Kitchen CutleryWhat do you use, what would you use if you could?


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alaskanativeson
April 24, 2008, 06:56 PM
I'll admit, I'm a bit of a cutlery snob. I won't have just any old grocery store knife in my kitchen cutlery. (I'm talking about knives for prepping food, not table butter knives.) I don't have any plain grocery store knives, most of the knives I have are Henckels Pro S series knives. I have the large Cold Steel chef's knife because I like the tacky rubber handle on it, I also have 3 very old Old Hickory brand knives, they were Mom's knives that she got from Grandma. I don't use them but I won't ever get rid of them.

So what kind of knives do you (or your S/O) use in your kitchen? Are you particular about what you use? What brand or type would you get if money was no object? What do you think makes a good kitchen knife?

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Sniper X
April 24, 2008, 07:33 PM
Recently I have bought a few different sizes of Suntokus, really like the shape and handling, all three are Katana Series Calphelons, beautiful quality for the money. here's a link to the Honesuki I also have a couple of.
http://www.calphalon.ca/calphalon/consumer/products/productGroup.jhtml?catId=CLCat100476

here's the pic of the Suntoku, and I also use (for chefs and bread knives top shelf Henkels.

Soap
April 24, 2008, 07:33 PM
I frequently use:

-Benchmade Rukus
-Kabar (gets used very infrequently since I sharpened the swedge)
-Gerber LMF II
-Dexter Chinese Chef's Knife

eliphalet
April 24, 2008, 08:18 PM
Forschner, Case, Henckles, Old hickory, etc. but for quality to price Forschner is hard to beat IMO.

Among several older rescued kitchen/butcher knives I own is a old Remington Kleanblade and Winchester made in the USA kitchen/butcher knives but they don't get used. I have seen the same knife/knives on display in the Cody Firearms Museum in Wy.

Oh hey! I forgot, we have a ginsu around here somewhere the little lady had when I met her.

MillCreek
April 24, 2008, 08:45 PM
I have a large collection of Dexter Russell Sani Safe knives. I figure if they are good enough for most commercial and restaurant kitchens, they are good enough for me.

hrgrisso
April 24, 2008, 09:03 PM
I actually regifted my wedding present Henkels to my sister in favor of my own Cutco. :p

For work in the Kitchen in my mind no one makes a better knife. I liked the Cold Steel Kitchen knives but I always come back to cutco. Their Double D edge is great! I love their Trimmers and you can't beat such a useful paring knife in length and especially length and grip of handle.

In fact I just bought another few pieces.

Their sales tactics suck (you can't order online you must have a rep come to your house) but the knives are so worth it. And since they'll sharpen (their proprietary edge requires them to sharpen) and polish your knives for free all you pay is shipping how can you complain.

Speaking of which my carvers could use a new edge.

CWL
April 24, 2008, 10:57 PM
Handforged Japanese knives, but these stay in the drawer. I keep a set of Shun damascus clads out in the knife block for the wife so she doesn't try to use mine.

I have a pair of American forged knives on the way from knifesmith David Wesner www.kelseycreekknifeworks.com and another pair ordered from Dan Koster www.kosterknives.com.

If you look around, you'll find out that American knifesmiths charge only about as much as a good Henckel or Wustof knife would cost.

Brian Williams
April 24, 2008, 11:21 PM
An old Cattaraugus 8" French knife and an Old Hickory 6" boning knife, a set of Stainless paring, boning and slicing knife.

http://thehighroad.org/attachment.php?attachmentid=67981&d=1196186431

ArfinGreebly
April 25, 2008, 03:05 AM
Years ago I wandered into a second-hand shoppe in Copenhagen (DK) and bought a number of things: a Hermes 3000 typewriter (Swiss, hands down the finest manual I've ever owned), some plumbing stuff, a few tools, and some yellow-handled kitchen knives (new) labelled "SWIBO" and "Wenger," also made in Switzerland.

Those SWIBO knives became my favorites. I ruined one of them trying to cut into the end of a bone, but kept the other two.
--[ For those of you who like Forschner (by Victorinox), I invite you to try SWIBO (by Wenger). ]--

When I came back to the states, I was only able to find one more in a restaurant supply store.

They've had a place of honor in my kitchen for years.

Since I found eBay a few years back, I have managed to pick up a few more SWIBOs and sent one to my daughter (who grew up with them), much to her delight.

