THIS is How I Get PERFECTLY Sharp Knives

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 16. 06. 2024
  • Learn how to sharpen a knife using a whetstone and take it from dull to easily slicing through any meat, fruit, or vegetable using these easy-to-follow techniques. You will be blown away at how sharp your knife will be after this.
    → Recipe: PRINT THIS TECHNIQUE: bit.ly/3PIs7Dp
    → Tools:
    • Knife
    • Whetstone - purchase at amzn.to/3Jdq3zO
    • Honing Rod - purchase at amzn.to/4cSdh7k
    Watch more recipe videos:
    Knife Skills: • How to Master Basic Kn...
    How to Cut an Onion: • How to Cut an Onion 6 ...
    → Follow Me On:
    • My Website: billyparisi.com
    • Instagram: / chefbillyparisi
    • Facebook: / chefbillyparisi
    • Pinterest: / chefbillyparisi
    • LinkedIn: / billyparisi
    Classical culinary expertise meets home cooking!
    I’m Billy Parisi, a classically trained culinary school graduate from Scottsdale Culinary Institute with over 15 years in the restaurant industry and over 25 years of cooking experience.
    Join me as I teach essential cooking techniques and provide easy-to-follow recipes, empowering you to create restaurant-quality meals right in your own kitchen. From classic dishes to innovative creations, I'll show you how to make anything from scratch, ensuring that every meal is a masterpiece.
    Food is the common language that bridges diverse backgrounds and stories, bringing people together around the same table. For me, cooking isn't just a skill; it's a source of pure happiness and fulfillment.
    Tune in every Friday for a new recipe, and subscribe now to discover why homemade food always tastes better. Let's cook up some magic together!
  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 75

  • @gloriachapman5618
    @gloriachapman5618 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Excellent video. Such a natural at teaching. Thanks

  • @deettetripp9227
    @deettetripp9227 Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you Billy for that it is going to help after I watch this a few more times!! You ROCK!!!!!

  • @johnw4659
    @johnw4659 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Thank you for this informative and clear explanation.

  • @monicanjoo3112
    @monicanjoo3112 Před 2 měsíci +6

    Thank you so much for posting this! I’ve had the sharpening stone for several years and have never used it. Sat it on my counter just now as a reminder.

  • @pierre6625
    @pierre6625 Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you, Chef, I enjoyed this video as a great refresher to sharpen my knives. Regards

  • @williamcox9865
    @williamcox9865 Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you Chef!

  • @Sue-ec6un
    @Sue-ec6un Před 2 měsíci

    Things everyone should know! Thanks :)

  • @stevelitteral
    @stevelitteral Před 2 měsíci

    So Helpful Thanx.😎👍👍

  • @christiang6960
    @christiang6960 Před 2 měsíci

    The cutting knive (Santoku) I use all the time and really love was a christmas gift from a local butcher. Of course its a cheap one and it does not hold a sharp edge for long. But its sharpened so easily. Gets sharp as a razor when it barely sees the iron :)

  • @DillanOttawa
    @DillanOttawa Před 2 měsíci +4

    Thanks, Chef -- very thoughtful of you to make this vid. I've learned so much from your vids over the years; keep it up, bro. Cheers.

  • @tedmccauley9319
    @tedmccauley9319 Před 2 měsíci +8

    Do only one side til you create a burr, then switch sides and create another burr. Change to a finer stone and repeat.

  • @deerhunter6307
    @deerhunter6307 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Nice, I recently got sharpening stones, will do this weekend. I agree with others, natural teaching easy to understand.

  • @mauigirlnokaoi_ts9837
    @mauigirlnokaoi_ts9837 Před 2 měsíci +1

    That was excellent! Not as daunting as other sharpening instructional i’ve seen!!

  • @r.s.632
    @r.s.632 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Grandpa used a whetstone and oil. I lost mine years ago in a move so thanks for reminding me to get a new one!

  • @hablin1
    @hablin1 Před 2 měsíci

    I always wanted to know how to do this 👍

  • @StacyInLove1
    @StacyInLove1 Před 2 měsíci +2

    A leather strop to polish the edge (last) is nice too.

