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  2. Yanagi ba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yanagi_ba

    Single ground: For right-hand use, the yanagiba has a bevel on the right side and is concave on the left. This allows a more acute angle compared to most double bevel knives and nonstick properties. Cutting direction: While almost all western knives are used to push and cut, the yanagiba is used pull and cut instead. [1]

  3. Deba bōchō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deba_bōchō

    Deba bōchō of different sizes (a) Kataba edge for right-hand use — (b) Ryōba double bevel edge — (c) Kataba edge for left-hand use. (The sample knife is a deba bōchō) Deba bōchō (Japanese: 出刃包丁) — "fish-preparer" — are a style of Japanese kitchen knives primarily used to cut fish, though are also used occasionally in ...

  4. 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:

  5. Usuba bōchō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usuba_bōchō

    Usuba bōchō (薄刃包丁 — lit. "thin blade kitchen knife") is the traditional vegetable knife for the professional Japanese chef. Like other Japanese professional knives, usuba are chisel ground, and have a single bevel on the front side, and have a hollow ground urasuki on the back side.

  6. Grind - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grind

    As many Japanese culinary knives tend to be chisel-ground, they are often sharper than a typical double-bevelled Western culinary knife; a chisel grind has only a single edge angle; if a sabre-ground blade has the same edge angle as a chisel grind, it still has angles on both sides of the blade centreline, and so has twice the included angle ...

  7. Kitchen knife indentation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitchen_knife_indentation

    Urasuki is a common feature of Japanese kitchen knives. [2] While Japanese kitchen knives initially appear as a simple chisel grind (flat on the side facing the food, angled on the other), the apparently flat side is subtly concave, to reduce adhesion, and, further, the apparent chisel cut of the edge is actually a small bevel, as otherwise the ...

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