rommelrommel
Diamond Member
- Dec 7, 2002
- 4,429
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Shun are overpriced, but they are nice looking. Does suck that they are gone tho. Gift from family :/
Shun are overpriced, but they are nice looking. Does suck that they are gone tho. Gift from family :/
As a compliment to the nice high quality wood ones, I highly recommend picking up a set of these. Thin, flexible, color coded. Green for fruits and vegetables, yellow/blue for raw/cooked poultry, red/brown for raw/cooked red meats, white for general. You can store all 6 in the space of a normal plastic one, they are cheap enough to just replace when they get scratched up, pretty flexible (though I would like a step or two more flexible).
Great for large meals with multiple components so you don't have to stop and clean the board between, or for camping/cookouts, etc. I just use them for everything though. I bought these and then was shopping for a good wood one, but I never bothered, I'm happy with these (but I don't cook all that much either)
http://amzn.com/B005EZD4FE
A friend gave me a slab of that that had been in his Dad's basement for 40 years. Approx. 3" x 2' x 4'...cut out of the middle of the tree. Amazing. Cut, joined, sanded and it has held my coffee, every morning, for the last 20 years.That black walnut one in the ebay link is nice.
I made my first board as a housewarming gift this spring. I need some more wood, all I have any quantity of is either ash or sapele. I'd like to try some maple end grain boards.
Isn't there a "requirement" for food prep woods?
Way in the back of my mind....heh, what's that get you....some wood would poison/taint the meat and make it dangerous to eat so woods like maple were used.What do you mean? I don't think it matters aside from durability. Hard and dense is best, but you could use pine too. You'd just have to replace it more often.
My way limited memory....IIRC, they hold bacteria longer than wood...I could be spreading misinformation, unintentionally.why not one of those anti-bacterial plastic polymer cutting boards?
$5 at walmart for 8x11 board
That could be, but I wouldn't expect it from most typical American woods.Way in the back of my mind....heh, what's that get you....some wood would poison/taint the meat and make it dangerous to eat so woods like maple were used.
My way limited memory....IIRC, they hold bacteria longer than wood...I could be spreading misinformation, unintentionally.
