by Wusthof
| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 78168 (lower is better) |
| Price as of: | 12/02/2008 1:13:15 AM MST |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Release Date: | 2001-07-31 |
| Label: | Wusthof |
| Binding: | Kitchen |
| Published By: | Wusthof |
| ASIN: | B00005NCX8 |
| Category: | Kitchen |
Wüsthof Classic 10-Inch Wide Cook's Knife Features
- Wide, extra-heavy 10-inch blade superior for chopping and other cutting tasks
- Forged high-carbon stainless steel blade, hand-honed for razor-like sharpness
- Traditional-style composition handle is triple-riveted for strength and permanence
- Dishwasher safe
- Lifetime guarantee
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Product Description
This is an exceptional knife and one that many professionals are pleased to own. It has a gently bowed 10??? cutting edge that is wider than a standard cook's knife. The extra ????? of knuckle clearance supplies enough razor-sharp surface to make short work of mincing herbs or julienning carrots, while its heft provides ample power for quartering chicken a or halving a winter squash. Its visible tang, like a Formula 1 spoiler, ensures a beautifully balanced tool.
Amazon.com Review
Cook's knives are indispensable kitchen helpers. They perform a wide variety of cutting chores, from mincing to dicing and slicing. The wide, extra-heavy 10-inch blade of this example provides powerful heft, which makes it a particularly efficient worker. Its large triangularly shaped blade is ideal for chopping and can be used to carry minced or cubed ingredients to waiting pans or bowls. This second largest wide cook's knife in the series, this is the knife to buy if you want extra blade heaviness and size, a combination that equals fast, efficient, effortless cutting.
Part of the Classic series, the knife represents two centuries of unexcelled Wüsthof craftsmanship. Like other cutlery in the series, it's hand-forged from a single piece of stainless steel for maximum strength; the hand-polished blade is exactingly calibrated to be hard enough to resist dulling yet soft enough to take a keen edge when it's honed or sharpened. Dishwasher-safe and with a traditionally shaped, ergonomically designed handle that is triple-riveted for durability, this knife brings a guaranteed lifetime of low-maintenance cutting to any cook who owns it. --Arthur Boehm
Customer Reviews
You will be proud to own such a fine knife. - Reviewed on 2008-01-24
The right chef's knife for you is a matter of personal preference, and with knives first impressions are not always lasting. You may be tempted to choose a lighter sleeker model. The size and heft of this knife may be a bit off putting at first. But if you are committed to using correct technique, you will soon fall in love with this blade for those very same reasons. While a cook might reach for this knife out of habit for any number of chores including those for which it was not designed, most often it will be used to chop stuff. This is the original food processor.
With your fingers curled away from the blade the knuckles of your holding hand confidently ride the wide flat surface of this blade. Meanwhile the knuckles of your knife hand are well clear of the cutting board. For greater comfort, I have ever so slightly relieved the edges of the bolster, but I have never owned a knife (with a bolster) that didn't benefit from the same treatment. The blade's ample mass keeps it steadily on line without a hint of flex or wobbles. Because the knife adds its own heft to the down stroke, you will not have to push down into it with the same forces you would need on another knife. This makes it safer. At 58C on the Rockwell scale, the chrome moly steel in this blade is an excellent hardness to take an edge keen enough to shave with and strong enough to chop wood. Also, it doesn't turn colors like older Soligen steel knives.
When the chopping is done, a cook always faces the same annoying choice, slide the pile up on the face of the blade to transfer it to the bowl or pan or reach for a dough blade. Little pile, use the knife, big pile reaches for the dough blade. While this knife does not solve that problem as well as a Chinese cleaver, it does give you just enough more surface that frequently you are pleasantly aware that you just beat the odds. This blade is guaranteed for life. When the terms of that agreement run out, you will still be glad you chose this knife.
Food Seems To Cut Itself - Reviewed on 2006-08-11
2 customers found this review helpful, 1 did not.
I think this knife doesn't actually cut the food, so much as it intimidates it. The food looks up, sees this massive, wickedly sharp blade approaching, and leaps out of the way at the last possible moment. That's my best guess as to how this knife cuts so effortlessly.
Or I guess it could be the fact that blade takes and holds an edge like a dream, allowing the significant weight of this very large knife to just drop the blade through whatever you happen to put under it. Whatever. The bottom line is you don't have to exert any effort to cut - you basically just steer, and the knife does all the work. Which is exactly as it should be.
I've had this knife for about 6 months, and use it almost daily, primarily for cutting up fruits such as pineapple, watermelon, large papayas, peaches, etc. Cutting the rind off a pineapple does require a tiny bit of effort, but otherwise, even a good size watermelon cleaves itself out of the way when it sees this beastie coming.
The wide blade is great for transferring food from the cutting board. Plus it adds that much extra weight, allowing the knife to do that much more of the work for you. I also find the width makes it easier to keep the blade against the fingers of my guiding hand, which makes me feel safer/more confident.
The length enables you to cut through small watermelons, large papayas and personal size pizzas with just one stroke. Sweet! The length also means that much more curve, meaning you can cut more and larger items without lifting the tip off the board. Also sweet!
If had one tiny complaint, it's that the length means the tip of the knife is quite far from your hand, so delicate strokes with the tip, e.g. to cut a blemish out of a piece of fruit, are a little awkward. I've gotten used to it, but it's taken some practice. However, since a 10" wide body knife isn't primarily designed for delicate tip work, I certainly won't deduct for that.
I have a Furi TechEdge Pro Knife Sharpening System. It's a great system, which I love to use. But I've only had to hone this knife's edge 2 or maybe 3 times in 6 months of almost daily use. Granted, I'm only cutting fruits and vegetables on a good quality bamboo cutting board. Still, that's pretty good edge-holding.
You really shouldn't buy a knife of this size, or in this price range, without at least holding it. How a particular knife will feel in your hand is unpredictable, particularly one this large and weighty. But I already knew I liked the Wüsthof Classic line, so I took a chance and bought this from Amazon without ever holding it. And I'm very glad I have it. I love this knife!
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