Jump to content
  • Welcome to the eG Forums, a service of the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters. The Society is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of the culinary arts. These advertising-free forums are provided free of charge through donations from Society members. Anyone may read the forums, but to post you must create a free account.

Edit History

paulraphael

paulraphael

For anything requiring precision and a sharp knife, nothing I've used can touch a Japanese Wa handle.

fullsizeoutput_13e8__07384.1516814002.jp

 

For heavier tasks that need a duller, sturdier chef's knife, I prefer a plain old Western handle. The exact handle size and style is unimportant. Two factors that matter: a rounded spine on the knife (so you don't get blisters) and no bolster. Traditional bolsters are stupid. They making proper sharpening impossible. My heavy German knife, which I like in other respects, had a big dumb bolster. I had Dave Martell Grind it down to get it out of the way. If I were buying a heavy knife now, I'd get a Messermeister or any lower-priced Japanese yo-deba (western handled, heavy chef's knives made for abuse). 

 

All these innovative handles look to me like they were created by marketing departments, or by inventors who don't really understand they're making one-trick ponies. 

 

 

paulraphael

paulraphael

For anything requiring precision and a sharp knife, nothing I've used can touch a Japanese Wa handle.

fullsizeoutput_13e8__07384.1516814002.jp

 

For heavier tasks that need a duller, sturdier chef's knife, I prefer a plain old Western handle. The exact handle size and style is unimportant. Two factors that matter: a rounded spine on the knife (so you don't get blisters) and no bolster. Traditional bolsters are stupid. They making proper sharpening impossible. My heavy German knife, which I like in other respects, had a big dumb bolster. I had Dave Martell Grind it down to get it out of the way. If I were buying a heavy knife now, I'd get a Messermeister  or any lower-priced Japanese yo-deba (western handled, heavy chef's knives made for abuse). 

 

All these innovative handles look to me like they were created by marketing departments, or by inventors who don't really understand they're making one-trick ponies. 

 

 

paulraphael

paulraphael

For anything requiring precision and a sharp knife, nothing I've used can touch a Japanese Wa handle.

fullsizeoutput_13e8__07384.1516814002.jp

 

For heavier tasks that need a duller, sturdier chef's knife, I prefer a plain old Western handle. The exact handle size and style is unimportant. Two factors that matter: a rounded spine on the knife (so you don't get blisters) and no bolster. Traditional bolsters are pointless and stupid. They making proper sharpening impossible. My heavy German knife, which I like in other respects, had a big dumb bolster. I had Dave Martell Grind it down to get it out of the way. If I were buying a heavy knife now, I'd get a Messermeister  or any lower-priced Japanese yo-deba (western handled, heavy chef's knives made for abuse). 

 

All these innovative handles look to me like they were created by marketing departments, or by inventors who don't really understand they're making one-trick ponies. 

 

 

×
×
  • Create New...