I was also able to find some classic (1970s/1980s) Gerber kitchen knives, among them the French that my mom used to have.

Along the way, we've found a knife here and another there that makes its way into the kitchen knife block. Right now, it looks like a fugitive from a yard sale. Plastic handles, metal handles, wooden handles, and some rubber+aluminum handles.

But you know what? If I ever get my hands on a complete set of Tupperware knives, I may just keep one knife block just for them. Yeah, go ahead and laugh. Like I did before I tried them.

alias
April 25, 2008, 10:44 AM
hrgrisso,
If you send back any Cutco for sharpening you become a repeat customer and they start sending catalogues in the mail. As an established customer you can order online, or over the phone from the sales catalogue. I've only bought one new piece of Cutco for myself, but I bought a set for my stepdaughter (who loves cooking) for Christmas a couple years ago with no problem. Never had a salesman come to the house. I love the stuff. My mom has had a set since 1955. Mine I bought used over 25 years ago.

sargenv
April 25, 2008, 11:30 AM
Personally I prefer the Wustoff Grand Prix series. I do have one Forschner, an offset cheese knife. For paring knives I just use the disposable $3 Dexters. If it gets dull I chuck it and buy a new one (or three). I used to have a Wustoff Paring knife, but either lost it or it was stolen. Now I need not worry about it. I can use just about anything (Professional cook, 10 years) but I like what I have and don't really think twice about using them for anything. For a bread knife I have a dexter also. Eventually they wear out and I just get another. As long as the knife I use keeps an edge and does the job at hand, I have no complaints. I prefer to sharpen my own knives and always found the Cutco thing annoying. Though I did get one for my mother and she likes it just fine.

theotherwaldo
April 25, 2008, 11:33 AM
I'm not sure how much I can contribute to this.

I was raised to use what I could get and just make do. I didn't seek out top quality, because I knew it would just be left behind on the next move. (I'm not sure how may times we moved, but I'm pretty sure that I changed schools 33 times.) I'm just now learning to care properly for a quality knife.

Once I learn that skill set I may treat myself to some good steel. In the mean time, Chinese stuff from WalMart (and a little Old Hickory) will have to do.

Mp7
April 25, 2008, 12:00 PM
http://www.zwilling.com/de-DE/Sortiment--sortiment/Messer--knives/Serien%FCberblick--serien/TWIN%AE-1731--3674/animation.html


( nice 360° animation of the newest Zwilling knife )

I use a Zwilling chef´s knife, as well as a few others i´ve
found and bought from unknowing folks on flea markets.

"Made in Solingen" is stamped on every single one.

sixgunner455
April 25, 2008, 12:11 PM
Henckels (very rarely use, because we don't leave them down for the kids to mess with), Old Hickory (most inherited, some bought on purpose), custom pieces from my dad, one custom piece I made, Dexter Russel paring knife with a white rubber handle (wedding present), and a bunch of Tramontina that we got in a set as a wedding present and I reworked so I could stand to have them in my kitchen. Got some others, just random knives.

One really long, narrow chef's knife that I got from a lending closet at Fort Ord years ago. It wasn't stainless, they didn't want to let me borrow it because it was rusty and they were going to throw it away. It was, by far, the best knife they had (all our stuff was in storage a thousand miles away), so when I asked them for it they just let me keep it. Cleaned up really easily, keeps a good edge. Can't really read the maker's mark, but it's fun to use.

schadenfreude
April 25, 2008, 12:49 PM
+1 for Dexter Russell and Forschner

I have a few that are the top of the line Wusthof and Henckels that I never use anymore. My favorite is the 7 inch Santoku knife thats a Dexter Sani Safe. They are NSF for cleanliness, easy to maintain, clean and use..... the best thing is they're only like $15.00 at the cash and carry. Compared to $140 for my Henckels chefs knife.

craftsman
April 26, 2008, 10:10 PM
I just purchased an Eagle Ceramic Zirconium Oxide (white blade) 5 in. utility
($35 at Target) - it is amazing.

3rd hardest material (Diamond being first). Razor sharp - cuts like a dream. Saving up for their next up model - Ceramic Zirconium Carbide (2nd hardest material) - same knife - $75.

Not for cutting or chopping frozen food - Not for stabbing - just slicing - don't drop it. Don't chop on a hard surface (hardwood cutting boards are OK). No need to use force for slicing either.

