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• #5427
You guys actually use a paring knife? I've got 2 and they end up opening packages more than touching food. In the kitchen I think I only ever used one for butterflying prawns.
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• #5428
They're great for de-stringing sugarsnaps.
I need a decent left handed bread knife. My current falling apart one is used for all sorts. Tomato chopping, cutting cheese. Shredding lettuce. Also for cutting bread.
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• #5429
All the time.
This morning:
- Trimming the top off a fig then quartering
- slicing a stress cut in the top of a banana so my kids can peel them cleanly without loosing their shit over it not peeling properly or me doing it for them.
- (Soon) slitting the corner off a coffee packet
- Trimming the top off a fig then quartering
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• #5430
Pallares pairing knives are nice too - Kitchen Provisions sell them for about 15 quid. Carbon steel & a nice rounded wooden handle.
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• #5431
They look nice
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• #5432
Huh, I just use the tip of a chef knife for that kind of stuff
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• #5433
they end up opening packages more than touching food
That's probably because they're blunt af from opening packages.
You're a monster.
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• #5434
slicing a stress cut in the top of a banana so my kids can peel them cleanly without loosing their shit over it not peeling properly or me doing it for them.
I taught ours to open them by pinching the bananus end - so much less stress.
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• #5435
That handle looks so uncomfortable
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• #5436
As it's a smaller knife I find the handle sits nicely in your palm but everyone's hands are obvs not the same
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• #5437
but everyone's hands are obvs not the same
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• #5438
Yup, I think one's from Ikea and one's from TK Maxx. I did have a nicer Sabatier one but that's gone missing during a house move at some point.
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• #5439
You know bananas shouldn’t be peeled from the bottom and, not the stalk?
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• #5440
I only ever use my IKEA paring knife to open packets of meat, my Sabatier was used to pry open a lid and the tip snapped. An IKEA chef's knife does most of the heavy lifting these days. I'm too scared/CBF to use my good knives.
A few months ago I got home from work one evening and found my precious Damascus Gyuto on the bench next to the remains of a lemon that had been sliced up that morning. The blade was undamaged thankfully.
CBD oil is great.
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• #5441
CBD oil is great
for you or the knife?
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• #5442
It's too expensive to share, mate.
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• #5443
I am aware that is how monkeys do it.
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• #5444
That, or it's not really carbon steel 🫣
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• #5445
I bought one of these https://www.procook.co.uk/product/procook-damascus-67-chefs-knife-20cm-8in
Not crazy money but still more than I'll usually spend on something that will probably get ruined eventually. Told my other half not to fuck it, a few hours later find her trying to pry open a can lid with it. -
• #5446
Thankfully it's stainless, past me was smart enough to realise that future me would inevitably find myself in this situation and made a very smart choice. But of course I'd forgotten about all that when I saw it on the bench top next to the lemon.
I leave my posh Nakiri tucked up in its box, safely out of harm's way. The Gyuto still lives in the knife block, I know I'm probably asking for trouble but what you gonna do?
I bought them both before I was diagnosed with GORD, I don't get to prepare and eat anything fun anymore. 🤣🔫
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• #5447
Hitoshi Kato-san
Congrats dude, that’s a beauty.
@dancing james. Strong stuff, enjoy.
Dragging this back to the Horl chat, I got a dose of FOMO and bought the no.2 and the 3000/6000 upgrade. Hmmm, I’m not convinced at all. I’ve tried it maybe five times now and it’s… ok I guess.
Even when I rush sharpening with the whetstone it’s significantly better than with this gizmo. I’ll persevere for a bit in case I’m missing something fundamental but if anyone wants to buy it, let me know 😂 -
• #5448
I bought the full set including the 3000 6000 upgrade.
For each knife I sharpied the edge (used a sharpie to colour it) and then went through each stone in turn, using the sharpie before each stone.
After I have gone through all the stones one final pass along each edge with the diamond standard stone removed the burr, then a quick strop. This stage isn’t shown in all the YouTube demonstrations but is essential in my experience.
Now I know all my knives are at a consistent angle I don’t have to go through the coarser stones to get a fine edge back, so it’s super quick and the results will shave arm or leg hairs with no problem and do a fine clean cut through paper. But it was only after I started doing the final single pass with the diamond standard that I was consistently impressed with the results.
Edited for clarity and emphasis
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• #5449
New grafting knife, niche and nice.
2 Attachments
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• #5450
I'd probably be interested should @dancing james not have convinced you to stick with it
Maybe this paring / peeling knife too: