ChatterBank2 mins ago
Knives
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I am considering buying some ceramic cook's knives. Are they as good as the publicity asserts? Anyone have experience with them? Thanks.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If you already have a good set of steel knives you may want some for their qualities in keeping an edge for ages (though some of us enjoy sharpening a good knife). You do have to be careful with them as they dont like rough usage and can be broken. I tried one but my favourite tool is still a nice large chinese cleaver.
Top of the line ceramic knives are expensive... here in the U.S., a paring knife made of ceramics is about $50 (US) as compared to maybe $30 for a good steel one. They have to go back to the maker if repair or sharpening is needed and, as already noted... they're brittle and easily damaged. They don't work well on semi-frozen foods sinc it's easy to damage the pointed tip...
I agree with seadogg wholeheartedly though... there's something very satisfying to reconditioning and then sharpening a good steel knife... one of the reasons I regularly shave with a straight razor (Sheffield or German only, thank you). Stropping a good razor to extreme shaprness is a fine art and the satisfaction shouldn't be wasted on the timid...
I agree with seadogg wholeheartedly though... there's something very satisfying to reconditioning and then sharpening a good steel knife... one of the reasons I regularly shave with a straight razor (Sheffield or German only, thank you). Stropping a good razor to extreme shaprness is a fine art and the satisfaction shouldn't be wasted on the timid...