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The Real Secret: Maintenance
The biggest difference between a home cook’s knife and a chef’s knife isn’t the brand — it’s maintenance.
- Regular honing to realign the edge
- Frequent sharpening to restore microscopic teeth
- Proper storage to prevent dulling
- Using the right cutting surfaces (wood or plastic, never glass or stone)
A dull knife, even if it’s expensive, performs poorly and can be more dangerous because it requires more force to cut.
Chefs understand that sharpness isn’t permanent. It’s maintained.
Serrated vs. Smooth: When Teeth Matter
But for most tasks — chopping onions, slicing meat, mincing garlic — a smooth, razor-sharp blade provides superior results.
Serrated knives work by sawing. Smooth knives work by slicing.
The Psychological Factor
There’s also confidence. When a chef picks up a properly sharpened knife, they know it will respond instantly and predictably. That confidence translates into speed and fluid motion.
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