Equipment Review: Best Santoku Knives & Our Testing Winners

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  • čas přidán 27. 07. 2024
  • Buy our Winning Santoku Knife: bit.ly/44NYdnL
    Buy our Best Buy Santoku Knife: bit.ly/4aw2Owf
    Behind the Testing: bit.ly/2xmc9ok
    Full testing details and ranking chart: bit.ly/2h7Kule
    We tested 10 santoku knives to find the best one (listed in alphabetical order):
    Global G-48 7" Santoku Hollow Ground Knife
    Kramer by Zwilling J.A. Henckels Euroline Essential Collection 7" Santoku Knife
    MAC Superior Santoku 6 1/2"
    Mercer Culinary Genesis 7" Forged Santoku
    Misono UX10 Santoku 7.0"
    OXO Good Grips Pro 6.5" Santoku Knife
    Shun Classic 7-in. Hollow-Ground Santoku
    Victorinox Swiss Army Fibrox Pro 7" Granton Blade Santoku Knife
    Wüsthof Classic 7" Santoku, Hollow Edge
    Zwilling Pro 7" Hollow Edge Rocking Santoku Knife
    With its petite build and curved tip, this friendly-looking Japanese blade is giving Western-style chef’s knives a run for their money. But does it offer something unique?
    Keep your knives sharp with the best knife sharpeners: • Equipment Review: Best...
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    WINNING TRAITS OF A GOOD SANTOKU KNIFE
    - Slim, sharp cutting edge that retains its sharpness
    - Slim tip for precision work
    - Narrow spine (top edge of blade), less than 2 mm
    - Handle of moderate width and length, and neutral shape, so it is comfortable in various hands and grips
    - Handle that doesn’t become slippery when hands are wet or greasy
    - Spine that isn’t sharp, facilitating pinch grip
    - Good balance between handle and blade
    WHAT WE TESTED
    We tested 10 santoku knives and also compared their feel and performance to that of our favorite chef’s knife, the Victorinox Swiss Army Fibrox Pro 8" Chef’s Knife. We measured the knives’ blade length, blade angle, and spine thickness. All knives were purchased online.
    RATING CRITERIA
    Performance: We minced fresh herbs, diced onions, broke down whole raw chickens into parts, and quartered unpeeled butternut squashes. To assess precision, we cut carrots into matchsticks and sliced slightly frozen boneless steak against the grain into uniform slivers (a technique used when preparing beef for Vietnamese pho). Knives that sliced smoothly and helped us complete the tasks with crisp cuts and neat results scored highest. We also assessed the sharpness of each knife before and after testing by slicing sheets of copy paper; blades that started sharp and stayed that way rated highest.
    Ease of Use: Throughout testing we rated the knives on how comfortable and easy they were to hold and use, evaluating the handle shape, spine sharpness (if we used a pinch grip), weight, and balance of the blade. Six testers of varying heights and handedness, including three proficient with knives and three self-described knife novices, chopped onions and rated the knives. Knives rated higher if most testers found them comfortable and easy to use.
    ABOUT US: Located in Boston’s Seaport District in the historic Innovation and Design Building, America's Test Kitchen features 15,000 square feet of kitchen space including multiple photography and video studios. It is the home of Cook’s Illustrated magazine and Cook’s Country magazine and is the workday destination for more than 60 test cooks, editors, and cookware specialists. Our mission is to test recipes over and over again until we understand how and why they work and until we arrive at the best version.
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Komentáře • 646

  • @hawk0485
    @hawk0485 Před 4 lety +46

    This is pure 100% information with no fat. I love it. Great job!

    • @A.Dude.
      @A.Dude. Před rokem

      Sadly, the Victorinox part is not accurate...

  • @Vanillaska
    @Vanillaska Před 5 lety +13

    These videos are just so well done. Please keep making them!

  • @prime5056
    @prime5056 Před 5 lety +7

    What a magnificent job you guys are doing. The videos are so well produced and incredibly thorough.

  • @arlenekufchock1394
    @arlenekufchock1394 Před 6 lety +14

    Thank you for this review - I'm sticking with my chef knives I already have because of you!

  • @markalancirino
    @markalancirino Před 4 lety +62

    I own a sandwich shop and use a J.A. Henckels Santoku knife for just about everything. Meat, cheese, veggies, even bread. It slices corned beef thin as paper and goes through soft rolls like air. I do have keep it sharpened, though, but it's not a big deal. One advantage of the Santoku is it's very handy as a scooper, for things like chopped onions.

    • @rdaltry777
      @rdaltry777 Před 4 lety

      I have Henckels Zwilling Pro S and Gourmet knives. I love the Pro S knives. I like the Gourmet knives.

    • @MalaysiaBarista
      @MalaysiaBarista Před 4 lety

      @@rdaltry777 I have one of this after I saw Gordon Ramsey using it, it is wonderful

    • @ShovelChef
      @ShovelChef Před 3 lety

      I keep hearing about these Zwilling Henckels knives. I have some knives I like, and I almost can't justify spending more money on knives, but it might only be a matter of time before I get a Zwilling. 😅 Maybe I'll save up for a Bob Kramer. Those things are gorgeous.

    • @scalp340
      @scalp340 Před 24 dny

      I've been looking to retire my cheap Santoku and trying to settle on a good value inexpensive (but not cheap) upgrade. After a few reviews/comparisons and some research to figure out the best bang for my buck. A Henckels Santoku seemed like it was the best of both worlds, very reasonably priced for a single knife and super sharp (also seems to hold and edge pretty well too). Then here I come across your comment, more confirmation that Henckles is the way.

