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  2. Japanese kitchen knife - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_kitchen_knife

    Edo-style knives are typically shorter with a square tip used for horizontal cuts, rendering a more robust working knife. The standard Japanese knife set, essential to Washoku (和食 Japanese cuisine), includes the yanagi-ba, deba bōchō, and usuba bōchō. Single-bevelled knives include: Shobu-bōchō — 刺身 — three main sashimi knifes:

  3. Nakiri bōchō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nakiri_bōchō

    Nakiri bōchō (菜切り包丁, translation: knife for cutting greens) and usuba bōchō (薄刃包丁 — lit. "thin knife") are Japanese-style vegetable knives. They differ from the deba bōchō in their shape, as they have a straight blade edge, with no or virtually no curve, suitable for cutting all the way to the cutting board without the ...

  4. Category:Japanese kitchen knives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Japanese_kitchen...

    Pages in category "Japanese kitchen knives" The following 10 pages are in this category, out of 10 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. *

  5. List of Japanese cooking utensils - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Japanese_cooking...

    Deba bōchō: kitchen carver for meat and fish; Fugu hiki, Tako hiki, and yanagi ba: sashimi slicers; Nakiri bōchō and usuba bōchō: vegetable knives for vegetables; Oroshi hocho and hancho hocho: extremely long knives to fillet tuna; Santoku: general purpose knife influenced by European styles; Udon kiri and soba kiri: knife to make udon ...

  6. Kitchen knife indentation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitchen_knife_indentation

    Knife indentation is done away from the edge of a kitchen knife. A knife most simply has either a rectangular or wedge-shaped cross-section (sabre-grind v. flat-grind, but may also have concave indentations or hollows, whose purpose is to reduce adhesion of the food to the blade, so producing a cleaner and easier cut. This is widely found in ...

  7. Deba bōchō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deba_bōchō

    Debas have wide blades and are the thickest of all Japanese kitchen knives and come in different sizes — sometimes up to 30 centimetres (12 inches) in length and 10 millimetres (0.4 inches) thick — but usually considerably shorter, normally between 12 and 20 cm (5 and 8 in) long with a blade between 5 and 7 mm (0.2 and 0.3 in) thick.

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