Wafer thin slices that I could not achieve with a steel blade unless it was on an electric slicer.

Don't take my word - You have to try one yourself!

Floppy_D
April 26, 2008, 10:27 PM
I bought my wife a Wusthof set for Christmas a few years ago... makes prep work a joy.

thebaldguy
April 26, 2008, 11:29 PM
We have several Chicago Cutlery kitchen knives that are now more than 20 years old. They work well, still look great and hold an edge. My mom has some really nice Wustof-Trident kitchen knives that work well also, but they were a lot more than the Chicago Cutlery.

I have been curious about those kitchen knives with the dimples on the blade just above the cutting edge. Do they really help keep items from sticking to the blade?

schadenfreude
April 26, 2008, 11:47 PM
thebaldguy Yes the dimples are great. Food doesn't stick as much and it seems to make it great for carving meat as well.

MaterDei
April 26, 2008, 11:52 PM
I have a set of Wusthof knives that I bought when I was stationed in Germany. I also have a set of Henckels. I like the Wusthof knives better but the Henckels are good too.

simpleguy
April 27, 2008, 12:53 AM
I too concur on the Wusthof, I have both Henckels and Wustof. Of all the knives I have the Wusthof brand are my favorite. Of all the knife styles I have, the Santoku knives are my favorite. Good steel and a good edge make cooking a dream.

Inspector3711
April 27, 2008, 12:55 AM
Wusthof classic set with a Wushof sontoku we added later. I'll never go back to Henckels.

schadenfreude
April 27, 2008, 01:04 AM
I actually met a chef a while back at one of the nicest restaurants around here and he said most chefs he knows use Wusthoff and global.

Skofnung
April 27, 2008, 01:39 AM
I use a hodgepodge of blades in my kitchen, but I find that the blade that I reach for most often is a 3" stainless Henckles paring knife.

alaskanativeson
April 27, 2008, 03:00 AM
I have to agree with the small cutouts on the blade. I know Henckels call it a kullenschlief(spelling?) edge. My 10 inch carver has this type of blade, I can tell a difference using it on a roast.

CWL, I really liked some of the knives on both of the sites, I especially liked the Ulu from Dan Koster. I sent him an email requesting a quote for an ulu made to my specs, I like a much larger ulu than the one he shows.

If you haven't used an ulu before, I'd really suggest trying one. It is a really great knife.

hso
April 27, 2008, 11:37 AM
3 handmade Japanese knives (2 sizes of Santoku) and an old Spyderco Santoku.

dagger dog
April 27, 2008, 06:52 PM
Bought my girlfriend (wife now) a set of Henckels, for graduation culinary school 30 yrs ago, the resin impregnated wood scales, we use them daily!

Dionysusigma
April 28, 2008, 07:38 AM
Turns out the best knife we have, for anything, is a cheap Chicago Cutlery concave paring knife. Holds a razor sharp edge for a long time... better than most knives I've seen, in any applicaiton.

I've been thinking about buying a few Old Hickory since I like carbon steel for cooking better than stainless.

fingerbanger
April 28, 2008, 07:53 AM
got my wife a set of wustoff clasics two years ago. i did alot of research on the subject before i spent the money. wustoff and global seem to be on the top shelf. there may be others that are also good. i found that these two brands seemed to have the highest ratings when i researched the subject, however both are very very expensive.

TimboKhan
April 28, 2008, 09:38 AM
For most of the cooking tasks I perform, an Ulu is about perfect, though it is certainly not the only knife I use.

skinewmexico
April 28, 2008, 10:38 AM
Forschner. Can't beat it for the money, which does hurt it's snob appeal.

Colt46
April 28, 2008, 11:40 AM
I got it ten years ago as a closeout and it's turned out to be fantastic. I put some gorgeous ironwood scales on it(since turned almost jet black) and it's the best knife I have. Somebody on another forum said it probably came out of Eastern Europe. Quality stuff. Would kill to get another.

sm
April 28, 2008, 12:16 PM
Old Hickory Paring knife
Case Barehead Slimline Trapper, yellow handle, CV blade.
Case Peanut, yellow handle, CV blades.
Old Hickory Utility knife

This is what I use, and I sharpen freehand with either a Norton 4" Crystolon combo stone or Norton 3" India combo stone.
For some reason I have been using the Crystolon more of late.