  • @guguigugu
    @guguigugu Před 6 lety +42

    the winner is almost a chef's knife. a true santoku, liek this best buy, has a a triangular profile - the handle is at an angle with the blade edge, not almost parallel. this makes it better suitable for chopping, which is how most asian chefs use a knife, as opposed to a rocking motion used in the west.

    • @seikibrian8641
      @seikibrian8641 Před 5 lety +9

      Also, Western knife technique often involves a pushing-forward movement, whereas Japanese technique more-frequently pulls back.

    • @emeukal7683
      @emeukal7683 Před 4 lety

      Santoku is a nakiri that got a tip. Then Japanese noticed how good rocking can be any they got a curve. Triangular? nope.do u mean a deba?

    • @MrsRen
      @MrsRen Před 4 lety +3

      Seriously. I wanted a santoku, not a short chef's knife.

    • @indrajitgupta3280
      @indrajitgupta3280 Před 3 lety +1

      @@seikibrian8641 I find this the precise definition of the difference between the two. With my cheap Santoku, that, however, remains sharpened, it is easy to slice through almost all veggies pulling back. That same veggie won't cooperate if I rock the knife, or push it. With a chef knife, both rocking and (sort of) pushing is all right.

    • @ShovelChef
      @ShovelChef Před 3 lety

      Funny thing, when I was shopping for knives for a few days, I bought two of them based on shape, almost back to back, for exactly these reasons. I have one reeeally flat santoku that I like for chopping, and a more curved one I love for slicing. I already had a 8" chef's knife that I could use for almost anything, but these 6" santoku quickly became my favorites.

  • @yokie52
    @yokie52 Před 3 lety +2

    Love these legit, impartial reviews..very hard to find! Thank you!

  • @novembersky9601
    @novembersky9601 Před 3 lety +1

    This lady is the best; these videos are the best. I'm truly impressed and my cookware is improved!

  • @stevegrooms1142
    @stevegrooms1142 Před 5 lety +10

    Because I'm a writer, I pay attention to writing in all the venues where I encounter it. This video is written exceptionally well. She compresses a great deal of information in a short time span while covering the topic clearly. Well done!

    • @YNGM1991
      @YNGM1991 Před 9 měsíci

      Have u written any books?

  • @johnhumphries4632
    @johnhumphries4632 Před 5 lety +2

    Hey Lisa ❤️ thanks for what y’all do.

  • @daniellebeach690
    @daniellebeach690 Před 3 lety

    Incredibly informative. Wow. Looking for a narrow spine santoku knife now -- already have my chef's knife! Thank you!!

  • @5thpixel
    @5thpixel Před rokem

    love all of your videos. they have been so helpful to me as a VERY novice home cook! thanks!

  • @deeblack9393
    @deeblack9393 Před 4 lety +5

    I have a knife set made by Mercer that I got from the Culinary Job Training program that I went through and all of the knives in the set work just fine.

  • @firehandszarb
    @firehandszarb Před 5 lety +27

    I like the finesse of the santoku, it feels much more comfortable/appropriate when making thin slices of vegetables or cutting into strips like peppers. Santoku is also good for cutting bread without tearing it or making lots of crumbs. My first santoku actually got stolen, probably the guy that took it had never seen a knife that sharp before. Also it might seem odd, but i would probably not try to cut through a squash like that, a utility knife might actually be better, push the knife into the squash and work your way round (we dont really have squash that much in the UK tho).

    • @pragawa
      @pragawa Před 5 lety

      Thanks

    • @emeukal7683
      @emeukal7683 Před 4 lety +2

      To cut sqash there's cleaver or like a big chef knife. You gotta try a sharp Chef knife before making your statement, santoku is the same type of knife, boring all-round. Try s good nakiri for veggies... that's a specialist.

    • @moreknow8904
      @moreknow8904 Před 2 lety +1

      Technique is important too w/ squash. One method: 1) cut off top & bottom so have flat stability; 2) slice down around skin like one would a melon.

  • @prestonlhouse
    @prestonlhouse Před 4 lety +4

    I loved mine when I had it. Actually used it more than my chef's knife. I need to get another

  • @raylarkin5004
    @raylarkin5004 Před 5 lety +18

    ATK has many virtues. Great cook, incredible recipes, easy techniques and of course, the non cook staff like Lisa, Adam, Jack, etc.
    I like how comprehensive her very focused and well detailed reporting is. Just all around good stuff!

  • @lisalisa3110
    @lisalisa3110 Před 4 lety +216

    I seriously need to stop watching these reviews, I bought 3 knifes just this month!

    • @alalz5848
      @alalz5848 Před 4 lety +1

      buy one when watch one

    • @Lughnerson
      @Lughnerson Před 4 lety +8

      Jacque Pepin in another video said you only need 3 knives: a short (3-4") paring, medium (6") slicing, and large chef's knife. "But I have 300 knives at home!"

    • @berksarioz969
      @berksarioz969 Před 3 lety +2

      @@Lughnerson it's nice having granton/hollow edge santoku along with chef knife. One short one as well. Also multiple paring knives cause you need them all day and it's easier to wash a few at once 😁
      So I reckon 8 to 10 is a good number!

    • @MohanLal-pp1qq
      @MohanLal-pp1qq Před 3 lety

      If you really love to knife work with any kind of bulk kitchen like hotel ,resturant or flights kitchen ! You may deeply enjoying to knife their 🔪🔪🔪👏👏👏🖒🖒🖒💖💖💖💖

    • @ShovelChef
      @ShovelChef Před 3 lety

      Yup. You're one of us. 😌🔪

  • @wilhelmtaylor9863
    @wilhelmtaylor9863 Před 5 lety +5

    Füri 5" Santoku, under $50. Been using if for a year and it's amazing.

