eatchicago wrote:
it is important to note that a very sharp knife is much safer than a dull one.
imsscott wrote:eatchicago wrote:
it is important to note that a very sharp knife is much safer than a dull one.
Having cut myself way more times on new or newly sharpened knives than with dull knives, (I can't even remember one time,) I don't buy into this canard at all.
Cathy2 wrote:imsscott wrote:eatchicago wrote:
it is important to note that a very sharp knife is much safer than a dull one.
Having cut myself way more times on new or newly sharpened knives than with dull knives, (I can't even remember one time,) I don't buy into this canard at all.
What EatChicago advised is true, though I can understand your dubiousness.
The duller the knife, the more pressure/energy you use to compensate for the dullness. A newly sharpened knife, especially if they were allowed to get really dull, causes the nasty cuts because you are exerting more energy than is really required. Once you are used to the newly sharpened knife, and maintain it that way, then you use less personal energy. Ultimately a sharp knife is safer, it is those nasty transition periods that getcha every time.
eatchicago wrote:Cathy2 wrote:imsscott wrote:eatchicago wrote:
it is important to note that a very sharp knife is much safer than a dull one.
Having cut myself way more times on new or newly sharpened knives than with dull knives, (I can't even remember one time,) I don't buy into this canard at all.
What EatChicago advised is true, though I can understand your dubiousness.
The duller the knife, the more pressure/energy you use to compensate for the dullness. A newly sharpened knife, especially if they were allowed to get really dull, causes the nasty cuts because you are exerting more energy than is really required. Once you are used to the newly sharpened knife, and maintain it that way, then you use less personal energy. Ultimately a sharp knife is safer, it is those nasty transition periods that getcha every time.
Yep, but it's not just the force that you're putting into it, but the combination of that force and the likelihood of slipping the knife off of the food you're chopping.
If you're chopping onions with a dull knife, you're pushing down hard (as Cathy said) and if your effort gets shifted ever so slightly off of the slick onion surface that knife is going to slide in some other direction other than straight down.
A nice sharp well maintained knife does the cutting for you. It moves smoothly through food and goes where you tell it to go with minimal effort.
If you're consistently cutting yourself on sharp knives, (and I do not mean this in a mean or chiding way) I would highly suggest taking a knife skills course. I know they offer a good one at The Chopping Block.
Best,
Michael
october271986 wrote:I seem to recall that japanese knives like my Globals are made differently than the German knives like Wusthof and Henckels. For this reason, they need to be sharpened differently - using a whetstone instead of a sharpening steel.
Can Northwest cutlery or the DIY method properly sharpen my knives?
october271986 wrote:I seem to recall that japanese knives like my Globals are made differently than the German knives like Wusthof and Henckels. For this reason, they need to be sharpened differently - using a whetstone instead of a sharpening steel.
Can Northwest cutlery or the DIY method properly sharpen my knives?
Jamieson22 wrote:
I just took my 4 MAC Knives (Japanese) and 1 Henkels (German) to NWC and I can say they all came back ridiculously sharp. As in so sharp that when breaking down a cauliflower into florets, I cut a stem in two and picked the piece up to break it into smaller florets while still holding my 6" utility knife, and proceeded to put the back edge of the blade into my thumb.
Jamie
stewed coot wrote:Anyway, another point-clean cuts made by sharp knives are easier to stitch than jagged ones, and heal faster.
stewed coot wrote:Also confused about the new razor blades in the lips- was that a trick or self-mutilation?
Jamieson22 wrote:october271986 wrote:I seem to recall that japanese knives like my Globals are made differently than the German knives like Wusthof and Henckels. For this reason, they need to be sharpened differently - using a whetstone instead of a sharpening steel.
Can Northwest cutlery or the DIY method properly sharpen my knives?
What you are probably referring to is that many/most Japanese knives have a 15 degree blade angle, where as many/most German knives have a 20 degree angle.
Hombre de Acero wrote:Not sure- if I can trust anyone else with my knifes- and will
learn-how-to "whetstone" as effectively as my Poppa used to.