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Al Mar Knives Chef's Knife, 8.25 in., Black Pakkawood Handle | 
enlarge | Brand: Al Mar Category: Kitchen
List Price: $129.00 Buy New: $113.99 You Save: $15.01 (12%)
New (2) from $113.99
Rating: 2 reviews
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Features a 8.25 in. blade of laminated VG-2 stainless steel and a black Micarta handle.
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| Customer Reviews:
My trusty kitchen knife July 23, 2008 dan_r I've had this knife for years and it's fantastic! To start with, it is in the Japanese Gyuto (I appologize if spelling is off) style. That is the Japanese "chef" knife and is geared towards meat. The Al Mar's edge and spine curve slowly upward, which is not only beautiful, but puts a lot of edge on cutting board. The western style handle is very agreeable. The entire knife is light and probably has the best balance of any large kitchen knife I own. The steel is clad. I forget the Japanese term for it, but it's basically hard steel encased in softer stainless steel. That center steel is certainly hard. I had a tough time sharpening it the first year until the final edge was as low and even as I like it. I have had some issues with rust and don't exactly know why. Maybe it was left to air dry. Those few instances aside, it now is clean and beautiful. I would steer serious beginners to pros to the Al Mar. It takes a little bit of care, as does any kitchen knife, but it pays out in dividends. It takes down meat and vegetables with ease. This length is great for the home chef since a larger blade requires additional cutting board and counter-top space.
My old and trusty July 23, 2008 dan_r I've had this knife for years and it's fantastic! To start with, it is in the Japanese Gyuto (I appologize if spelling is off) style. That is the Japanese "chef" knife and is geared towards meat. The Al Mar's edge and spine curve slowly upward, which is not only beautiful, but puts a lot of edge on cutting board. The western style handle is very agreeable. The entire knife is light and probably has the best balance of any large kitchen knife I own. The steel is clad. I forget the Japanese term for it, but it's basically hard steel encased in softer stainless steel. That center steel is certainly hard. I had a tough time sharpening it the first year until the final edge was as low and even as I like it. I have had some issues with rust and don't exactly know why. Maybe it was left to air dry. Those few instances aside, it now is clean and beautiful. I would steer serious beginners to pros to the Al Mar. It takes a little bit of care, as does any kitchen knife, but it pays out in dividends. It takes down meat and vegetables with ease. This length is great for the home chef since a larger blade requires additional cutting board and counter-top space.
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