  • @matthewjamesduffy
    @matthewjamesduffy Před 2 měsíci

    Great video and a good reminder that I should go sharpen my knives 😳

  • @francoisverdoes8552
    @francoisverdoes8552 Před 17 dny

    Thank you sir🙏👍

  • @Pooroljc
    @Pooroljc Před 5 dny

    WOW !! Your video was outstanding, I just purchase some new knifes, and I notice they were not cutting like when they were new, thank you so much for the video.. I'm surprised you only 2K likes..

  • @hammock753
    @hammock753 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Thanks Chef! Can you use a diamond stone on cutlery?

  • @lawman5511
    @lawman5511 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Not everybody has one. But a buffer with a felt wheel and some grey compound works wonders after the stone to take off the burr..

  • @BleakDeath
    @BleakDeath Před 2 měsíci +1

    Love your vids! Thanks chef 👨🏻‍🍳 😊

  • @tomasjonsson6383
    @tomasjonsson6383 Před 2 měsíci

    Its so nice a pro shrapener to sharpen these knives. The angle across the edge varies so much. So this method is... Ok. To be accurate over the full edge pls use Tormek t2 or T8

  • @darlenebrown3993
    @darlenebrown3993 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Thank you. Never knew how to use this stone. I have my dads which he used to sharpen his pocket knife😜 I never fully realized he wet it. It’s only one color. It’s not two toned. I watched the other video of the knife cuts. I admit I struggle to get comfortable with slicing with the knife up against my knuckle like you did. I struggle with sliding my finger up as I cut. I guess I just need to practice🤔it feels awkward.

  • @jackdorsey4850
    @jackdorsey4850 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Dear Chef Perisi,
    what is your opinion on diamond stones?

  • @salamancadingding
    @salamancadingding Před 2 měsíci +1

    I have a whet stone like this and it is simply the best option for restoring dull kitchen knives (compared to other sharpening utensils). When I first tried it I was getting poor results and gave up on it. I then took some time to practice. If you're willing to put the time in, this is definitely worth it.

  • @marcburton807
    @marcburton807 Před 2 měsíci

    Can you send a link to where you purchased this wet stone?

  • @Javaman92
    @Javaman92 Před 2 měsíci +1

    What are the odds!? I got out my wet stones yesterday to sharpen my knives. I have to admit I found it very frustrating. Not because of lack of experience, but because I am getting old and I can't see or feel like I used to. But you have encouraged me to not give up quite yet. It's like the universe has spoken to me. lol ;-)

  • @dennispatrick7158
    @dennispatrick7158 Před 2 měsíci

    I went to cooking school back in the early 1970s and while I enjoyed everything I was taught, except for knife sharpening. To this day I can't sharpen a knife if my life depended upon it; I use a knife sharpening company to do it for me.
    Based upon your video I just might try sharpening knives again.

  • @jayandry3392
    @jayandry3392 Před 2 měsíci

    What about stropping to remove the burrs?

  • @joseph-ow1hf
    @joseph-ow1hf Před 2 měsíci +1

    Thank you. Booked marked this one to study later. I've had a 1K/6K wetstone for months but have been afraid to use, thinking I mess up my knives. (even though not super pricey.......a mix of Misen and a few of the Japanese style from Milk Street)

  • @KdeBee
    @KdeBee Před 13 dny

    Like to know what type wood is your cuttingboard..

  • @nickkambitis5340
    @nickkambitis5340 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Great tutorial 😇

  • @twinheatingairconditioning135

    Excellent video i thought it was really sharp

  • @tectorgorch8698
    @tectorgorch8698 Před 2 měsíci

    It's nice to see that you are cool with the SP stone (and that Helen Rennie uses the King stone). As you undoubtably know, many of the knife psychos on YT won't go near anything less dear than a $70 Shapton and many others even more spendy.

  • @peternowlan5196
    @peternowlan5196 Před 14 dny

    Chef, as a pro sharpener I love watching sharpening videos. I won’t comment on your technique only to say that if you’re comfortable with it stick to it. Here is a little hint for finding an appropriate angle for any knife. Use the tip of a pinky finger between the spine of the blade and the stones. This will provide a 16-17 deg angle. Don’t sweat the actual numbers, it’s consistency that you need. This is an easy method to get a visual reference for an angle to shoot for and going muscle memory with. Also, don’t be afraid to start the process at 400-500 grit, coarse stones are the most important stones in any sharpener’s inventory. I start every knife at 320-500 grit. It’s pressure that enables us to control the amount of metal we remove. Sharpening is all about removing metal in a controlled manner. Also, ditch the Steel, the rod. Use the 6k side of your stone to hone the knife in between sharpening. Sharpen, hone, hone, hone, sharpen. Not bad Chef, thanks for what you do.

