Cynthia wrote:I have Henckel and Chef's Choice -- love both, but I'm always looking. Anyone have any experience with the Shun knives that Alton Brown favors?
elakin wrote:i'm lazy and don't often take the time to get out a stone and sharpen my knives, so i love my sabatier carbon steel knives.
the carbon steel is harder, even, than the various molybednium alloys that your henkels, wustofs, and globals employ, so once it's got an edge, it lasts a very long time. i have them sharpened once a year or so by the guy who shows up at my farmer's market with his wheel. and they're usually not even dull by then, just not really *sharp*.
yes, they discolor. yes, they rust if allowed to sit wet. so what? are you buying knives because they look pretty or because they cut things well?
sabatiers are typical old-school european-style knives. the tang is kind of harsh, so if you use it a lot you'll get a callous on your finger. they're a bit thinner and more delicate than the germans (wustof, henkels) and not as thin and wispy as the japanese-style knives.
for me, they're perfect. i love working with them.
http://www.fantes.com/carbon.htm
Darren72 wrote:3. A utility knife is generally as long as a chef's knife, but is thinner and shorter.
brandon_w wrote:I love my Global knives. I like that they are lighter than German knives yet they are really well balanced. A lot of people don't like the metal "roundish" handles, but I like them just fine. Going to a store and testing a few out really the best idea though. Global's hold their edge a long time. I don't send my out to be professionally sharpened, I bought a 3 stone set of Japanese water-stones and sharpen them myself. I use a guide that keeps the knife at the proper angle when I sharpen, however it leaves some scuffs on the knife, which is fine with me.
nsxtasy wrote:Darren72 wrote:3. A utility knife is generally as long as a chef's knife, but is thinner and shorter.
It's the same length but shorter?
I'm not trying to pick apart your words, just trying to understand how it compares with the chef's knife that we're all familiar with, and what advantages it has.
brandon_w wrote:I have a utility knife, a vegetable knife (5" curved blade), and a hollow edge santoku knife, they all look really pretty on my wall when I use my chef's knife. I mean I use them sometimes, especially the santoku, but really I just use the chef's knife. I do have a pairing knife that I use for smaller things sometimes.
The three you really need are chef's, serated, and pairing. The rest are fun to have though, if you like collecting knifes. You should see my pocket knife collection...
Darren72 wrote:I agree: cutting a bagel or a crusty bread is painful without a serrated blade.
Someone at NW Cutlery steered me to this wonderful, $23, 10.25" bread knife:
http://www.northwesterncutlery.net/Fibr ... Knife.html
I much prefer the long, curved blade on this to that on my Wusthof bread knife.
More reviews of this knife at Amazon
Darrne72 wrote:There are four main knives most cooks use:
1. A chef's knife, usually 8 inches. Also called a cook's knife.
2. A 3-4 inch pairing knife
3. A 6-8 inch utility, sandwich, or flexible knife
4. A serrated bread knife.
Rust, however, left unchecked can permanently damage or destroy the knife, so they do require a bit more maintenance than other blades.
tomsullyjr wrote:My wife and I attended a cooking demonstration at Flavour in Forest Park on New Year's Eve. The chef there was using a ceramic knife made by Kyocera. She said she been impressed with them so far, although, they are alittle more fragile that steel and they recommend not to use them for slicing meat with bones. The sales line is that these are 5 times sharper and hold an edge 10 times longer than traditional knives.
I bought a 7" chef knife for $100 and have used it a few times so far. It's definitely the sharpest knife I've used in a long time and it's significantly lighter than my Henckel knives. The downside is that to get it sharpened, I'll have to send it in to Kyocera rather than go some place local. If it stays sharp as long as I was told it would, this won't be that much of an inconvenience.