Kitchen knives needed budget £500?

Kitchen knives needed budget £500?

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Discussion

singlecoil

Original Poster:

34,154 posts

249 months

Yesterday (11:57)
quotequote all
My wife is fed up of her old Sabatiers which were never a set in the first place, and she'd like something a bit better. Sharpening might be an issue, I'm not much good at freehand knife sharpening so any suggestions on that aspect as well as the knives themselves would be much appreciated.

If paying more would be advisable then that would be ok.

Aunty Pasty

645 posts

41 months

Yesterday (12:30)
quotequote all
I wouldn't look to buy a set but just the knives you really need or would use. In a set there's usually one or two items which never really get used.

I would look for forged knives rather than stamped. You should try to see and feel the knives first-hand if you can. Everybody's grip is different and some handles may suit some more than others. Also see if the handles have any ridges or imperfections which may irritate when in use.

The other thing I would consider doing is shy away from brands that seem to be just on Amazon / Ebay and nowhere else. May be fake or deceptive marketing. Their selling point should not be how sharp the knife is. They're all sharp, out the factory.

I personally have and like Wusthof Ikon Classic but that's just one brand.

Jimjimhim

447 posts

3 months

Yesterday (13:04)
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You only need a couple of different types of knives in a kitchen and it's much better to buy a good one of each type rather than blowing £500 on a set. Use the left over money to get some knife skills training, that's much more worthwhile than an expensive knife that you don't know how to use.

Nightmare

5,206 posts

287 months

Yesterday (13:07)
quotequote all
I would suggest watching this video…..despite the slightly unusual delivery style!

https://youtu.be/AcLD4SKY9Js?si=cuteEjGTOrNKezeR

tomsugden

2,255 posts

231 months

Yesterday (15:23)
quotequote all
I wouldn't look any further than I O Shen, they're brilliant

https://ioshen.co.uk/product-category/all-knives/

Sebring440

2,120 posts

99 months

Yesterday (22:28)
quotequote all
singlecoil said:
My wife is fed up of her old Sabatiers which were never a set in the first place, and she'd like something a bit better. Sharpening might be an issue, I'm not much good at freehand knife sharpening so any suggestions on that aspect as well as the knives themselves would be much appreciated.

If paying more would be advisable then that would be ok.
https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&f=192&t=1962988

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...


LooneyTunes

7,045 posts

161 months

singlecoil said:
Sharpening might be an issue, I'm not much good at freehand knife sharpening so any suggestions on that aspect as well as the knives themselves would be much appreciated.
Look up the knife sharpening thread and send some of your money into a decent electric sharpener.

Fwiw I use a Chef’s Choice 1520, and really rate it.

oddman

2,450 posts

255 months

Jimjimhim said:
You only need a couple of different types of knives in a kitchen and it's much better to buy a good one of each type rather than blowing £500 on a set. Use the left over money to get some knife skills training, that's much more worthwhile than an expensive knife that you don't know how to use.
Agree. Focus on finding one knife that she really gels with. It's really personal and some eg. Global may feel like a toy to some people and Wüsthof might feel unwieldy and heavy to another.

Most of the knives in a knife set won't get an outing - if she's not doing butchering or fish prep the filleting knife won't be used. The specialist knives such as bread knives which come in sets are rarely as good as quite cheap alternatives. Opinel make an excellent bread knife and other specialist knives.

Sounds like you should be allocating a chunk of the budget to the sharpener and that electric one posted looks great.

21TonyK

11,669 posts

212 months

OP, have a good read of the links Sebring posted and this...

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

Discendo Discimus

427 posts

35 months

I have a fancy Japanese knife that I use daily:
https://cuttingedgeknives.co.uk/products/tsunehisa...

Probably a bit overkill though, with hindsight I'd probably get a cheap carbon steel chef's knife from https://www.nisbets.co.uk/ and buy some sharpening stones and a honing rod.

Lotobear

6,688 posts

131 months

Discendo Discimus said:
I have a fancy Japanese knife that I use daily:
https://cuttingedgeknives.co.uk/products/tsunehisa...

Probably a bit overkill though, with hindsight I'd probably get a cheap carbon steel chef's knife from https://www.nisbets.co.uk/ and buy some sharpening stones and a honing rod.
I purchased that one last year albeit with the European handle - I love it and it does everything I need in a single knife. A few drags on the ceramic 'steel' every now and then and it stays wonderfully sharp.

Discendo Discimus

427 posts

35 months

Lotobear said:
Discendo Discimus said:
I have a fancy Japanese knife that I use daily:
https://cuttingedgeknives.co.uk/products/tsunehisa...

Probably a bit overkill though, with hindsight I'd probably get a cheap carbon steel chef's knife from https://www.nisbets.co.uk/ and buy some sharpening stones and a honing rod.
I purchased that one last year albeit with the European handle - I love it and it does everything I need in a single knife. A few drags on the ceramic 'steel' every now and then and it stays wonderfully sharp.
Wonderful after a hone isn't it? I purposefully seek out dishes that involve finely chopped onions / tomatoes / herbs. Wife thinks I'm mad.

Lotobear

6,688 posts

131 months

Discendo Discimus said:
Lotobear said:
Discendo Discimus said:
I have a fancy Japanese knife that I use daily:
https://cuttingedgeknives.co.uk/products/tsunehisa...

Probably a bit overkill though, with hindsight I'd probably get a cheap carbon steel chef's knife from https://www.nisbets.co.uk/ and buy some sharpening stones and a honing rod.
I purchased that one last year albeit with the European handle - I love it and it does everything I need in a single knife. A few drags on the ceramic 'steel' every now and then and it stays wonderfully sharp.
Wonderful after a hone isn't it? I purposefully seek out dishes that involve finely chopped onions / tomatoes / herbs. Wife thinks I'm mad.
.....I still keep mine in it's box, in the drawer, and no one else is allowed to use it biggrin