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Advice needed for learning knife skills

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    Advice needed for learning knife skills

    I need to better my knife skills as they are sorely lacking and I really do not know where to start. I hesitate to just go on the internet without some guidance as I do not want to get into any bad habits. help please.

    Where did you learn? Were you born with them? hee hee. Any advice is very welcome!

    Thanks in advance. Kim

    #2
    I found this video very informative when I watched it 3 years or so ago. I know I’ve watched many other knife skills videos on YouTube but this one was the first one that popped into my head so in my opinion it’s the one that had the most impact on me.

    Comment


    • KimO
      KimO commented
      Editing a comment
      Thank you ssandy_561, I will check this out!

    • KimO
      KimO commented
      Editing a comment
      ssandy_561, love it! will try his detox will use practice and make his detox chicken soup as he recommends!

    #3
    Chef Jean-Pierre's guide to using a knife like a Chef is very good.

    Comment


    • KimO
      KimO commented
      Editing a comment
      Thanks ecowper I really enjoyed this video and watched one other of his this afternoon. Thanks for the link.

    #4
    The two listed are good and Jacque Pepin has a book & mebbee a video. After that, just do a whole lot of choppin. Yup, a whole lotta choppin goin on. Hmm, I feel a tune comin on.

    Comment


    • KimO
      KimO commented
      Editing a comment
      Thank you. I'll look for a video by him!

    #5
    Chef JP's (above) is great, and Helen Rennie has done a few, she's pretty great too, here's one:

    Comment


    • KimO
      KimO commented
      Editing a comment
      Thanks, Bob K I'll watch this tomorrow, thanks for the link!

    • KimO
      KimO commented
      Editing a comment
      Bob K This video will help me a lot when I need to chop more leafy vegetables.. thank you! Very helpful!

    #6
    I've had this same question. Don't have the opportunity to just cut and chop a bunch of stuff, being just the two of us... but I understand that at some level practice does make perfect...

    Comment


    • xrodbob
      xrodbob commented
      Editing a comment
      Try getting some onions, carrots, celery and experiment. Save 2:1:1 parts of those diced items for a mirepoix which is a great base for turkey or chicken soups and can also be used in an Italian Bolognese sauce. Save some individually cut onions (and peppers) for cheese steak sandwiches, salads, etc. Freeze anything you cut that you will ultimately cook with heat in the future.
      The point is I find taking multiple veggies and practicing at all at once will help with the test fix test cycle.

    • DaveD
      DaveD commented
      Editing a comment
      Yeah, we use mirepoix, americois, and the trinity all the time. I could vac-seal the chopped up veggies to keep them fresh... hmm.

    • KimO
      KimO commented
      Editing a comment
      Looks like I have some shopping to do tomorrow... it will be a start...

    #7
    "You don't need knife skills -- just walk, don't run."

    I thought this 13 minute video by Adam Ragusea was very well done, helped me relax about how I chop/slice things, and probably has kept me from hurting myself in the kitchen.

    Comment


    • KimO
      KimO commented
      Editing a comment
      Thanks Michael_in_TX this did make me feel better, especially about how I have been holding my knife up til now! :-) I am trying these other ways of holding knives and the food, but good to know what I was doing wasn't necessarily 'wrong'.

    • Michael_in_TX
      Michael_in_TX commented
      Editing a comment
      KimO You're most welcome.

    #8
    I can't remember the chef but I have heard at least one celebrity chef met Anthony Bourdain and asked him for advice and Bourdain told him to go get a 5lb bag of potatoes and practice knife skills.

    Comment


    • CaptainMike
      CaptainMike commented
      Editing a comment
      Yep, don't overthink it.

    • HawkerXP
      HawkerXP commented
      Editing a comment
      Yup, a bag of spuds and a ...!

    #9
    Keep your knives sharp! S-A-N-F-O-R-D period. (IYKYK)

    Hand wash them, dry them right away. No drawers, I use a magnetic rack. No dishwasher.

    That said… what kinda skills are you looking for? Speed? Dexterity?

    Comment


    • KimO
      KimO commented
      Editing a comment
      ecowper I watched and saw that in his video. very informative video! I was making cinci chili today and followed his instructions to dice my onions. Will do some more tomorrow when have more time (and onions!).

    • JimLinebarger
      JimLinebarger commented
      Editing a comment
      I was wondering if I was the only one that washed their knives right away and put them away even before putting food on their plate.

    • Mosca
      Mosca commented
      Editing a comment
      JimLinebarger I do, too. As soon as I know I won’t be needing it again, it gets cleaned and stored.

    #10
    Central Market in my area held a hands on class for knife skills. They brought in a bunch of veggies that were ready to be discarded and let us chop away. It was great.

    Comment


    • KimO
      KimO commented
      Editing a comment
      That sounds like a lot of fun!! Doing it with other people too and learning from them as well.

    #11
    Amongst other skills, I learned most of my cooking from my mom (sometimes what “not” to do) and Alton Brown. I’ll have to go back an search, but he had a great episode on knives.

    Lots of great advice above. My knives NEVER see the inside of a dishwasher.