Old Hickory Utility gets used the least, I actually like using that Trapper and so tend to use it instead.

What I would use?
I am not really sure to be honest, not as far as current offerings.

What I had and would use include some old Case Cutlery, and some Custom made Cutlery.
I have had nice stuff, but after more than once of losing most everything, I just sorta have the memories , and sentimental value and just keep it simple.
Heck, I ain't gonna live forever, I have nobody to leave anything to, and who is to say I won't lose stuff again.

*shrug*

cedjunior
April 28, 2008, 07:50 PM
All or my small knives are cheap "forged" stuff you buy at walmart or target, but my one large knife I use for most things is a Kershaw/Shun Santoku.

Oro
April 28, 2008, 08:25 PM
We have a set of the Henckel Pro S and a similar Wusthof - any type with the sold tang full-length. I am sure there are other good ones but these are common enough to find and good enough for the picky.

My new splurge in cutlery, though, is Laguiole flatwear from Jean Dubost. Now that is a serious tool for your hand when working on the steak.

When camping or riding, all duties are generally performed with a Vietnam vintage Camillus jet Pilot survival knife. Even packs it's own stone!

http://i225.photobucket.com/albums/dd275/kamerer/knives/IMGP2511.jpg

Jason_G
April 28, 2008, 08:29 PM
I like Henkel's (have the five star set), but I think I might try out some of the Victorinox line pretty soon. They look like an incredible deal.

Jason

hso
April 28, 2008, 09:18 PM
Blade did a quick chef's evaluation. Their best buy pick was the new line from Timberline.

Jason_G
April 28, 2008, 09:35 PM
Blade did a quick chef's evaluation. Their best buy pick was the new line from Timberline.
hso, are these (http://www.gatcosharpeners.com/cape_cod.mgi) what you're talking about?

Jason

enfield
April 28, 2008, 09:45 PM
Chicago Cutlery in the kitchen, and Henckel's in the camper. I'm happy with both.

Sir Aardvark
April 29, 2008, 01:16 AM
Pretty much anything that has a forged blade does pretty well in the kitchen.
These include Henckels, Forschner, Messermeister - you know, pretty much all of the Solingen-area knives.

Stamped blades are no good, they can get dull just sitting there.

Also, stainless steel is an obvious choice. It's an avoidable hassle to have to wipe your blade with mineral oil after every time you use it in the kitchen, so why bother?.

You pretty much have to balance the utilitarian aspect with the cost...

I myself would not want to slice chicken with a $700.00 laminated steel chef's knife hand-forged by some Japanese Blade Master. A piece that expensive should be mounted on the wall like artwork.

Perhaps when I'm at the point of lighting my cigars with $100.00 bills, then I'll have really expensive kitchen knives - but, when I'm at that point, I'll be paying a cook to do it for me - so it won't matter then.

hso
April 29, 2008, 06:35 AM
Jason_G,

Yes.

coelacanth
April 29, 2008, 07:52 AM
my favorites in no particular order are Sabatier, Dexter-Russell, Forschner, Old Hickory, and Dawson ( custom ). Properly maintained, any of the knives I own are equal to the task at hand. The only major disappointment on the kitchen knife front belongs to A.G. Russell. I purchased three of his kitchen series a few years back and they have not held up well at all. Brittle blades and either poor materials or poor construction on the handles. That said - those are the only knives I've ever purchased from A.G. Russell that I've not been completely satisfied with.

Dave McCracken
April 29, 2008, 11:12 AM
WW had a set of Henckels when we met. I added, at her request, a large Sabatier chef's knife for a present early in our marriage. Later, we've added a few good paring knives and some Japanese offset serrated thing we use for bread, roasts, etc.

Every now and then I break out the bench stones. Touching in between sees a Henckels steel and a crock stick in use.

Striker
April 29, 2008, 12:25 PM
Based on sm's various discourses on the virtues of 1095 carbon steel Old Hickories, I've gave my old Chicago Cutlery set to my daughter and replaced it with an Old Hickory (Ontario) kitchen set. After working the bevels a bit, they suit me fine. I touch them up as needed with a steel for everyday use, and give them a tune up on the stones once a quarter or so. I also like the fact that each individual knife in the set is is easily replaced from open stock if required.

Just another step in my return to simpler times.

zxcvbob
April 29, 2008, 12:31 PM
I have a mixture of Dexter Russell Sani-Safe and R.H. Forschner's.

