Pls don’t judge the exte

by Comfortable-Bar8464

31 Comments

  1. artistzero0027

    They make knives with what are called scallops on the blade. Little indentations that help items clear the face of the knife.

  2. Barzondek

    Use the tip of your knife, less surface area that the produce is touching the knife the less likely it is to stick

  3. Bladrak01

    Most santoku knives are made with the scalloped sides.

  4. Fun_on_a_Bun010

    If you use the tip of the knife there is less surface area and therefore less friction which helps food to release easier

  5. PerfectlySoggy

    A different knife is the easiest solution. The kind with the dimples in the blade. It’s a simple design that allows air between the blade and food; in this case the food is sticking because the blade is flat and there is no air flow to assist with release. A scalloped blade is best for slicing firm but moist foods, like cucumbers or potatoes.

    Sometimes chopping at an angle helps, using gravity to assist the foods falling off your knife. You can also try pulling the knife toward yourself as you cut, more of a slice rather than the up and down chop motion. I usually don’t have sticking issues with that method, regardless of knife, but it’s not as quick as chopping.

  6. shoot_pee

    Tip of the knife and drag it a bit through the food instead of just pressing down. Should slide right through and away

  7. viscousvial

    I try to slice cucs and watch em roll off the board onto the table and stick on the floor so I’ll slip on em later

  8. Equivalent-Excuse-80

    You’re holding the fruit/veg with your non-cutting hand, with your thumb behind your curled fingers.

    Once the blade cuts through the product, extend the index or middle finger from your non-cutting hand and hold down the cut piece in place while you move your knife away to make another cut.

    Like learning how to use a knife, start slow. It will become second nature soon.

    Also, just like you cut different things in different ways because of the diverse shape of produce, so too your finger-hold technique will have to be modified depending on which technique you’re using.

  9. Shawnmeister

    If I’m speedcutting my finger joints pushes as i pull the knife away. That way everything is intact shape wise before cutting and i can pick parts i want for the recipe and relegate the other parts to another. Otherwise use the edge or get knives with groves.

  10. MountainTurkey

    Use the tip and pull towards you or scalloped knife.

  11. KhadaJhina

    use only the tip of the knife. Hold it at a steep angle and just slide along the board.

  12. dasfonzie

    Angle your knife about 10 degrees. Or get a textured knife. Or use a fuguhiki for everything I guess

  13. cheesy_pegasus

    I rinse my knife with water periodically when cutting cucumbers, garlic, and anything else sticky.

  14. phadedlife

    tip of knife, cut slightly on an angle into whatever you’re cutting

  15. blessings-of-rathma

    Zucchini is gonna do that. It’s a weirdly gummy vegetable when it’s raw.

  16. You can also slightly tilt/lean the knife so the veggie wants to slide off to the right side. Also you can get. Serrated edge knife or something with an air gap on the knife.

  17. UnhappyWatch

    I use WD40 typically, quick spritz about once a week and she’s clean as a whistle

  18. Try a less tall knife or use the tip more instead of an up-and-down or rocking motion.
    Instead tip cut and pull towards yourself.

    Rocking and press cutting is comfortable but the added pressure on the knife is not needed for most vegetables.

    Olive-dimples or S-grinds on the knife helps a **tiny** bit but barely and honestly not worth it, especially not dimples since they shorten the life of the knife significantly. A better cutting technique for the applications works way better.

    The only grind i find actually help alot is a “Swedish grind”/”Apple seed edge”, it naturally pushes the produce away so it doesnt stick to the blade and is very long lasting but has a horrible “sharpness” and should honestly not be used in kitchen applications. Again your technique matters more.

    Good luck.

  19. bluephazon

    For stuff like cucumbers, I do draw cuts. If you don’t like the “reverse” motion, do push cuts and focus on using the tip of the knife.

  20. Jolly_Lab_1553

    You can do a pulling towards you motion with the knife blade about 45° tip touching board. This helps minimize surface for veg to stick to

  21. International_Lake28

    Keep the knife lubricated with raw chicken juices

  22. I’ve found success in blades with vertical scallops similar to meat cutting, it cuts down on the surface area of the knife actively in contact with the food, so if you’re a *fast* prep cook, with quick sure cut motions and a practiced level of competence the zucchini shouldn’t be sticking to your blade at all.

  23. Fresh-County3150

    Get a scalloped blade. Those indentations are to avoid the sticking. Somewhat works…

  24. UnderstandingSmall66

    1. The motion of your hand should feel like you are connected to a wheel. With a chef knife you want to move front to back and up and down, that way things stick less
    2. Use the tip of your knife more often for more finer cuts
    3. There are knives with grooves that’s supposed to help but I don’t find they make a massive difference

  25. Just the tip. But… don’t visit the subreddit. Hahaha!

  26. Decent-Product

    1) Have a small, very sharp knife. 2) put your knife upright with the tip on your cutting board. 3) pull towards you, because surface area is small, veggies cannot stick to knife.

  27. fresh_and_gritty

    You’re chopping. You need to slice. By drawing the tip of knife towards you with out it coming up off of the board. Too much of your product is being allowed to touch the blade.
    Source: I sliced cucumbers for a sushi restaurant and still have nightmares about not having enough despite prepping hundreds of cucs.

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