    Comment


    • KimO
      KimO commented
      Editing a comment
      I'll check out Alton Brown and knives. I don't remember where I learned it, but, I always hand wash my knives as well.

    #12
    All of the above stuff looks great. Just get some cheap veggies and start cutting. Get a ruler as well to help get a feel for different sizes. And make sure your knife is sharp!

    Comment


    • KimO
      KimO commented
      Editing a comment
      Thank you Pobeque. Great idea to have a ruler handy, thanks!

    • Alan Brice
      Alan Brice commented
      Editing a comment
      Just don't over think it. It is about not cutting yersef.

    #13
    Thank you all so much. These responses are all so very helpful. I have plenty to go on. I truly love this site for all the great advice and breadth of advice I can get. Thank you again.

    Comment


      #14
      I took a knife skills class years ago, at the local Publix Cooking School (which I think they have now disbanded, in person anyway.) They may have a video, as that is where they have moved most of the former cooking school stuff. I would think the videos mentioned above would all be similar.
      Helps to learn the differences between knives, what to use them for, like paring/boning/chopping/butchering. I would echo SheilaAnn re: keeping them sharp, and treating them well. I use a magnetic rack also, and have an old block with old knives that were my parents' wedding gift in 1957. I keep them sharpened by a mail in relatively local company I am very happy with, and the ones I keep in the block I put in upside down so the sharp side of blade is up in the air. Don't chop on your countertop or standard dishes, only on chopping blocks with some give, so they don't dull.
      Can't help but add, since I spent a lot of my life in ERs, those gloves that prevent you from slicing your fingers off are really a good idea, especially with the more lethal tools like mechanical slicers and mandolines. Oh, and never stick the point of a knife into an avocado, in the palm of your hand, and try to pry out the pit. I've seen many Sunday morning hand wounds that were the result.

      Comment


      • KimO
        KimO commented
        Editing a comment
        Thanks for the advice, I will look for the videos and buy some gloves. Your description of ER patients acorgihouse turned my stomach enough for me to be leery! :-)

      • ecowper
        ecowper commented
        Editing a comment
        safest way to remove avocado pit is hold the half avocado in palm of your hand and lightly tap the blade of a knife into the pit. It should go in 1/8 inch, or so. Twist the pit with the knife and it will come right out. Easy peasy.

      • Brian_M
        Brian_M commented
        Editing a comment
        My wife bought this for me after I sliced my thumb open while trying to remove the pit from an avocado using the method ecowper describes. I had done it successfully a couple hundred times. One failure led to an Urgent Care visit and some stitches from a Doc who was kind of amused.

        The Ultimate 3-in-1 Tool for Effortless Prep - Cut, Pit, and Slice Like a Pro with our Multi-Functional Avocado Knife - Enhance Your Culinary Experience Today!" https://a.co/d/7DpT34w
        Last edited by Brian_M; December 7, 2023, 05:26 PM. Reason: Edited to correct some spelling errors.

      #15
      I read (or saw, I don’t remember) that carrots and onions are the two. I remember an episode of Restaurant Impossible where Irvine gave a kid a huge bag of carrots and showed him how to make matchsticks, then left him alone to learn.

      Most, if not all, videos are the same, because the act involved is simple and repetitive. The teaching is different.

      A good knife. It doesn’t have to be expensive, there are great cheap knives out there. Keep it sharp, keep it honed. I sharpen mine once or twice a year, I hone it every other use. I always tell people Victorinox, but that’s only because it’s the one I always remember, and I have to look up the other good choices. These have gone up, but only $7 since I got one in 2014:

      Victorinox Swiss Army 5.2063.20-X4 Fibrox Straight Chef's Knife Black 8 in https://a.co/d/dn5OhPU

      Once you start cutting, you’ll figure out the motion pretty quickly. Straight down usually doesn’t work! But a small glide, and the blade moves freely.

      A bag of carrots is a couple bucks, same with a bag of onions. Watch a couple vids, they’ll all be the same. Then start cutting!

      Michael_in_TX has a good point: take it slow. That’s my way, too. It’s not a race. I’m still a mess with carrots; I do the rounds well, and dicing is fine, but I am terrible with matchsticks. Oh well. I’m good with onions!

      Comment


      • Mosca
        Mosca commented
        Editing a comment
        SheilaAnn oh right, I forgot to add save all the stuff you chop! When I practiced, I did celery too, so that I would have a mirepoix for soup!

      • KimO
        KimO commented
        Editing a comment
        Carrots and onions it is! Plus apples also. I'm told we have apple breakfast bars in our very near future! Hoping to get some time on the chopping block tomorrow! hah!

      • PGH_RAM
        PGH_RAM commented
        Editing a comment
        I definitely agree with the Victorinox recommendation. I've been using their Fibrox chef's knife for a couple of years now and I prefer it to my Wusthof. It takes a beautiful edge when I sharpen it, too.

        I recently bought a set of Victorinox Fibrox breaking and boning knives. The factory edges were like razors and they made short work of the hog I was breaking down.

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