    • @ChefBillyParisi
      @ChefBillyParisi  Před 14 dny +1

      Appreciate you watching and for the tips. Many thanks!

  • @Metoobie
    @Metoobie Před 2 měsíci +2

    For those new to sharpening, do yourself a favour and practice using the absolute cheapest knife you can find. You're going to mess up a lot of edges before you get muscle memory, which is perfectly normal.

  • @mattm2507
    @mattm2507 Před 2 měsíci

    Great video, keep in mind you want to try to use your entire stone from edge to edge or else it will develop an uneven surface which can lead to an uneven blade sharpening, to repair it you will have to resurface the stone.
    Otherwise great info and helpful. :)

  • @JREwing-se2wk
    @JREwing-se2wk Před 2 měsíci +18

    After only 2’ of watching led me to believe this is promoting some subpar Water stones. Am I wrong? Looking at the knives brands, they are among the best in kitchen so there is a big discrepancy. I once tested similar stones, they are terrible to say the least, grit size is completely bogus. Slow cutting, fast wearing, the absolute garbage nobody should buy, regardless of the knife quality.

    • @kodiak536kodiak536
      @kodiak536kodiak536 Před 2 měsíci +2

      DUH! It's OBVIOUS since start of the video, it all about that stone and NOT how to sharpen the knife.🙄

  • @gee2891
    @gee2891 Před 2 měsíci

    this is the way.

  • @aaronthiagarajan
    @aaronthiagarajan Před 2 měsíci

    Most of the time all you need is honing rod. Wetstone is last step to revive the knife.

  • @stevekatz4372
    @stevekatz4372 Před 26 dny

    I cook every day and I sharpen my knives when I think they need to be sharpened But Not Razor Sharp! IMO, there is absolutely no reason to keep your kitchen knives razor sharp, when using them for kitchen use at home! I do sharpen my knives, when needed, then I use a stainless steel honing rod to keep them sharp, until they need to be sharpened again! I have No Problems slicing, dicing, cutting meat or any other kitchen duty that needs knife use! I Do Not Shave with my knives or cut through paper or any other material to prove how sharp my knife can be! I do appreciate you showing us how to make our knives Razor Sharp But Not for Me! Thanks

  • @einundsiebenziger5488
    @einundsiebenziger5488 Před 2 měsíci +3

    That combo whetstone is silly. No hobby cook needs 6000 grit and the X50 (aka German) steel of the knife in this video is not even able to maintain a super-fine edge this grit is made for. The 1000 grit is enough to give you a good working sharpness but is also too fine to get an edge back on a truly dull knife. A 400/1000 combo stone would make much more sense. Maybe add a 3000 grit stone for finer cuts such as paper-thin julienne or slices of expensive proteins. And for heaven's sake please sharpen with the edge forward and keep it on the same side until a burr forms, then flip over and sharpen until the burr is gone. Absolutely no need to count strokes.

    • @lgninjalo
      @lgninjalo Před 2 měsíci

      This guy sharpens. Trying to do even mild reworking on that junk stone would take all day. You would also probably ruin your truing plate/stone.

  • @craigg6951
    @craigg6951 Před 2 měsíci

    Stropping the knife is an important part in making sure the burr is gone to truly apex. Youre better off starting on a 400 grit as 1000 can take a lot longer.

