Hail to the knife

Respect to this guys skills and a crazy sharp knife
byu/BISTtheGOOLZ inKitchenConfidential



by BISTtheGOOLZ

44 Comments

  1. TraditionalYear4928

    Is that Juliien? Or also chopped after?

    Edit: awesome thanks for the knowledge.

    To whoever downvoted go fuck yourself

  2. Diced_and_Confused

    Those sideways cuts are a complete waste of time.

  3. titaniumdoughnut

    If I could do that this well I would literally use it as meditation

  4. GlockPerfect13

    Yea but does he know how to breathe let’s see his face lol

  5. MelatoninJunkie

    I was always taught if you’re cutting horizontal do it before vertical no?

  6. Pattern_Is_Movement

    skills? the sideways cuts are at different angles… the diced result is not going to be consistent in size.

  7. AOP_fiction

    I never noticed a difference doing the horizontal cuts, but folks swear by it. The onion is already layered

  8. Watashiwajoshua

    The up and down motion is less efficient and causes those “flyaway” onion strips. Down and back is a better method.

  9. TheUlfheddin

    Bro powdered an onion while it was still hydrated.

  10. Thin_Locksmith6805

    Sharp knives always make cutting, slicing, and dicing easier

  11. SnooRabbits1411

    The horizontal cuts seemed unnecessary, but damned if that wasn’t beautiful to watch anyway

  12. Aint_EZ_bein_AZ

    No offense but I am confident most in here could do this. His horizontal cuts weren’t great. CARRIED BY THE KNIFE!!

  13. the-subjectDelta

    Horizontal cuts are a waste of time. Just cut the arc of the onion and then dice. Nice knife though.

  14. Intelligent-Luck8747

    How does one make the knife that sharp. More time on the higher grit whetstones?! I have a set of 400, 1000, 2000, and 3000 grain but I can’t get my Mercer that sharp

  15. respect for the knife skills However, for safety sake, always do the horizontal cuts first. It is easier to cut them when the onion is whole than when there are 75 vertical slices giving the onion less stability. I have seen some nasty cuts because the knife isn’t quite as sharp as this Chef’s, or they don’t have quite the same experience in holding the onion securely.

  16. GhettoSauce

    To a layman, it’s impressive – but I’m not impressed.

    I’m gonna go full-analytical because the internet allows me. If I were actually standing there I’d say “good” and not care.

    The vertical cuts should be first if you’re doing them. How he places his fingers for the first vertical slice is disgusting. Then for the remainder of the cuts, he should be tucking his fingers and using the palm instead. The slight downwards angle is fine but not really needed if your hand is placed properly. If you’re a stickler for consistency, the angles coming in after the initial straight cut messes it up. And on top of all this, those vertical cuts only go through 2/3 of the onion, which to me isn’t far enough and wastes time processing the rest of the onion.

    The horizontals are fine but also don’t go deep enough. The cuts should go down and out, not down and up, so the onion slices don’t get raised – it happens every once in a while, but it’s happening to every slice here. I don’t like it, lol. As for the final dicing, this is gonna be very-personal-preference, but I’m a fan of the rocking motion over the chopping down. Anytime someone’s raising the knife up, I cringe. I was taught to hate the sound of a knife hitting the board over and over and to treat it as poor technique (but I acknowledge that’s a “me” thing; I know there are entire regions of the world who “chop”, and do so better than anything I can do).

    The knife being that sharp should be standard in any case.

    Source of judgement no-one asked for: was a high-volume prep cook for years, where dicing onions could be 4 hours of each of your Tuesdays for years (endless big bags of onions; just *endless*)

  17. inkydeeps

    Skills? Took dude 30 seconds to dice half an onion. Slow.

  18. Dangerous-Sector-863

    I need to sharpen my knives. 20 years out of working in restaurants my attention to detail has gone to shit. lol.

  19. 4tunabrix

    I’m not a chef I just enjoy the sub. But I’ve always wondered why you need the horizontal cuts? The onion is in layers so once the cuts along its length have been made the chopping across these cuts would dice it no? Does it just give you a more even dice?

  20. NorthReading

    nice knife

    it’s the second sideways cut that makes the blood come out.

    I just stick with the first and third series.

  21. The knife skills are equal to their ability to sharpen and hone. Damn.

  22. If he following the onions curve by rotating the blade won’t all the dices be the same size?

  23. ImFrenchSoWhatever

    It was going great until the 17 useless horizontal cuts

  24. SgtNeilDiamond

    Jesus I need to get my knife sharpened haha

  25. MysteriousMine9450

    When you volunteer to St ahh ge ( idk how to spell it) at places you want to learn from and do nothing but chop veg and pick/de stem herbs for hours just for the love of the game and the skill set acquired pays off. Warm fuzzies

  26. Icy-Bid224

    If I ever see anyone cutting onions this way in my kitchen I would quickly explain that onions are naturally segmented and if you rotate it 90° there is no need for all the wasted cuts. In other words: stop fucking around and hurry the fuck up Garden Ramsly

  27. proscriptus

    Pretty awesome, but also that edge is impractically sharp for most people.

  28. Tbh I’ve only been in the industry 5 years and that looks slow

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