kage69
Lifer
A large and 2 inch thick end grain cutting board that permanently lives on my countertop.. it's not just highly functional, it's decorative and looks great in the kitchen.
Wood is the best, and certain woods are easier on knives than others.
I had an end grain board that eventually cracked after 6 years, but I barely oiled it. This one I'll be oiling every couple months.
John Boos makes some really nice end grain ones but they are like $200 or more. That's ATOT baller money.
I think the one I have now is Catskill Craftsmen. It's not as pretty as my previous one but it's still a nice piece.
It's about 17"x19" - so a nice big working area. Love that feature.
I might drill 4 small holes in it and install feet. Anybody do that on an end grain board?
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I've never been able to go with Boos personally. They're nice I'll admit, def look great, but I can't justify the expense when a single round piece of wood does the job fine. It's just a surface to work on, I'd rather spend that extra dough on good steel with dimensions appropriate for my hand size and a quality/temper that allows me to go months between sharpening. A cook I know told me that if you go with Boos, definitely get their wood oil and use it to preserve your investment. Apparently it's different than normal food grade mineral oil.
I would definitely avoid drilling holes if I were you, that grippy soft mesh stuff for cabinets previously mentioned is what I use, works great.