  • @robohippy
    @robohippy Před 5 hodinami

    Well, not the way I do it.... But, no one does it exactly the same way I do it... Most of my sharpening experience comes from the wood shop, but I did start with kitchen knives. One, that 'sharp pebble' stone is pretty much junk, and very low quality. Not covered here is that they need to be flattened since they will cup and dish as you use them repeatedly. As far as I am concerned, the best bet is for a diamond plate, preferably 3 by 12 inch. One side is 300 or 400 grit, and the fine side is 1000 or 1200 grit depending on which one you get. I got one for a son in law from Woodcraft which was 400/1000 and 4 by 12 inch long. They will pretty much last forever. The burr needs to be removed. As for pushing or pulling, it makes no difference, and I prefer to push into the cutting edge. This lets me 'feel' when the cutting edge is in contact with the stone. The only difference is that the burr from pushing into the cutting edge may be a little bigger. You do not get rid of the burr by going to 6000 grit. I still have burrs on my plane irons and bench chisels if I go to 30,000 grit. You need to strop the edge to remove the burr. This involves a compound on leather, or in my shop I just use a piece of poplar or alder wood that is dead flat. I go with 2000 or so grit compound, and if you want to get fancy, there are diamond compounds listed in microns. If you get the black stuff, called 'polishing' compounds at the big box stores, it is around 800 grit, or so I heard. It will do a fine job. I think that the process is to bend the burr back and forth enough times that it breaks off. Not positive... Once the burr is removed, then you have a fine edge. If you don't totally remove the burr, it will bend over and your edge goes dull far faster. The cutting edge is a fine toothed razor saw. Even after the burr is removed you have to saw back and forth on anything you cut, you can't chop through like an axe. If you think of the teeth, they get bent out of line with use. Think of the sticks sticking out of the top of a tee pee. What the steel does is get the teeth back into a straight line. When I use the steel, I put the distant end on my cutting board. I have never liked cutting towards myself. No trips to the ER please!

  • @peternowlan5196
    @peternowlan5196 Před 14 dny

    One more thing. Please ignore the folks who tell you to practice on a cheap knife. This is a common piece of advice given because the people saying this assume we are too stupid to learn the process without ruining a knife. Believe me, you will not ruin the knife. The problem here is that these cheap knives are made with inferior steel full of impurities that makes the knife resistant to abrasives. So despite doing everything correctly in terms of technique, it will become frustrating because the burr formation is just not happening. Your confidence will crash and you may just say “ screw this”. Start with a good knife, good steel.

  • @ABU-lz2sh
    @ABU-lz2sh Před 2 měsíci +1

    I use back of ceramic plate, rubbing blade against its ridges
    Stays sharp awhile

  • @billy4072
    @billy4072 Před měsícem

    Angle grinder 120 grit flap 🙄. Done in seconds

  • @johnbennett9630
    @johnbennett9630 Před měsícem

    I've never understood why people hone their knives by sliding the blade against the honing steel. I never felt comfortable waving a sharpened blade about like this and always hold the knife still and slide the steel along the knife blade. It's basically the same action but you push the steel along the blade instead of the blade along the steel and you lose fewer body parts.

  • @andigo54
    @andigo54 Před měsícem

    if you follow this the fali rate will be more than 50 percent.
    start with dmt diamond.
    a little bit more expensive
    but you wull have fun
    start corse enough and you will end racor sharp

  • @bacicinvatteneaca
    @bacicinvatteneaca Před měsícem

    Note: this kind of stone is produced for literal pennies, don't buy them for 60$

  • @bobanpen1
    @bobanpen1 Před měsícem

    All my knives are Japanese so they bevel is 15 degrees. Not much use to me.

    • @ChefBillyParisi
      @ChefBillyParisi  Před měsícem

      The same technique applies just a different angle.

  • @samueljackson856
    @samueljackson856 Před 2 měsíci

    Lol there's no way you got that knife sharp with that technique. You shouldn't have to saw through the tomato

    • @ChefBillyParisi
      @ChefBillyParisi  Před 2 měsíci

      Oh yeah, I love misleading people in doing something that won’t render the same result. Come on now. All that does is hurt me and my credibility, why on earth would I do that?

  • @mattnejmanowski631
    @mattnejmanowski631 Před měsícem +1

    Dont make anymore sharpening videos.

    • @ChefBillyParisi
      @ChefBillyParisi  Před měsícem

      You make one

    • @mattnejmanowski631
      @mattnejmanowski631 Před měsícem

      @@ChefBillyParisi why dont you cut that tomato without editing the part where you got it started!

    • @mattnejmanowski631
      @mattnejmanowski631 Před měsícem

      you know the part where you bragged about not using your hands?

    • @ChefBillyParisi
      @ChefBillyParisi  Před měsícem

      Send me your email. I have the full clip and I’ll happily send it to you. I just didn’t include it for Time sake. It didn’t make sense to show the full clip because I wanted to get to the next one. Didn’t realize it was that big of a deal.

    • @mattnejmanowski631
      @mattnejmanowski631 Před měsícem

      how about the poor angles and poor technique?

  • @-alpha-o-mathematics8342
    @-alpha-o-mathematics8342 Před 2 měsíci