Wooden Chopping Boards

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Stainless steel scratches with the sink scourer...from pots to cooker hobs to roasting tins to sinks themselves.
I think stainless steel comes in many varieties, and though chromium might be tough, the rest of the mix doesn't seem to be.

Toughest thing I cut is a turnip....food wise that is. Otherwise it's the shell of the Fomes fomentarius.
 
Years ago my friend had a marble cutting board. I don't know who thought that was a good idea. Someone who hates sharp knives presumably.
My in-laws use their bludgeons on a glass one....

I did once, many years ago, offer to sharpen them and advised using a more suitable board.They didn't take up the offer.
 
I think the problem comes because we don't see any other really cleanable alternative than glass or metal.
Plastic sounded ideal, but we know now about the microplastic bits. Old butchers shops used wood, and scoured it with salt, scraped the surface off too.....I'm not doing that with meat. Commercial kitchens use stainless steel and heavy polytop cutting tables.

I just cut carefully.
 
Cleaning wooden chopping boards and scrub top tables was the first lesson taught (to girls) in Secondary School domestic science classes.
The method was designed, in part, to maintain the anti-bacterial properties of wood. Never use soap or Brillo (wire wool impregnated with soap.) or detergent.

It was the only sort of chopping board that I ever saw in my youth - and look - I’m still here.

As for the difference between sharp, effective and adequate - that is a different thread.
 
I’m quite disappointed that on a forum such as this that people are recommending cheap, mass produced foreign products. I would have thought we were collectively more environmentally conscious than that, and would be more interested in locally sourced materials and hand crafted items? :dunno:
 
I’m quite disappointed that on a forum such as this that people are recommending cheap, mass produced foreign products. I would have thought we were collectively more environmentally conscious than that, and would be more interested in locally sourced materials and hand crafted items? :dunno:
The explanation can be found in every newspaper, every day this year.
A very significant proportion of the population can only afford the minimum that will do a particular job.

Some of them are even driven to use Temu.

I won’t judge them.
 
The explanation can be found in every newspaper, every day this year.
A very significant proportion of the population can only afford the minimum that will do a particular job.

Some of them are even driven to use Temu.

I won’t judge them.

Nobody is “driven” to use temu! :lmao:

Folks use it because
1. It’s a fad
2. They can get cheap crap and satisfy their consumerist tendencies.

One of the requirements was 'not expensive', if you're able to recommend a hand crafted and locally sourced end-grain cutting board that isn't expensive then it'd be good to share it.

He actually said “not too expensive if possible” but that’s an entirely subjective question. Expensive for me could be cheap for someone else.
 
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As for the difference between sharp, effective and adequate - that is a different thread.

That is so true. I grew up in households where the only 'big' knife was the bread knife. The law had said that no one had to possess a knife bigger than would be necessary to cut their meat at their plate...and we got good at using wee knives.
The neatest butcher I know takes apart a deer with a knife no longer than his forefinger, and an axe to seperate the ribs from the spine, everything else he uses that wee knife.

Bread knife apart the longest knife I use is about 5" blade length.
My Italian near as daughter in law despairs and looks around desperately hoping I have bigger ones somewhere :rolleyes2:
I even dice onions with a wee knife.....and it's not that sharp. I hold the onion in my hands and cut it up, I do the same with pretty much every vegetable bar turnip which is too damned big and hard.

You don't need a razor sharp knife in the kitchen for food prep, pretty much every housewife in the land knows that. Sharp enough to do, will do. No need to be constantly worrying about a razor lying about the worktop.....but then, what do I know ?
I'm just a housewife ;)

Today I've made vegetable broth (tatties, onions, leeks, carrots, celery, mushrooms etc.,) and apple turnovers....all peeled and cut with one wee knife with a blade less than three inches long. Quick, neat and tidy. No nicks or cuts.
 
Cleaning wooden chopping boards and scrub top tables was the first lesson taught (to girls) in Secondary School domestic science classes.
The method was designed, in part, to maintain the anti-bacterial properties of wood. Never use soap or Brillo (wire wool impregnated with soap.) or detergent.

It was the only sort of chopping board that I ever saw in my youth - and look - I’m still here.

As for the difference between sharp, effective and adequate - that is a different thread.

I didn't do Domestic Science at school, I had Latin instead. I don't use detergent on my cutting boards, I do scrub them with the green scourer though, dry them well, occasionally do a salt scrub, but that's pretty much it....and we're still here too :D
 
I was always told to clean a wooden chopping board by running it under very hot water and scrub the surface with a scouring pad then let it dry fully, this is how I've done it for ever with no ill effects.
The kids have put wooden chopping boards through the dishwasher before which warped them but didn't really damage them in any other way, they did come out super clean though.
 
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I’m quite disappointed that on a forum such as this that people are recommending cheap, mass produced foreign products.

I actually thought @johnnytheboy had access to woodland and it would be worth making his own. I've used a board split out of sycamore before, when it's got a bit old it went on the fire. I should make some more.

We mainly use an end grain boad picked up in a sale from of the DIY sheds for a few pounds and that's lasted a couple of decades. It's only used for veg thpugh.
 
Stainless steel scratches with the sink scourer...from pots to cooker hobs to roasting tins to sinks themselves.
I think stainless steel comes in many varieties, and though chromium might be tough, the rest of the mix doesn't seem to be.

Toughest thing I cut is a turnip....food wise that is. Otherwise it's the shell of the Fomes fomentarius.
Scotchbrite believe it or not, is used for putting a satin finish on hardened knife steel, so it will scratch stainless, including hardened stainless knife steel at 60 rc and above.
 
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I actually thought @johnnytheboy had access to woodland and it would be worth making his own. I've used a board split out of sycamore before, when it's got a bit old it went on the fire. I should make some more.

We mainly use an end grain boad picked up in a sale from of the DIY sheds for a few pounds and that's lasted a couple of decades. It's only used for veg thpugh.
It’s a crap wood for that, a fair bit forestry pine, immature trees and loads of ash die back. All in all not the place to source decent wood tbh!
 
I dropped and split apart my breadboard a week ago.....it came from an Aunt's house thirty years ago, it must be sixty or seventy years old.
It's sycamore.
I have another my Dad made for me when I got married but it's much thicker, about an inch thick. It's superb for hard heavy chopping but for everything else I preferred the thinner older board. I'm still using the pieces, but I'm wondering about how to glue it together properly. Tempted to use wee mini dowels and ....I don't know what glue.
I have cascamite, and I have acrylic white wood glue, but will they safely take washing and the occasional salt scrub ?
Cascamite is good, get the surfaces freshly planed, glue and the usual 3 clamps and it should be fine.
 
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