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  2. Santoku - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santoku

    The santoku knife design originated in Japan, where traditionally a deba knife is used to cut fish, a gyuto knife is used to cut meat, and a nakiri knife is used to cut vegetables. This knife was created in the 1940s to combine the three virtues of each of these traditional knives into one universal generalist knife — the santoku bōchō. [1]

  3. Japanese kitchen knife - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_kitchen_knife

    This knife is a variant of the santoku, but instead of the sheep's foot tip, it has a "k-tip", also called a "reverse tanto". [citation needed] Nakiri — 菜切 — (lit: "vegetable cutter"). The square tip makes the knife feel more robust and secure than the pointed tip of the santoku or gyuto, which allows it to cut dense products at the tip ...

  4. The Best Santoku Knife for Slicing, Dicing and Mincing - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/best-santoku-knife-slicing...

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  5. Nakiri bōchō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nakiri_bōchō

    A nakiri blade is generally between 15 and 20 centimetres (6 and 8 inches) long. There are regional differences to the style of the knife tip with a sheep's foot drop tip on knives from Osaka, whereas the dominant style from Tokyo is for a squared tip giving a cleaver-like appearance — as seen in the second image.

  6. Kitchen knife - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitchen_knife

    A kitchen knife is any knife that is intended to be used in food preparation.While much of this work can be accomplished with a few general-purpose knives — notably a large chef's knife and a smaller serrated blade utility knife — there are also many specialized knives that are designed for specific tasks such as a tough cleaver, a small paring knife, and a bread knife.

  7. Caidao - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caidao

    Traditional knives had a simply-forged, carbon steel blade with a long, ground bevel, but the typical Chinese chef's knife is now a stamped blade. The traditional handle is a full-length tang that is only about 1 or 2 cm wide, which is passed through a metal cap, then through the center of a round, wood dowel, then bent over and hammered into ...