ESSENTIAL Knife Skills for Every Home Cook

Cooking is something that everyone should learn how to do, and having some simple knife skills will take your kitchen game to the next level! Today, Nathan is running you through the basic tricks of the trade that will strengthen your cooking chops and elevate your meals. Using simple procedures, and some Chef secrets, you'll learn to make meal prep easier, safer and way more fun.
Book in for a full Cut Like a Chef Class at:
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Knives used in the video:
Haruyuki Mugi Santoku 180mm: knifewear.com/products/haruyu...
Munetoshi Gyuto 240mm: knifewear.com/products/muneto...
Haruyuki Soba Nakiri 165mm: knifewear.com/products/haruyu...
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Пікірлер: 42

  • @TheKeule33
    @TheKeule332 ай бұрын

    Very easy to understand, pleasent pace, good tips! Thank you.

  • @KnifewearKnives

    @KnifewearKnives

    2 ай бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @NoodlesR6
    @NoodlesR65 ай бұрын

    Raw onions with tomato and lots of salt is nature's MSG!

  • @zairiph6361
    @zairiph63615 ай бұрын

    I’m telling you, I’m so glad I found this channel! I recently just bought a chef knife by kato, and I was soo in need of this video, thanks a lot!

  • @KnifewearKnives

    @KnifewearKnives

    5 ай бұрын

    Awesome, happy to hear it!

  • @tubenhans6190
    @tubenhans6190Ай бұрын

    At about 4:30 into the video, he's clearly demonstrating why the Western chef knife is Held by its handle rather than the pinch grip, so there can be a greater distance between pivot point and cutting action, reducing the vertical distance the hand needs to travel. Cutting takes place rather close to the handle. Think "rocking-movement = handle grip, slicing movement = pinch the blade"

  • @arthursoto4285
    @arthursoto42855 ай бұрын

    Love to watch these!

  • @l30n.marin3r0
    @l30n.marin3r05 ай бұрын

    Fantastic videos, thank you!

  • @paulnovakowski8358
    @paulnovakowski83583 ай бұрын

    Awesome video. I will practice those techniques.

  • @william1270
    @william12705 ай бұрын

    Happy new year from the folks in the UK

  • @KnifewearKnives

    @KnifewearKnives

    5 ай бұрын

    Happy new year!

  • @BobRoss-yc7ew
    @BobRoss-yc7ew5 ай бұрын

    Happy new year from BC, will have to make a trip up north and visit the shop sometime.

  • @KnifewearKnives

    @KnifewearKnives

    5 ай бұрын

    See you soon!

  • @l30n.marin3r0

    @l30n.marin3r0

    5 ай бұрын

    How the hell did you manage to leave a message before the year of the lord? Very impressing time travel flex here!

  • @mikebabb2155
    @mikebabb21555 ай бұрын

    His comment about getting less flavor by cutting things like ginger or garlic thin is not quite true. The funny thing about garlic is that the more or finer it is cut the more flavor you get. The strong sharp garlic flavor is from allicin and the more the cells of garlic are damaged the more it releases. So if you want a strong garlic flavor cut it up smaller but if you want a more mild flavor cut it up less. My favorite way to cook with garlic is to just cut off the root end and cook it. That produces a wonderful mild flavor and if you are opposed to biting into a hunk of buttery soft garlic you can always smoosh that buttery soft goodness and mix it in with the food and keep that wonderful mild flavor.

  • @KnifewearKnives

    @KnifewearKnives

    5 ай бұрын

    How could I forget about allicin 🤦 Thanks for the reminder!

  • @mikebabb2155

    @mikebabb2155

    5 ай бұрын

    @@KnifewearKnives it is no problem! Hopefully y'all have a wonderful new year.

  • @jgjones28

    @jgjones28

    5 ай бұрын

    Nice video-thanks!😊

  • @marctestarossa

    @marctestarossa

    2 күн бұрын

    i would highly suggest to let cooking-time decide your cut size. if you make a big broth or stew that cooks for hours or even days, you just take the whole clove of garlic, cut the root off if dirty, just take away some of the very dry outer skin because it can maybe burn and become bitter, and put the garlic in whole. if you focus on flavour, vary the total amount of the ingredient or pre-cook ingredients or include them in different form, for example garlic-oil or confit garlic, make a paste and add that to your dish. ❤ there are a million variables with cooking, make it scientific or keep it simple, there‘s no right or wrong way to approach cooking. i used to belittle people who don‘t have any idea behind the chemistry and science aspect. they didn‘t even know what a maillard-reaction was. and then in cooking class they made fantastic dishes with double the components as me in the same time, beautiful taste and plating. but tbh i‘m sure if they also had the knowledge, they could push it even further. ❤ but the most important thing is, that you enjoy what you‘re doing. if you‘re nerding out over which type of tomato is best for salsa or if you try to find the best one to go with your aged balsamico, if you like tweaking temperatures or the perfect blend for your garam masala, don‘t let anybody tell you that you shouldn‘t spend time with what brings you joy.

