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Knife Care & Maintenance

Five Tips For Taking Care of Your Cutlery 

No matter what you hear on TV, quality kitchen knives are not indestructible. To protect your investment of good quality knives, here are five tips to ensure a long and happy relationship with your sharp and shiny friends.

1.   Use Your Knives for Their Intended Purpose

As the old saying goes, "your knife is the most expensive and least effective pry-bar you'll ever own." You can insert pretty much anything in place of pry-bar (chisel, screwdriver, or hammer) and come to the same conclusion. but knives are precision cutting instruments. Using them for anything else will not only void your warranty, but probably damage your knife and possibly even yourself!

If you need to hack through a bone, open a can, or pry apart frozen hamburger patties, use the right tool for the job.

2.   Sharp Knives Are Safe Knives 

It may seem counter-intuitive, but a dull knife is much more likely to slip or twist when trying to cut items like tomatoes and onions. This, coupled with the fact that a dull knife requires more force to cut, means that working with a dull knife can be downright unpredictable. Sharp knives, on the other hand, will cut exactly where their edge is pointed, and as long as you keep your digits out of that trajectory, you'll be fine.

Keep your knives sharp by regularly using a steel or pull-through maintenance device and having them professionally sharpened every year or two.

3.   Safe Storage

The most terrifying kitchens to walk into are the ones with no knife block on the counter, no magnet bar on the wall, and no knives to be seen. These are the kitchens of predatory blades, lurking in gadget drawers, just waiting to leap out and slice an unsuspecting thumb or pinkie. Storing your knives loose in a drawer is not only dangerous for your hands; contact with other metal tools in your drawers can dull or chip your knife's thin edge, resulting in poor cutting ability.

Here are some safer storage options:

  • Knife Blocks
    Available in a variety of shapes, colors, and configurations, a good knife block will not only protect your knives but can also complement your kitchen decor. When storing knives in a block with vertical slots, make sure that the edge faces up-wards to prevent dulling.

  • Knife Drawers
    Each knife has its own slot, allowing you to store and organize your knives safely out of reach in a standard kitchen drawer.

  • Magnetic Bars
    Available in wood, synthetic material, or aluminum. Two extra strong magnetic segments provide a safe, easily visible, and space saving storage option. Plus, it looks really cool. Mounting materials are included with each magnet bar.

  • Knife Rolls
    An ideal method for professionals to store and transport their tools safely. It is recommended that each knife be stored in a separate knife saver before placing it in your roll.

  • Knife Savers
    Basically sheathes for your kitchen knives. This is a great way to safely store knives in a drawer or to transport them. Start by fully inserting the blade closest to the bolster into the open edge of the knife saver, then gently pressing the rest of the blade into the edge protector. 

4.   Cutting Surfaces

Do you know that noise a knife makes when it's used on a glass cutting board? That horrible, heart-wrenching sound is actually your dear knife screaming in pain at the torture that's being inflicted on it. Glass, marble, or granite cutting boards are harder than the knife being used on them, so they will dull your knife's edge almost immediately.

Use a wood or a hard polyethylene plastic cutting board. If you're unsure about a cutting board, use the scratch test: if your knife can make a scratch in your cutting board, it's safe to use. Cut marks on a cutting board are good signs!

5.   Cleaning Cutlery 

Although most knives are advertised as dishwasher safe, dishwashers are an incredibly harsh environment for your precision cutting tools. With the corrosive soap and grit flying about, your edge can be dulled and the finish marred if your knife sees too many dishwasher voyages.

We recommend hand-washing with soap and water. Maintenance steels can be wiped vertically from handle base to the tip with a vinegar dampened cloth to remove grease buildup and steel particles.

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