9 Ways to Improve Your Knife Skills
? Con Poulos
The funny thing about great summer cooking is that the best of it involves no actual cooking. The ingredients basically do the work: delicate sugar snap peas nestling among fat chunks of watermelon; crisp radish rounds falling on pearly, raw scallops. In summer, food can be easy. But not necessarily simple.
? Con Poulos
Knife tip: Thinly sliced scallops are tender enough to eat raw. They're topped here with radishes and hand-cut ginger-chive pesto.
Because in the most basic act of cooking—the cutting—there is deep meaning. Sometimes I think this, not the mastery of fire, is really what separates us from animals. A tiger might conceivably happen upon some poor antelope that was fried by lightning. But only a human will ever know how slicing carpaccio translucently thin lets it dissolve between your teeth. Considering that the first, most primal part of eating is biting food into pieces, how brilliant is it that people have dedicated thousands of years of craft and ceremony to taking that work out of our mouths and putting it into our hands?
I once saw a sushi chef pick up his knife, wicked as a straight razor smoking cigarettes, and nick it into the side of a daikon. He made the smallest motion, a bare tremble, and began shaving around the radish, unspooling it into one long, ribbon-thin sheet. His tool was from a 400-year-old knife-maker; the chef had spent five decades of his life training how to use it. Watching him meditate on the precise point where blade met food, I realized that this was a form of devotion. It was what he was meant to do.
Tofu Banh Mi Sandwiches
? Con Poulos
Knife tip: To julienne carrots, cucumbers and daikon for the quick pickles in these sandwiches, slice the vegetables on a bias about an eighth of an inch thick, then stack and cut into matchsticks.
I remember this when I think about how all you need is a knife—a trusty, sharp one—to truly transform ingredients. More than that, using a knife also helps focus your mind. You can slow down and put everything you have, for just a moment, into a simple act that nourishes you, in more ways than one. In summer, the ingredients may be doing the work, but you are doing the living.
Green-Market Tacos
? Con Poulos Here, we toss sweet summer corn and raw green and yellow wax beans in a creamy, tangy mix of yogurt, feta, olive oil and cilantro to use as the filling for tortillas. It's a great vegetarian meal on a hot day because there's no cooking involved. Just be sure to get the freshest corn and beans you can find.
? Con Poulos
Knife tip: Once you've cut the kernels off of corncobs, use the back of the knife to scrape the sweet "milk" from the cobs to flavor the crema for these incredibly good vegetable tacos.
3 Knives Every Cook Should Own
1. Chef's
For slicing steak, whacking coconuts--pretty much anything. The side of the blade is great for crushing garlic.
F&W Test Kitchen Pick: Masamoto Virgin Carbon Steel Gyutou. "The carbon steel holds its edge way better than stainless steel." - Kay Chun. From $182; korin.com
Chef Pick: Middleton Made Knives. "I take mine everywhere. Whenever I bring one out, all the cooks around me ask to hold it." - Sean Brock, McCrady's, Charleston, SC. From $280; middletonmadeknives.com
Best New Knife: Chubo Kazan HAP40 Hammered Gyutou 210 MM. The textured finish keeps food from sticking. $220; chuboknives.com
Vegetable-Chicken Summer Rolls
? Con Poulos
Knife tip: When sliced superthin, raw beets become surprisingly pliable and supple enough to fold into a summer roll with avocado, corn, sprouts and chicken.
2. Paring
A paring knife picks up where a chef's knife leaves off. It's ideal for slicing and mincing smaller ingredients and for peeling fruits and vegetables.
F&W Test Kitchen Pick: Miyabi Kaizen (4.5"). "The lightweight design and thin blade make it easy to produce fine, even slices." - Justin Chapple. $120; zwillingonline.com
Chef Pick: Shun Classic Limited-Edition. "Streamlined and nice to hold." - Jenn Louis, Lincoln, Portland, OR. $40; williams-sonoma.com
Best New Knife: Wüsthof Epicure. Makes easy work of garlic and shallots. $90; surlatable.com
Marinated Feta and Nectarine Fattoush
CON POULOS We love cold dishes like this on hot summer days. This recipe from Food & Wine's Justin Chapple is a fun riff on fattoush, the classic Middle Eastern bread salad. Chapple covers feta in olive oil and coriander seeds, then uses the marinade to dress nectarines, tomatoes and pita chips.
We love cold dishes like this on hot summer days. This recipe from Food & Wine's Justin Chapple is a fun riff on fattoush, the classic Middle Eastern bread salad. Chapple covers feta in olive oil and coriander seeds, then uses the marinade to dress nectarines, tomatoes and pita chips.
CON POULOS CON POULOS
Knife tip: Feta absorbs dressing better when cut into thin slabs. The cheese, nectarines and pita are delicious paired with a tangy coriander-spiked vinaigrette.
3. Serrated
The toothed blade is as useful for slicing bread or foods with waxy surfaces like tomatoes.
F&W Test Kitchen Pick: Dexter Basics Scalloped Offset. "This style protects my knuckles." - Emily Tyman. $19, dexter1818.com
Chef Pick: Victorniox 10." "One of the most versatile knives I've ever used." - Eli Kulp, High Street on Market, Philadelphia. $55; jbprince.com
Best New Knife: Kai Wasabi Black. Inexpensive Japanese craftsmanship. $29; amazon.com
CON POULOS This tasty snack recipe from Food & Wine's Justin Chapple makes the most of canned sardines. Chapple prepares a bright herb mayo to spread on rye crisps, then tops them with a cherry tomato salad and good-quality sardines. The juices from the tomatoes soften the rye crisps ever so slightly.
This tasty snack recipe from Food & Wine's Justin Chapple makes the most of canned sardines. Chapple prepares a bright herb mayo to spread on rye crisps, then tops them with a cherry tomato salad and good-quality sardines. The juices from the tomatoes soften the rye crisps ever so slightly.
CON POULOS CON POULOS
Knife tip: Cherry tomato halves might roll right off these rye crackers. Cut them into slices with a serrated knife instead, then set on the crisps with sardines and herbs.
Bob Kramer, Knife Jedi
Kramer, one of 120 master bladesmiths in the US, has a cult following, especially among chefs. After running tests on some recent orders of steel, the admitted control freak was not happy with the quality. So he set up a crucible and induction cooker in his Seattle workshop to make his own steel. "Thomas Keller has his own gardens so he has more control over ingredients. That's what I'm trying to do." He also adds a dash of meteorite, melting it to create bright streaks of nickel in the blade. His obsessive craftsmanship has led to so much demand that he only sells via lottery on kramerknives.com.
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