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What are your favorite kitchen knives?
Hello all,
As many of you know, one of my hobbies is knife making and I got into it due to kitchen knives. So I was curious on what are your guys favorite knives? Style, handle, maker, materials, etc.
Right now I have been taking advantage of the popularity of Japanese knives and got a couple yanagi ba and santoku bōchō. Even made a usuba bōchō for a trade with another maker. I also have a nice 16" fillet knife I used with slicing the bacon up that I did recently. Most of mine are kit knives that I've done for practice over the years since, like most makers, I never have enough time to make one for me.
Jim
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My wife and I received a set of Henckel Pro-S knives fro our wedding ten years ago. We use them everyday.
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I like the sharp ones. Although, the doctors have said I can not have sharp things yet.
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Nothing cuts the cake like my Bowie knife, Jim. It was made by Wick Ellerbe, and may still be featured on his webby. I had it fashioned after the Musso Bowie, using the same dimensions, but with my initials.
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All but one of my main knives are Wustof Trident Classics. I also keep one santoku and a Chinese chef's knife in carbon steel.
I'm pretty obsessive about the sharpness of knives in my kitchen, and I cook quite a bit, so I've got several high-grit stones (up to 12,000) a steel and a very wide strop that see frequent use.
Now if i could just keep my wife from cutting on the stainless counter top and leaving nicks in the blade of one particular knife...
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The one I use most often is a Rada 10" chef that I bought from the church ladies' group. All my knives need sharpening, by the way.
--dbh
When given a choice, most people will choose.
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I have a basic set of Wiltshire stainless knives with wooden handles. In decreasing order of size they are: chef's, slicer, utility, and paring. These are augmented by a Chinese cleaver (full stainless construction) for heavy chopping and an Ikea serrated knife for bread. The one that sees the most use is definitely the chef's knife, probably because one of my first jobs after high school was working in a kitchen that only had those types of knives 
I have tried a santoku and my mom has a set of Shun kitchen knives but I have not yet acquired the technique to benefit from the way they are constructed.
Back when I had access to more tools, I made a chef's knife out of a higher carbon steel. It was a great cutting tool but the blade got very stained and I had to coat it with oil between use to prevent it from rusting.
Even though my knives are basic, they do the job because I keep them sharp. I touch them up with the steel after each washing to keep the edge straight and sharpen as necessary with a Spyderco Triangle Sharpmaker. The latter is particularly useful because it sets a consistent angle and removes a minimum of stock.
- Justitia et fortitudo invincibilia sunt
- An t'arm breac dearg
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I use Wustof Gourmet knives... quality blades w/o being horrendously expensive. I used to have a set of Wustof Classics, too... better balance and overall blade, but I hrm, lost those.
 Originally Posted by artificer
I'm pretty obsessive about the sharpness of knives in my kitchen, and I cook quite a bit, so I've got several high-grit stones (up to 12,000) a steel and a very wide strop that see frequent use.
12k grit?! Man, that's about what I use for my straight razors!!! I figured that'd put too fine an edge on a normal knife...
elim
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I have a trio of Mundial knives -- French and two small blades. We recently got a 7-inch santoku as a gift and it's seeing a lot of use. Aside from those, I have a nice curved skinning knife that my grandfather made 100 years ago that still gets used, a couple of large knives that I use to cut pizza, and a knife that was originally sold as a cleaver.
That last one cost me 37 cents new, including tax, at a clearance store. Far too light to be a cleaver, and hollow ground besides, it makes a dandy slice-and-dice in the Chinese fashion. It amuses me to use it, considering what I've paid for good knives over the years.
Dr. Charles A. Hays
The Kilted Perfesser
Laird in Residence, Blathering-at-the-Lectern
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 Originally Posted by lethearen
I use Wustof Gourmet knives... quality blades w/o being horrendously expensive. I used to have a set of Wustof Classics, too... better balance and overall blade, but I hrm, lost those.
12k grit?!  Man, that's about what I use for my straight razors!!! I figured that'd put too fine an edge on a normal knife...
I actually use the reverse side of the 12k wet stone for my straight razor as well.
It's really just a light pass or two on the Wustofs, nothing like I give to the santoku (which I use for sashimi and other decorative one-draw cuts).
Like I said, I'm pretty obsessive about my knives being SHARP 
ith:
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