    • @devivinod
      @devivinod Před 4 lety

      thank you does it cut fish bone like bass and some meat/ chicken bones is it called Furi trisha thats what i found when i googled

  • @John-mu2js
    @John-mu2js Před 2 lety

    My Kitchenaid Santoku knife was $35 & I love it so much I got another one for a spare. It's got a full tang with a great wooden handle & it stays sharp. Don't sleep on it.

  • @peter-radiantpipes2800
    @peter-radiantpipes2800 Před 5 lety +5

    I’ve got a few Santoku knives from $50-200 and used them for ten years but I’ve moved back to chef’s knives as my most used knife again now. I still use them daily but not as much a my 8 and 10” chef’s knives. I like the Dalstrong Shogun Santoku the most of my bunch. more than the more upswept Shun but even a cheaper Henkle works well.

    • @harrymurphey2634
      @harrymurphey2634 Před 4 lety

      ... I have a draw full of kitchen knives ... and you are right, the Dalstrong Gladiator or Shogun series are my favorites ... love the 7" Shogun Santuko (the 5" I can't use as I beat my knuckles to death because of short blade height) ... the Shogun Kirutsuko is also a excellent knife too.
      I also have a 8" Sabatier Chef Knife, w/ (3) brass rivets, a wooden handle that I treasure ... that a friend who was a professional Chef gave me ...
      Each knife is different and is used for different tasks ... but they are all sharp !!!

  • @katherineperkins9668
    @katherineperkins9668 Před 6 lety

    Awesome video,thanks for sharing this review!

  • @jblyon2
    @jblyon2 Před 3 lety

    I have one of these from Chicago Cutlery. I bought it in college (aka it was cheap, $25-30 at most). It's been dulled by countless trips through the dishwasher, dinged to hell, and resharpened several times. I have no idea how it's still as sharp as it is, but to this day it sits in my fancy Wusthof knife block with the expensive boys and is my go-to for any vegetable chopping.

  • @clintondavis3363
    @clintondavis3363 Před 3 lety +2

    For years I've just used the Chicago cutlery set gifted to us as a wedding present. I added a couple of knives. Not sure that the home cook needs both a Chef Knife and a Santoku. I primarily use a smallish 7" Chef Knife and a couple of paring knives for fruits and veggies. I have a stiff bladed small boning knife for trimming meats, ... and there's a double-sided long and thin serrated knife that slices bread and is helpful for anything where you want a "bit more tooth" to penetrate what you are cutting. My wife uses a serrated utility knife to cut tomatoes for her salad. There's a big, cheap knife that is my kitchen hacker. Add to that a pair of kitchen shears and seems to just about cover everything. I used a simple hand sharpener from the hardware store that got a reasonable edge on the knives, which aren't really hard steel. I just sharpen the knives before putting them up. Recently, ... I did get the electric Chef's Mate sharpener (diamond cutting at 15 degree angle) which has made it a breeze to get a knife sharp. I would like to get a finishing whetstone to polish the edge just a bit, but it's not really needed. For a home cook, who isn't preparing multiple meals every single day, ... I think it is more practical to have a knife that can sharpen quickly. It also is usually more practical for a professional, meat processing plant butcher to have a knife that sharpens quickly. Professional chefs have another standard and may prefer harder steel. But for the home cook, the weight and feel, and ease of sharpening, is likely more important factors. The feel of a knife may have a lot to do with what you are used to. My Dad gave me a large German knife, thinking that I'd appreciate having a large knife in my collection. However, it was awkward and I much preferred sticking with 7" Chicago Chef Knife. I swapped the big knife out for a German boning knife. Dad had big hands, so what fit his hand was not what fit mine. Glade to see ATK reviewing the Santoku. I like the shorter length and width of the blade to gather up chopped food from the board, ... but, honestly, it seems redundant to a chef knife for a home cook. If I was to advise someone starting out, ... I'd suggest that they go to store and get a feel of the shapes and sizes. I'm sorta in agreement with Jaques Pepin - all you need is about 3 knives. If I had to just have 3, I'd have the Chef Knife, a paring knife, and a serrated/bread knife. After that, ... it would be a boning knife, but you could get a utility knife for that matter. And, ... it's always handy to have a large beater knife or cleaver to hack with. As it is, I don't use knives that made their way into my kitchen as gifts. I can't imagine what people do with dozens of knives - that's going beyond the practical, day-to-day, needs of a home cook. As for criticism of the ATK reviews and recommendations. I think they strive to fit the recommendations to practical decisions and they offer a couple of choices: the best, ... and the runner-up, which usually is a cheaper alternative.

  • @kirkarthur8137
    @kirkarthur8137 Před 3 lety +3

    Damn!!!😳really didn't know there was so much involved in knife selection,this lady is very educated and well informed on this matter.I will never look at knives the same way again.

  • @Koi-studio
    @Koi-studio Před 6 lety +5

    I’ve had the Mac Superior Santoku for at least for 5 years now. It’s still going great, what a bargain.

    • @richardx4456
      @richardx4456 Před 6 lety

      Hi Bro, can you send me the link for your knife here? thx!

    • @Koi-studio
      @Koi-studio Před 6 lety +2

      Here you go man. smile.amazon.com/Mac-Knife-Superior-Santoku-2-Inch/dp/B0006MM4RE/ref=sr_1_1?s=home-garden&ie=UTF8&qid=1529444778&sr=1-1&keywords=mac+superior+santoku+knife

  • @wilhelmpaulm
    @wilhelmpaulm Před rokem +1

    I only use 1 santoku knife for everything. It replaced all my old knives when I moved to a smaller apartment. I've never looked back ever since.

