RE: cook's country's unbiased review of knives
Hi folks!
My title is "tongue in cheek"! of course, they are biased!
They, and their sister show, "America's Test Kitchen", now have QVC as one of their contributing partnerss.
Now, to knives ... every show they do, and the YouTube videos from them on knives, always, always, always, return to the Victorinox Fibrox-handled chef knife, as their best choice. 'Hybrid knives', i.e., gyutos lose against that knife. Higher costing standard chef knives of reputable names, lose against that knife.
Now, why is that?
Because it's cheap in price! The guy with the bowtie is a miser!
(Never mind the guy is on record as flinging, um, 'dung' at all of us who blog about food.)
I have been around long enough to know that 'Chicago Cutlery' was a good brand. So was Oneida. There are Case chef knives, still is the retail packaging, floating around. The re-broadcast of "The French Chef" Julia Child PBS show, shows her with the older traditional 'triangular' French Sabatier design. The German knives were getting their names about, then came the Swiss. Then, the next hidden revolution came, of Japanese knives, with the creation of the Santoku, after WW2, and the discovery by foreigners of Japanese style chef knives patterned after European chef knives, but of course, with a Japanese difference, called gyutos. So, with all of this, the Cook's Country and America's Test Kitchen refuse to move beyond the Victorinox.
Now, from these eyes, I have seen how well Chicago Cutlery, when wooden grips were the standard. I remember a small cutlery store in Portland, Oregon, with the huge Wenger automated pocket knife in the store window display. I looked over all the different chef knives, from all over the world, including the 'safe/sanitary' huge white-handled knives. As a GI vet, I have learned a respect for Oriental knife makers. I will admit, Oriental chef knives have caught my attention, but my 'inner budget guy' was in full revolt, once I spied the price tag.
Since then, I had moved to New Orleans, and after Katrina, to Central Louisiana (i'm only 80 feet above sea level in mid-state!). No knife shops, no restuarant stores, so the poor computer has been busy.
I've always wanted to use a Santoku design knife. Now, after over a decade, I own a few different ones. I ordered a Columbia model. It had a nice big blade, but the grantons on the blade were for show. The summer sausage I was cutting, would not come away from the blade, granton or not! Now, here is the shocker. I bought a set, still in the retail packaging, of Masterchef Santoku knives, 7-inch, 5-inch, and 3-inch, for less than a Subway sandwich, chips, and a drink for you. So, having put down the Columbia in disgust, I grabbed the 7-inch Masterchef, and did a 'let's see'. It cut better. It RELEASED the same sausage that the Columbia would not! It felt better, lighter, and 'faster', whether with a home cook's hammer grip, finger on top grip, or a 'trying to be a chef' pinch grip. When washing that knife, I could still maintain a good grip on it, even under the faucet, with the other hand gripping the blade safely, and trying to just move it a smidgeon. The 'bolster area' had enough knuckle clearance, and 3/4 of an inch of dull flat blade at the heel square, should my hand slip just a little.
You might say that I found my Santoku, even if it is not a 'major heavy name of knives'. And, being 'high carbon stainless steel', it is sharpenable to the old standard angle of all American blades, without the possibility of 'messing up' the normal angles used by Japanese manufacturers. I have a 'butcher's steel', and a two oilstone set, so I'm ready.
(For a sharpening scare, on YouTube, look for Chaplin's restaurant. Why? The chef uses a hand-gripped-drag-across-the-blade sharpener across his Wustoff knife, in his 'knife skills' video.)
Happy New Year, folks!