enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: japanese knife sharpening angle guide tool

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Knife sharpening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knife_sharpening

    The disadvantage is that the sharpening angle is fixed so some specialized knives, like a Japanese style Santoku, may need additional attention to sharpen to the ideal angle. Recently, manual sharpening tools have appeared in the form of systems that guide the blade against the stone at a predetermined angle.

  3. Sharpening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharpening

    Sharpening tools. Very sharp knives sharpen at about 10 d.p.s (degrees per side) (which implies that the knife's edge has an included angle of 20-degrees). Generally speaking, razors, paring knives, and fillet knives should be the sharpest knives at an angle of 12° – 18°.

  4. Yanagi ba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yanagi_ba

    Yanagi-ba-bōchō (柳刃包丁, literally willow blade knife), Yanagiba, or yanagi, is a long and thin knife used in the Japanese cuisine. It is the typical example of the sashimibōchō (Japanese: 刺身包丁, sashimi [raw fish] bōchō [knife]) used to slice fish for sashimi and nigirizushi .

  5. 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 ...

  6. Sharpness (cutting) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharpness_(cutting)

    Sharpened metal drop-point blade Naturally occurring sharp obsidian piece Shark tooth with a sharp, serrated edge A sewing needle comes to a sharp point. Sharpness refers to the ability of a blade, point, or cutting implement to cut through materials with minimal force, and can more specifically be defined as the capacity of a surface to initiate the cut. [1]

  7. Sharpening stone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharpening_stone

    The term is based on the word "whet", which means to sharpen a blade, [2] [3] not on the word "wet". The verb nowadays to describe the process of using a sharpening stone for a knife is simply to sharpen, but the older term to whet is still sometimes used, though so rare in this sense that it is no longer mentioned in, for example, the Oxford Living Dictionaries.

  1. Ads

    related to: japanese knife sharpening angle guide tool