  • @leegreen159
    @leegreen159 Před 5 dny

    I love these videos. I happened to see a rerun of an episode where Adam Reid makes a similar presentation. You guys are great. One reason I was interested is because I was considering buying a vegetable cleaver, but since I had a santoku I wondered if I needed one. Adam said that part of the growth of the santoku in popularity is because it was in part intended to replace a vegetable cleaver. This are all so informative, and even though I don't cook as much as I like, I really enjoy the education.

  • @73twall
    @73twall Před 6 lety +2

    AHA! It wasn't all in my head! I bought a Faberware Santoku in 2005, and I absolutely loved it. After losing the knife after a breakup, I recently purchased another one (Victorinox this time). However, I immediately noticed how rounded the belly was. I swore my old one was almost dead flat. There was a slight bow at the tip, but that was it. I got used to that profile, and am having trouble finding it again.
    I thought maybe my memory was failing me. Thanks. Great video.

    • @Pseudo_Boethius
      @Pseudo_Boethius Před 5 lety

      If you want a kitchen knife with a nice, straight edge, look for a "Nakari" or "Kiritsuke" knife from one of the Japanese knife companies. They will be expensive, about $100 to $200 each, but well worth it if you like a straight edge knife.

    • @deezynar
      @deezynar Před 5 lety +1

      Go to second hand shops, they sell old knives. You might run into a knife like your old one. Plus, it will be cheap!

  • @Ms2cents
    @Ms2cents Před 4 lety +1

    Nice review but I still love my Global knife. Had it for years and still perform well. I do have a sharpening tool to maintain it so that helps.

  • @Joseph1NJ
    @Joseph1NJ Před 6 lety +1

    I can't remember the last time I watched a thorough and complete review that answered all of my questions. Well done ATK!

  • @nadtz
    @nadtz Před 4 lety

    After playing with a bunch of decent but inexpensive knives I've settled on a gyuto, a nakiri and a standard chef's knife. They all have perfectly good uses but if you just want to cut stuff a chef's knife works just fine.

  • @fevkin
    @fevkin Před 5 lety

    An excellent comprehensive review

  • @protheu5
    @protheu5 Před 5 lety

    I liked Sabatier santoku knife. I used different ones, but this one was the most useful for me.

  • @NeechiGaming
    @NeechiGaming Před 4 lety

    I recently Joined a culinary Program that is run by Red seal chefs (From Canada) and second week was when Knife skills were taught to me, how to properly Hold a knife and How to cut Vegetables and how Butcher a Whole chicken from the store, I fell love with using this knife, the Curve makes for easy rocking motion chopping, The rounded end makes it less intimidating, and dang Did I have to cut a crap ton of onions with it on my second day of knife skills. I bought one for myself During my 3rd week in the program.

  • @yogensubba7904
    @yogensubba7904 Před 4 lety +1

    i didn't know that story but always my eye on santoku. I found it beautiful shape of knife to buy or have it.

  • @KevinSmith-qi5yn
    @KevinSmith-qi5yn Před 6 lety +628

    Sometimes I question is the tester really a novice. Then you showed the tester chopping onion like me. I find the evidence satisfactory that they are a novice.

    • @otonashiizumi9026
      @otonashiizumi9026 Před 6 lety +28

      2:09 surprised they still have fingers 😑

    • @judsonkr
      @judsonkr Před 6 lety +14

      HAHA yeah. That was brutal.

    • @toadamine
      @toadamine Před 5 lety +9

      That novice shouldn't be allowed around sharp objects!

    • @dangarrison4507
      @dangarrison4507 Před 4 lety +30

      Did no one listen to the narration? The whole point to that section was that they had an amateur test the knives in order to get feedback in addition to the trained testers. So it was intentional that he sucked-in fact, the whole point.

    • @itomba
      @itomba Před 4 lety +10

      Dan Garrison comprehension is a lost art in today’s society.

  • @AllanTingey
    @AllanTingey Před 6 lety +213

    I have two Santoku and Chef's knife. I use which ever one is clean :)

    • @moezzdiorfly
      @moezzdiorfly Před 4 lety +1

      FACS bro😂

    • @doozy.5494
      @doozy.5494 Před 4 lety

      Honestly me

    • @bl6973
      @bl6973 Před 4 lety +1

      Question: because Santoku have a 30/70 bevel how do you sharpen them?

    • @hello.itsme.5635
      @hello.itsme.5635 Před 3 lety +5

      A good chef will never have a good knive laying around dirty 😉

    • @VestigialHead
      @VestigialHead Před 3 lety

      @@bl6973 Use a diamond sharpening stone to sharpen them.

  • @berksarioz969
    @berksarioz969 Před 3 lety +1

    I really like the soft handles of Mercer knives that cost 15-20 bucks for santoku/chef. Your hand just merges with the knife.

  • @Gollammeister
    @Gollammeister Před 5 lety

    I just bought my first SANTOKU knife as my former cooks knife broke luckily it's cheap made blade handle saved me from a potentially nasty injury I'm happy with what I paid plus mine has a 20 yr garauntee and yup the blade Is crazily sharp I nearly cut my finger getting it out of packaging

  • @bobkoure
    @bobkoure Před 4 lety +3

    If you want the flat belly of the older santokus, maybe try a nakiri (basically a usuba with a double sided bevel). Some of the newer nakiris have a rounded profile near the tip, so keeping the front of the knife down isn't out of the question - but, like the usuba, they're more for push-cutting.
    Also those winner-knives don't look to be particularly comfortable for a pinch grip, angle from choil to blade too abrupt.
    Finally, you can round down the spine of the blade and the back of the heel where your fingers some in contact in a pinch grip. Whoever you go to for knife sharpening can do this, or get some #600 wet-dry emery paper at the local hardware store. There's no need for a knife to make your hand hurt.

