Cutting up food  into uniform pieces is one of the most important skills to master in  cooking. And once you learn to use an all-purpose chef's knife, it's  easier than you think. 
I  like to tell that the knife is the original food processor. It can  slice, mince, chop, crush, tenderize, and scoop up food - and you can  even use the end of the handle to grind spices. Complement it with a  smaller paring knife for finer cutting and making garnishes, and you'll  be ready for just about anything.
Getting a Grip
Hold  the knife in  your writing hand. Move  your hand all the way up the  handle so that your thumb is on one side of  the                                                       blade and your index  finger on the other  side. Curling your index finger slightly, grasp the  blade firmly  between your thumb and index finger. This may feel a                                                       bit strange at  first, but once you  get used to it, you'll find that grasping the blade  in this way gives  you much more control than simply wrapping all your  fingers around the  handle.
Use   your free hand to hold the food in place, curling your fingertips   under. Use the flat side of the blade alongside the first knuckles of   your free hand, and as you slice or                                                       chop, slide your  free hand along to guide the blade  and keep it vertical. To avoid  cutting yourself, never uncurl the  fingers of your free hand, and never  raise the blade                                                       higher than the  first knuckle. Try  not to wiggle the blade while cutting. Use a firm  downward and slightly  forward motion                                                     
Here's  my number  one tip for keeping your wok happy and perfectly seasoned.  Use it! Don't  banish it to that extra storage area behind the basement  door. Hang it  in your                                                       kitchen, where  you'll reach for it all the time to cook all kinds  of food.
Slicing
Holding the food and the chef knife firmly, cut straight down, using the knuckles of your free hand as a guide.
Julienne and shredding
Stack   a few slices, and use the slicing technique,                                                       cutting straight  down through the stack to  create sticks. For matchstick julienne, start  with 1/8-inch slices, and  cut them into 1/8-inch sticks. To shred                                                       food into fine  slivers, begin by cutting  paper-thin slices, then cut across them in the  same way to create thin  strip.
Dicing
Line sticks up perpendicular to the blade, and slice straight down across them, creating cubes.
Mincing
                                                     Start by cutting the ingredient into thin strips, then dice the strips. Hold the knife handle   in one hand and, with the other, hold down the tip of the blunt edge  of                                                       the blade.  Using the  tip as a pivot, raise and lower the blade in a chopping  motion, moving  it from side to side to mince everything evenly. Scoop  up minced                                                       ingredients  occasionally, flip them over, and keep chopping to ensure  even mincing.
Roll-Cutting
Parallel Cutting
Crushing
To crush ginger or garlic, place it near the edge of the cutting board, lay the knife blade   flat over it with the                                                       blade facing away  from you, and with the heel of your free hand,  give the side of the  blade a good whack, being careful to avoid the  edge of the blade.
Tenderizing
Use  the blunt  edge of the chef's knife to tenderize meat by pounding it in  a  crisscross pattern. It's even more fun to get out your aggressions  by  turning the blade                                                       on its side and  slapping the surface of the meat.
Care and Cleaning: Staying on the Cutting Edge
Wash   your chef's knife after each use in warm, soapy water and dry it well.   To                                                      preserve its  handle,  never soak a chef's knife in water, and never put it in the  dishwater.  Store your knife in its own protected place (I use a  magnetic knife  rack),.                                                       not in a drawer  where its edge might be dulled by knocking against  other tools. To  maintain a sharp edge, I recommend using a traditional  knife sharpening  steel .                                                      
- Hold the steel firmly, placing its tip on a cutting board.
- Position the knife at a 20-degree angle to the steel with the blade facing down and the handle of the knife just below the handle of the steel.
- Push the blade downward along the steel, pulling it toward you as you go, until you reach the steel's tip.
- Move the blade back up and place its other side against the steel: repeat the sharpening action, moving the blade from the steel handle to its tip.
- Repeat six to eight times on each side of the blade.
The Cutting Board
We have a built-in butcher block   surface at home, but I still like to place a smaller                                                       wood or plastic  board over it to  preserve its surface. These smaller boards are also  easier to store and  clean. That's especially important when you've been  cutting meat,                                                       poultry, or fish.  Some  people like to reserve a separate board just for that purpose to  avoid  cross-contamination of other foods.
Courtesy: Chinese cutting methods
Courtesy: Chinese cutting methods
 
 
 
Hey good post di :) I'm also hoping i'll come to US and start using the wok. It somehow doesnt work well with the indian household ;)
ReplyDeleteInteresting info :-)
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