I also have a big heavy cleaver that I bought cheap from Harbor Freight that works about as well as my Dexter cleaver (and the HF looks nicer)

Pilot
April 29, 2008, 12:33 PM
Forschner Fibrox series are a great value and superb knives.

zxcvbob
April 29, 2008, 12:34 PM
Pretty much anything that has a forged blade does pretty well in the kitchen. These include Henckels, Forschner, Messermeister - you know, pretty much all of the Solingen-area knives.

Stamped blades are no good, they can get dull just sitting there.


Forschner (a.k.a Victorinox) are all stamped blades. I think F. Dick has forged blades.

JohnBT
April 29, 2008, 12:36 PM
A set of Chicago Cutlery purchased in 1986 and two more expensive European knives of the same vintage - one butcher and one chef's. I've forgetten the makes - Forschner and Henckels maybe?

I'm happy with the knives I have, including my 3 old fillet knives.

John

CZ.22
April 30, 2008, 06:45 PM
Nice set of Henckels, a Wustof paring knife, some assorted wood handled knives (not Old Hickory), and a set of cheap Farberware serrated steak knives.
However, two extremely under-rated tools, in my opinion, are a good pair of kitchen shears and and a good pizza cutter.

bigjim
April 30, 2008, 07:09 PM
I use a mixture of Wustoff, Shun, Bark River Knife and tool and a few customs
http://i126.photobucket.com/albums/p83/45government/IMG_5920.jpg
http://i126.photobucket.com/albums/p83/45government/IMG_5922.jpg
http://i126.photobucket.com/albums/p83/45government/IMG_5923.jpg
http://i126.photobucket.com/albums/p83/45government/IMG_5924.jpg
http://i126.photobucket.com/albums/p83/45government/Barker4.jpg

mr.trooper
April 30, 2008, 07:34 PM
What I use?

a mix of Victorinox, Old Hickory, and Boker Ceramic

Indifferent
May 2, 2008, 07:40 PM
Calphalon set, wedding gift, I woulda preffered the money (already had a set of Henkels)

And when the wife isn't looking my Ontario Machete

1KPerDay
May 2, 2008, 07:46 PM
Personally I prefer the Wustoff Grand Prix series. +1 I love mine. The Grand Prix I series. They since 'upgraded' the handle but I haven't tried it.

catbite45
May 2, 2008, 08:01 PM
Sam's Club Members Mark.

They are Tramontina Pro-Series and only cost $100.

craftsman
May 4, 2008, 12:52 AM
I'm sorry - had to chuckle - in today's economy "only" and "$100.00" - and I'm complaining about the $75 price tag on the Zirconium Carbide ceramic as compared to the $35 Zirconium Oxide Ceramic as being expensive!

Silly me!

Dravur
May 6, 2008, 12:26 PM
I own every piece of Cutco ever made in both the white handles and brown. I own the 3 piece boxed carving set. I own the hunting knives and every fork, spoon or grenade launcher that Cutco ever made. I think I own pieces that Cutco doesn't even remember having made.

Why do I own so much Cutco?

My father is retired, loves to search flea markets, goodwill stores and garage sales and buys every piece of Cutco he finds. He sends it all in, has them sharpened, polished, and any repairs done and then gives them to me and my brother. I have never bought a Cutco knife in my life.

They are good knives and I use them every day as my utility knives. About once a year, my Dad rounds them up, gives me a new set and sends mine in. I think Dad has hundreds of these knives lying around. My guess is he has never paid more than $.50 for any of them.

It works for me. I have some very good knives.... honestly, they don't get used much. I have too many Cutcos...

I even have 2 copies of the Cutco cookbook from the 60s or 70s.

bigjim
May 6, 2008, 01:18 PM
Very frugal Dravur!

On the other end of the spectrum I just took a 300 dollar Busse Skinny Anniversary Steel heart knife and reshaped the blade and handle by hand to make a kitchen knife. I think I spent more on sandpaper than you have on your Cutco's. LOL!!

http://i126.photobucket.com/albums/p83/45government/DONE.jpg

1KPerDay
May 6, 2008, 01:22 PM
Cutco are stamped... worth about .50 but not much more, IMO. :D I don't like balance or the way the top of the blade wears into your finger as you're dicing something.

MASTEROFMALICE
May 6, 2008, 02:21 PM
Am I the only one who uses Globals?

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