  • @ragu168
    @ragu1685 ай бұрын

    Happy new year to all

  • @KnifewearKnives

    @KnifewearKnives

    5 ай бұрын

    Happy New Year!

  • @marctestarossa
    @marctestarossa8 күн бұрын

    I got one very important essential rule for working with a knife: only touch the food and other stuff with the hand, that‘s not holding the knife. or put another way: the hand that holds the knife needs to be clean, dry and free of oil. always. don’t cut with a smeary hand, not even in a pinch, it can be really dangerous. one hand clean, one hand „dirty“. just stick to that rule at all times. ❤❤ can you tell, that i learned in a very strict kitchen and things like this are just burned into my brain forever? 😂

  • @KnifewearKnives

    @KnifewearKnives

    7 күн бұрын

    Well said!

  • @jeffkuipers1030
    @jeffkuipers10305 ай бұрын

    got a new blackstone griddle this mid-summer and trying new things like stir-fry and lots of meals with fresh veggies i am not really good with a knife i can get buy but this will help me not to loose a finger.

  • @KnifewearKnives

    @KnifewearKnives

    5 ай бұрын

    Glad I could help, that griddle sounds awesome!

  • @marctestarossa

    @marctestarossa

    8 күн бұрын

    practice slowly and really get the motions down

  • @reispab
    @reispab5 ай бұрын

    👍🙏

  • @zimmmerit6308
    @zimmmerit63085 ай бұрын

    Hello there, Can you help me to guess A Japanese knife name? It is thick like Deba, but long like Gyuto… I saw it in video and chef used it to cut a very big fish and I liked it so much!

  • @KnifewearKnives

    @KnifewearKnives

    5 ай бұрын

    Hey! That could be a 210mm Deba, a Yo-deba, or a miorshi deba!

  • @zimmmerit6308

    @zimmmerit6308

    5 ай бұрын

    @@KnifewearKnives ty very much!!!! < 3 I found it, it was Miorshi Deba

  • @user-wy3re6hl4j
    @user-wy3re6hl4j3 ай бұрын

    Hey! Great video, thank you :) My parents have given me a beautiful nagiri knife. I am vegan and chop a lot of veggies. I read it's the perfect knife for that but I noticed that you sometimes used the santoku for veggies... What is the reason for that ? I am used to using the rocking motion which makes me wonder if I should buy the santoku but I am happy to learn new knife skills if you think nagiri is the way to go for me! Thank you :)

  • @KnifewearKnives

    @KnifewearKnives

    3 ай бұрын

    Hey! It all depends on preference, both are great for veggies. Santokus are better for rocking, whereas a Nakiri requires more of a slide to work well, but are exceptional once you get the hang of it. Check out this video! kzread.info/dash/bejne/d36JzLarhabUeKg.htmlsi=yMsCdo_qjY99sYTM

  • @marctestarossa

    @marctestarossa

    8 күн бұрын

    both knifes can be fantastic, if you only have a nakiri, i would suggest a smaller knife with a more traditional point. sometimes you just need a point. we always told our apprentices to get a traditional western chef knife as a first knife, but that‘s because they need something that can also handle meat and fish. i‘m also vegan so i gave all my meat/fish specialty knifes away and i‘m back to the absolute basics: gyuto (the japanese version of a western chef knife), big saw blade knife, small officeknife, and a curved pairing knife. and that‘s also the order to buy them, if you ask me. ❤❤❤

  • @Simplicity165
    @Simplicity1655 ай бұрын

    What small Japanese knife is in the still photo that he doesn't show in the video..?

  • @KnifewearKnives

    @KnifewearKnives

    5 ай бұрын

    Hey, it's this one! knifewear.com/products/masashi-vs1-kaijin-santoku-165mm

  • @mattbrooks1302
    @mattbrooks13023 ай бұрын

    What's the brand and model on that gorgeous gyuto?

  • @KnifewearKnives

    @KnifewearKnives

    3 ай бұрын

    The gyuto I used near the end is this guy! knifewear.com/products/munetoshi-shirogami-migaki-gyuto-240mm

  • @chefknivesenthusiast
    @chefknivesenthusiast5 ай бұрын

    Garlic dessert huh? 🤔😋

  • @stevewebber707

    @stevewebber707

    5 ай бұрын

    Perhaps with roasted garlic. I don't think it would work well with traditionally heavily sweetened western style deserts, but I think something more subtly sweet might work with it.

  • @jkbcook

    @jkbcook

    5 ай бұрын

    This would be a dessert for me. Brie cheese, roasted garlic, brown sugar or maple syrup and tia Maria, roasted pecans served with a digestive cookie or a pizzelle.

  • @cheesetown777
    @cheesetown7775 ай бұрын

    Pronounced: Brew-sheta

  • @billlast7903
    @billlast79033 ай бұрын

    Why don.t you guys use a Ginzu knife everyone knows they are the best I also like electric knives.