  • @audiofella5066
    @audiofella5066 Před 5 lety +2

    Ive had the oxo the one they hated on for 2 years now its been awesome, very sharp and i sharpen all my blades myself when they get dull. And it only cost me $20

    • @ShovelChef
      @ShovelChef Před 3 lety

      I'm curious if you had trouble with the squash. That seems to be their main complaint on the chart, although it's right in the middle for blade thickness. Personally I like a large handle too.

    • @audiofella5066
      @audiofella5066 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ShovelChef I dont eat much squash so couldn't say but no problems with potatoes, onions or tomatoes though, I personally sharpen all my knives so they all work good to about the same level, but I like this knife for the in hand feel is comfortable and the blade profile is nice and it's cheap so I can beat up on it if I wanted to not that i do lol

  • @AJ3000_
    @AJ3000_ Před 6 lety +1

    I have a MAC and Victoria, no complaints from this home 👨🏽‍🍳 I use them everyday.

  • @drrogerwilkinson330
    @drrogerwilkinson330 Před 9 měsíci

    This was a well-considered review and gives me food for thought. We mainly eat vegetables. Cutting and cooking veges is a pleasant experience (especially where there is just two of us). The feel and look of a knife is an important consideration. This review will help me buy my new knife.

  • @kentonkirkpatrick5225
    @kentonkirkpatrick5225 Před 3 lety

    I like the large Santoku blade for scooping up what I just cut.

  • @1998TDM
    @1998TDM Před 5 lety

    I was given a cheap Santoku which I really enjoyed using at home so I bought a good one for work, Chef funnily enough. I hoped the smaller and less leveraged knife would be easier on my wrist which is knackered after decades of chopping and pan rattling. Faced with a decent sized chopping board and mis en place for 150 I was distinctly underwhelmed despite the quality and sharpness of the blade. Too much effort required with the shorter blade. Poor thing sits in the knife roll while the old faithful Shun classic continues to do the hard yards. Their is a lot to be said for the western chefs knife despite my fascination with Japanese designs. I'm learning how to fillet with a Deba, that's a review I would love to see. Really enjoying these videos, thank you.

  • @ek7235
    @ek7235 Před 6 lety

    I enjoyed the brief history behind the knife.

  • @martinraboy5971
    @martinraboy5971 Před 7 měsíci

    I loved this review. Really wanted to know about the grantons as I always found them to be superfluous. I love atk.

  • @johnlonergan7145
    @johnlonergan7145 Před 6 lety +2

    I have been using the sujeo santoku knife for more than 6 months and I love it. There is no way I would pay $200 for a knife. I could go on vacation for that.

    • @garthhendricks2607
      @garthhendricks2607 Před 4 lety +4

      What the hell kind of vacation are you doing for 200.00 dollars?

  • @Beatprisoner
    @Beatprisoner Před 5 měsíci

    Excellent review and very informative. Thanks a lot!

  • @TheDaytripper114
    @TheDaytripper114 Před 5 lety

    Love these videos!

  • @YuliSayuri
    @YuliSayuri Před 2 lety +6

    I'm from Japan and mainly use Santoku (by Wüstof), which has a great balance for smaller hands. Rarely touch chef's knife. Maybe because it's more familiar to Santoku which is easier for Japanese cutting methods like thread thin cut or super fine chopping.

    • @slickrick8046
      @slickrick8046 Před 2 lety +1

      Well that makes sense because chef knives were made for European style cooking.

    • @mattcookre73
      @mattcookre73 Před 9 měsíci

      Do you use the 14 cm or the 17 cm long Wüstof Santoku ?

    • @YuliSayuri
      @YuliSayuri Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@mattcookre73 long (regular length)

    • @mattcookre73
      @mattcookre73 Před 9 měsíci

      @@YuliSayuri
      Oh, that is a surprise for me .
      You mentioned your small hands, so I guessed you would use the smaller one .
      I just ordered a Suncraft Senzo Classic Santoku 10 cm for a great price, hope it's doing well. The regular size is 16,7 cm.

    • @YuliSayuri
      @YuliSayuri Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@mattcookre73 I believe handle size is not so different??? Only blade length.
      Regular people don’t use a small knife for cooking in Japan. We have a small “kudamono knife for cutting and peeling fruit, but Santoku can handle that fine.
      I tried other makers Santoku, but their Santoku had perfect weight and balance for me. Still using it for over 2 decades

  • @mealsinasnap1526
    @mealsinasnap1526 Před 6 lety

    Pretty happy with my global knives

  • @lunarlegend8924
    @lunarlegend8924 Před 4 lety +1

    if i was going to buy one it'd be the MAC. it preformed pretty well and i actually really like how it looks

  • @maxamillion26093
    @maxamillion26093 Před 2 lety +2

    My dad used one that was at our cabin that we rented and he loved it, after using it myself I’m inclined to agree. I wish I could buy one now that I’m out of the house and on my own.

    • @Murimz
      @Murimz Před 2 lety

      You can rent a knife?

    • @maxamillion26093
      @maxamillion26093 Před 2 lety

      @@Murimz I meant we rented the cabin we stayed at not the mnife

    • @Murimz
      @Murimz Před 2 lety

      @@maxamillion26093 oh alright haha

  • @peterxyz3541
    @peterxyz3541 Před 6 lety +3

    The Misono Hausa profile more like a Gyuto. Quick to dull = softer metal, lower heat treat (common with most western knives or inexpensive Box Store retailer). Rocking technique was never a method I grew up with.

  • @moreknow8904
    @moreknow8904 Před 2 lety +2

    Good review. My setup of Henkel & Wusthof (pairing, 7" chefs) & Chinese cleaver are all I've needed for decades. They ride w/ me in the FRONT seat when I travel. Kinda like a cross btwn a bestie & a newborn. NO touching!! ☠🤣

  • @Alpa6c
    @Alpa6c Před 4 lety +91

    No decision I have ever made has been influenced by rachel ray.

