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Re: Anyone into knives?
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All one really needs is a chef's knife, paring knife, cleaver, & bread knife. |
Re: Anyone into knives?
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Re: Anyone into knives?
In my opinion, the minimum knives needed;
Chef's Bread Paring Utility Carving Slicing Boning Butcher Fillet A Utility knife is the best tool for task like slicing mushrooms, garlic, radishes or shallots for a salad when only a little is needed, and cutting tomato for a sandwich or a sandwich for that matter, when a paring knife is to small and a chef's knife to large. If you roast large cuts of meat or turkeys, a carving knife will do a much better job than a chef's knife when it's time to get the meat to the platter. For getting really thin cuts of roast meat for sandwiches a slicing knife is hard to beat. The last 3 are task oriented knives that may not get allot of use (depending on how you prep/shop), if you buy whole poultry, fish, primal cuts of beef or pork, rabbits etc. they are hard to get by without. Having a thinner blade than Chef's knives, Butcher knives are a good choice when breaking down meat that's headed for the grinder or the stew pot. Specialty cutlery that gets a lot of use in my kitchen, Cheese knife Poultry shears Kitchen shears Salmon/Ham knife Oyster knife Lets not forget a carving fork and honing steel. While the steel will not sharpen your knives, it will straighten the edge and prolong the time between sharpening. |
Re: Anyone into knives?
Great thread guys! As a professional chef, it's great to see "regular" folk talk about gear with the same zeal as us sleep-deprived crazy souls. :D
However, you really don't need a zillion knives to work effectively in the kitchen. Let me dispel a few myths... Quote:
Also in an ideal world you would use a serrated tomato knife to cut tomatoes, but in practice a really, really sharp chef's knife does the job just as well. Quote:
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A fillet knife for fish is indispensable if you prep a lot of fish. You need that long, flexible blade to slide in between the bones and for neatly taking the skin off. I've tried to fillet bream with a rigid chef's knife, and failed miserably. :rolleyes: So to sum up, the absolute minimum you'll need is: A quality chef's knife... yup, that's it. And depending on your kitchen, you'll certainly need a bread knife (if you prep a lot of bread, I personally don't), a fillet knife (if you prep a lot of fish, I do), a cleaver (if you have to split a lot of bones, I do) and maybe a pairing knife if you're doing fancy garnishes (although you can just use the tip of your chef's knife in most cases). Easy! Oh, and for the record I use Henckels 4-Star knives... I like the weight although I'm looking to change to a thinner blade... :confused: I'm sure MPW would agree: http://img.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/200...10_468x430.jpg |
Re: Anyone into knives?
I find it very hard to believe that these two people are the same person.
http://i103.photobucket.com/albums/m...10/th_seth.jpg http://i103.photobucket.com/albums/m...DSC_0058-1.jpg |
Re: Anyone into knives?
Harpo,
I can imagine it's rare in a professional kitchen that one is splitting a sandwich for two or cutting a few mushrooms for a salad, a quality chef's knife may be the end all... Cooking for the wife and I alone, the utility knife gets more use on a daily basis than just about any other. The bread knife does double duty, bread and tomatoes. I make bread (don't own a bread maker), and buy fresh unsliced bread from a bakery. A restaurant or deli may have the room and need of an electric gravity slicer, I don't. The 14” slicer get used a couple times a month, enough to justify having it. For Frenching chops and ribroast, removing silverskin, opening chops that are to be stuffed etc. a 6” boning knife is much easer to use than a 14” chef's knife. Yes I use a chef's knife with a 14” blade, also the reason I use paring knives to peel fruit and veg. I collected antique butcher tools and cutlery for years, had over 300 blades when I met my wife. My heavy knives are carbon steel, made by the now defunked Gustav Emil Ern, and are 40 to 60 years old, all where unused when I acquired them (new old stock). The paring, utility, fillet & slicing knives, are nogent style Sabatier. Recently ground from forgings that are more than 60 years old. Check this http://www.thebestthings.com/knives/sabatier_nogent.htm |
Re: Anyone into knives?
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