    • @jimmason8502
      @jimmason8502 Před 4 lety +4

      @Tony Samson I watched her once. No chef training and doesn't have any cooking chops. She's a hack

    • @SuperPussyFinger
      @SuperPussyFinger Před 4 lety +6

      Tim C - I was influenced enough to change the channel forever.

    • @KevinTKeith
      @KevinTKeith Před 4 lety +4

      She's kind of down-market, but many of her quick-dinner recipes are good, and her branded kitchen products are also good. She's a useful resource for people who aren't foodies, especially those on a budget.

    • @lenjames
      @lenjames Před 3 lety

      A TV hack cook..Sad she made millions on being a hack cook.

  • @jimmason8502
    @jimmason8502 Před 4 lety +1

    Watching those kitchen newbs slicing onions is a riot!!! :)

  • @guguigugu
    @guguigugu Před 5 lety +30

    i actually feel that the santoku-type tip is much more accurate. at leastfor me. i believe this is down to personal preference.

    • @The_Crazy_Monkey75
      @The_Crazy_Monkey75 Před 4 lety +2

      I believe so too, due to its flatter profile. It's hard to gauge the tip's position when it rounded/curved like the Chef's Knife.

    • @MrCombfoot
      @MrCombfoot Před 3 lety +1

      I find the tip is easier to locate. So I can place it exactly where I want to start the slice, and get more consistency.

  • @finalbossd
    @finalbossd Před 6 lety

    Could you perchance do a video testing blanched versus unblanched Basil in pesto?

  • @Matthew-vm7qi
    @Matthew-vm7qi Před 6 lety

    I've had a JA Henckels santoku for over 10 years and love it. I think one of the issues cooks have with santoku knives is that they expect to cut using a pulling or rocking motion while Japanese cutting techniques often make use of a pushing motion. When I switched my cutting style to pushing, I noticed an inprovement.

    • @seikibrian8641
      @seikibrian8641 Před 5 lety

      No, a santoku is meant to be used with a pulling motion or a vertical chopping motion. Japanese cooks rarely use a pushing motion; they use a pulling motion or a short push followed by a longer pull. See: czcams.com/video/xDLGghDU-pI/video.html

    • @seikibrian8641
      @seikibrian8641 Před 5 lety

      Western technique, on the other hand, is to use a pushing motion. See: czcams.com/video/pULGA-84RYg/video.html

    • @thatrealba
      @thatrealba Před 5 lety

      Japanese saws and knives are meant to cut with a pulling motion.

  • @barriepopeyes3412
    @barriepopeyes3412 Před 6 lety +1

    Please do a review on cold press slow juicers

  • @ausuyucayeque
    @ausuyucayeque Před 4 lety

    Thanks a lot for very useful info!!!!

  • @whatevergoes4340
    @whatevergoes4340 Před 6 lety

    please do video on kitchen shears with cutco!!!

  • @padleo
    @padleo Před 4 lety +2

    WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN ALL THESE YEARS???!!! WHERE?!! I HAVE WAITING FOR SO LONG!! :'(

  • @Hexspa
    @Hexspa Před 4 lety +1

    We have a Global santoku and it's great.

  • @MalaysiaBarista
    @MalaysiaBarista Před 4 lety +1

    Santoku is meant to be a slicing knife, you aren't meant to use it in a rocking motion, or to chop (force it down) a butter squash like a Chinese chopper. If you are testing Santoku then the right approach is to test it as what it is meant to be used for. This is like testing how well a car would fly and glide

  • @Maitree15
    @Maitree15 Před 4 lety

    what is the best knives for a home cook?

  • @joswearingen4521
    @joswearingen4521 Před 4 lety

    Love my Wusthof Santoku knives. I also have a set of expensive Japanese Shun knives, they're wicked sharp but the handles don't 'fit' me like the Wusthofs.

    • @Ms.MD7
      @Ms.MD7 Před 4 lety +1

      My cousin left me Wusthof knives and felt they were of good quality but I have yet to try em and see for myself.

  • @socketman
    @socketman Před 6 lety

    These vids are gold

  • @aqua8155
    @aqua8155 Před 6 lety

    I have 5" Calphalon Katana & 7" Wusthof Classic santoku knives and love both of them. Btw... for small jobs (cutting garlic, onion, parsley, dill, veggies, etc) the 5" santoku knife is perfect.

    • @MAGAMAN
      @MAGAMAN Před 6 lety +1

      I have a several Wusthof knives and love them all. They may not be the same caliber as the $179 (per knife) knives they tested, but they are great and beat the hell out of the $25 wallmart sets.

    • @aqua8155
      @aqua8155 Před 6 lety

      I also love Wusthof knives and recommend them highly.

  • @earthworm85
    @earthworm85 Před 5 lety

    Will they be on sale for prime day?

  • @bereantrb
    @bereantrb Před 6 lety +8

    No need to go that expensive. I have both: a pricier J.A. Henckels 8” chef’s knife and a $15 Oneida santoku (with full tang). I keep both razor sharp and love both for different tasks. But I actually use the Oneida santoku more.

  • @erikarnstrom897
    @erikarnstrom897 Před 6 lety

    In my kitchen a small Deba knife is king. So easy to cut thin even slices.

  • @ShovelChef
    @ShovelChef Před 4 lety +58

    "We broke down whole flocks of chickens."
    Why do I love that. I'm a monster. 😌

    • @tinkzilla1682
      @tinkzilla1682 Před 4 lety +2

      I will drive the bus to Hell..... that's my favorite description, EVER!!!! Bahahaha
      .... hey, at least we'll have fun on the ride!

    • @snakeriverfisher
      @snakeriverfisher Před 4 lety +2

      i thought that was pretty funny too

    • @sandrashaw6298
      @sandrashaw6298 Před 4 lety +2

      When you broke them down, did you pay for their therapy?

    • @MradventurEPL
      @MradventurEPL Před 3 lety +2

      BLOOD FOR THE BLOOD GOD

    • @ShovelChef
      @ShovelChef Před 3 lety +1

      😂 I love all of you.

  • @tanyanguyen3704
    @tanyanguyen3704 Před 5 lety +2

    As a woman, with tiny hands (and being better than novice, but in no way, trained with a kinfe) i find santoku to be so useful and easy to cut with.

  • @Gollammeister
    @Gollammeister Před 5 lety

    I own a santoku knife is there a sharpener you can recommend so I could re sharpen in future

    • @Bunta1987qwerty
      @Bunta1987qwerty Před 4 lety +1

      Gollammeister a king KDS 1000/6000 stone. Easy to use, cheap for as good as it is, and available on Amazon. I have 5 santoku, 3 nakiri, 2 yanagiba, one deba, and 2 chef’s knives. I sharpen them all on various stones, but this is the one I recommend.

  • @sixtomidnight1492
    @sixtomidnight1492 Před 5 lety +2

    Mac knives are AWESOME!

  • @bratticuss
    @bratticuss Před 6 lety

    How does it compare to the traditional chinese knife?

  • @nomad90125
    @nomad90125 Před 4 lety

    I use santoku for vegetables.
    They perform well.

  • @IBOGW
    @IBOGW Před 9 měsíci

    My Wustof Hollow Edge 6” Chefs Knife, and my Wustof Santoku are my best friends in the kitchen

  • @d3877
    @d3877 Před 6 lety +1

    I wish Shun SG2 steel Santoku was tested. I have it and it easily defeats German steel blades and your entire list. Surprised to see your testing was less comprehensive in the selection of products compared to your other reviews.

  • @allenblum3183
    @allenblum3183 Před 3 měsíci

    I wish they had given details about each knife they tested. A spreadsheet with information about each of the characteristics she mentioned, such as the blade thickness at its widest part.

  • @emdee7744
    @emdee7744 Před 2 lety +2

    I prefer Santoku knives to Chef's knives. I have two different sized Santoku knives and I use them, a paring knife, and a bread knife, and that's it. All the other cooking knives I have sit in the counter top block unused.

  • @Siloguy
    @Siloguy Před 5 lety +8

    ATK seems to have something against Tojiro knives, probably the best value knives

    • @KenS1267
      @KenS1267 Před 4 lety

      Huh? In what world are Tojiro value knives? I looked at Tojiro when I bought my last chef's knife. It was double the price of the Victorinox that I bought, that was over a decade ago but still looks to be the case today as well.

  • @Nizm0350z
    @Nizm0350z Před 6 lety +3

    wish you included some higher end japanese models, shun hiro sg2, miyabi mizu, tojiro, etc

    • @mydogskips2
      @mydogskips2 Před 5 lety +2

      I think the $180 Misono is a pretty high-end Japanese knife. But frankly, it's really irrelevant considering how I believe the vast majority of people are not going to spend anything close to $100 for a santoku knife, regardless of who makes it.
      I would probably never buy a Shun or Miyabi, and the only reason I'd consider a Tojiro is because it's relatively cheaper, but I still wouldn't pay $80 for their gyuto. I actually do own a Tojiro knife, and it is very good, cuts through cardboard like butter, but I only paid $18 for it. My Kai Wasabi Black Chef's knife cost me $20(I got lucky and found it in a local store on clearance), and does everything I need it to do, has for about 5 years now.
      But I'm poor and cheap, and I suppose someone with money could spend more, but unless they're a professional chef/sushi chef I doubt they would notice that big of a difference when preparing meals. I mean, a knife is for cutting things, that's all, and any decent one will do the job, whether it costs $10 or $1,000. And a decent knife can be had for about 10 to 15 bucks these days, a more than decent one for 20 - 30.

    • @commendatori1
      @commendatori1 Před 4 lety

      Miyabi Birchwood is the best..

  • @Pete_952
    @Pete_952 Před 4 lety +2

    Just a nerd point, disregard the top of the knife- rounded, pointed etc. It's the angle/thickness/sharpness - the bottom edge that matters. The cutting side is what matters.

  • @hepgeoff
    @hepgeoff Před 3 lety

    The MAC Superior Santoku looks nice, but how do you sharpen? It looks like it has two separate bevels on each edge. Can you sharpen in a pull through or steel rod?

  • @thomascatt5736
    @thomascatt5736 Před rokem

    A good video, but I'd like to know what kind of steel the winners are made of. Also whether chipping of the blade was a problem.

  • @kenmurphy4077
    @kenmurphy4077 Před 6 lety +1

    I can see in the video that you have tested the Victorinox Swiss Classic Santoku and are calling it the Victorinox Fibrox Santoku, but the handles on the Fibrox and Swiss Classic lines are very different. You comment on your review that the handle was a point of concern but you don't actually have the Fibrox knife...

  • @jackara
    @jackara Před 6 lety

    This might sound funny but why wasn’t the miracle blade series of knives tested? They’re really popular on infomercials and the rock n chef is a good fit for this test. Does anybody have any experience with those compared to these?

  • @golgothatheend
    @golgothatheend Před 4 lety

    I think the position of the tip and the accuracy is completely about individuals comfort.
    If you're used to it, lower tip will be more comfortable, and vice versa.
    I'd argue that santoku will be more comfortable, especially for someone who never was used to german chef's knife, because the position of the tip is positioned closer to the cutting surface. There are way less adjustment to make, especially when you do not have those muscle memories.

  • @SimpleSock
    @SimpleSock Před 6 lety +2

    For some reason I really dig the aesthetics of the Santoku Knife. However, being someone who uses a knife for ~6 hours a day I can honestly say there's nothing I've ever done in the kitchen that I'd prefer it over a Chef's Knife.

    • @deezynar
      @deezynar Před 5 lety

      Have you used a santoku? I am not a professional cook, but I went from exclusively using a 9" chef's knife to using a 7" santoku in my home.

  • @mountaindweller770
    @mountaindweller770 Před 6 lety +19

    I notice that all of the knife work was done in a western style chop sa oposed to the Japanese type of cut. This may be why there was no difference felt. Granted, this is how an American home cook trying out these knives would use them, but they are not intended to be rocked or used like a cleaver.

    • @MrsRen
      @MrsRen Před 4 lety

      It's an American version of the santoku. They're made to be used like this.

    • @BuddhasMiddleFinger
      @BuddhasMiddleFinger Před 4 lety +2

      In other words, made for the ignorant and unskilled?

    • @BuddhasMiddleFinger
      @BuddhasMiddleFinger Před 4 lety +2

      @rats arsed Oh no no no . . . If I was to buy one I'd get mine from Masamoto Tsukiji. Not some half-arsed design made of sub-par material from 'Murica. Those, even when broken in half put these half-breed designs to shame.

    • @indrajitgupta3280
      @indrajitgupta3280 Před 3 lety

      @@MrsRen ???

  • @lorrie2878
    @lorrie2878 Před 5 lety

    I just use my 8 inch Wusthoff chef knife and sharpen it on a stone and or steel very often. Every couple of days. I would love to have an an amazing knife. But

  • @dave-in-nj9393
    @dave-in-nj9393 Před 3 lety

    my 5" Santoku has a very rounded edge. but perfect for dipping and spreading mayo on bread. the only 'feature' that I like about these designs.

  • @stevewebber707
    @stevewebber707 Před 3 lety +5

    Very nice that they had novices participate.
    But then $75 as their cheap choice will be out of the price range of many novices.
    Also I can confirm the thickness of the blade makes a surprising difference. I have a santoku about .5mm thicker, and it feels very awkward compared to a thinner santoku.

    • @Boz1211111
      @Boz1211111 Před rokem

      There is no point comparing 10dollar knife to real knives anyway, if you want ultracheap just use their findings to apply to a cheap one - thin blade, pointier tip and such

    • @stevewebber707
      @stevewebber707 Před rokem

      @@Boz1211111 "There is no point comparing 10dollar knife to real knives anyway"
      Though knives that list at $10 will probably not be worth doing a comparison, a price point of $20-$30 would be different story.
      But in general, I disagree. One of my go to knives is a Farberware Santoku that I picked up on sale for $10, though that was probably 20 some years ago. It is well engineered, designed, and manufactured. It is not an "ultracheap" knife.
      The only real downside is that the steel is not quite as hard as some pricier models.
      As a home cook with no problem sharpening knives, that isn't a problem.
      And for reference, I have a Wusthoff santoku that gathers dust, as I prefer the other knife handle. And yes, I got sucked into buying the knife because of Rachel Ray.
      Since so many knives are made in China, and the manufacturing costs are so cheap, it is not at all unusual to find very good quality knives for far less than the popular name brands. And a surprising number of name brands have them made in China anyway.
      Mind you, if one of those cheaper brands got the recognition of a good rating on AMT, I bet the price would jump a lot.
      More food for thought, I could easily pick up a Tojiro VG10 Santoku, for less than $40. And yes it would have a less fancy handle than their DP bolstered. But If I were to poll home users, I believe many of them would go for the cheaper handle, to drop the price.
      And then there's the folks that swear by Kiwi knives, that do fall under the $10 price point. I don't consider those directly comparable, but some do.
      I do think they did a good comparison, and the selection of knives was reasonable. for people comfortable with that price point. If anything, my primary objection would be that many people I know would refuse to spend $70 on a knife, so ignoring that set of the market does a disservice.
      I do agree that they provide information that can aid in shopping for less expensive models. Though far from a comprehensive guide.
      With some caveats, like they seemed biased towards a more curved profile, which nearly negates the point of the santoku design.
      The Santoku, as originally designed, is is not intended to be used with rocking cuts, it's designed for push cuts.
      My personal theory is that many professionally trained western cooks, are trained to use rocking cuts, so are typically going to prefer knives designed for that.
      Many home cooks are not trained that way, and push cuts are quite natural for them.
      I will add that I don't consider a santoku a replacement for a chef's knife, but rather a complement, so comparing which is "better" seems odd.

  • @sedivecproductions2025

    how do you hold a knife to get that kind of bruise or w/E on your palm :DDDDDDDDD

  • @MaZEEZaM
    @MaZEEZaM Před 4 lety

    Sharp spine, yeah, I love my Global knives but I did find if using for ages, or putting a lot of pressure on the knife, the very narrow handle did make my hand sore due to how skinny the handle is.

    • @Galworld761
      @Galworld761 Před 3 lety

      I have Global knives. I love then and find them comfy but I have small hands. My boyfriend HATES them and says they are uncomfortable. I think heavy hands apply more pressure.

  • @pamelah6431
    @pamelah6431 Před 3 lety

    I have a very affordable Victorinox santoku. It stays pretty sharp (easy to resharpen), is comfortable in my hand, and does whatever I ask. Rarely go for the Wusthof chef knife anymore. Btw, I agree that the grantons are gimmicky.