About the Shape - A Nakiri is a vegetable knife. Under utilized in the Western kitchen, the Nakiri’s flat blade is meant for the push/pull chopping of vegetables. Since the entire flat edge of the knife kisses the cutting board at once, you wont be turning the vegetable into an accordion. Accordion vegetables are still connected like a paper doll after you're “done” cutting them. To truly understand the awesomeness of a Nakiri we recommend making onion soup your first night with the knife. The ease of chopping will blow you away.
About Masashi Kemuri - Masashi-san makes a beautifully polished and crazy sharp blade, working entirely by himself hand-forging, sharpening, and putting on the handles. He’s also a bit of a risk taker, forging knives in his flip-flops and lighting cigarettes off white-hot knife steel. Bad. Ass. The unassuming Kemuri series is an extremely hard worker thanks to the power of SLD stainless steel, which stays sharp like carbon steel but doesn't rust. The burned chestnut and ox-horn handle adds a flash of sexiness to these slick-looking blades.
Knife Shape | Nakiri |
---|---|
Blade Length | 165mm |
Blade Height | 55mm |
Weight | |
Spine Thickness at Heel | |
Steel Type | SLD Stainless Steel |
Rockwell Hardness | 60-62 |
Edge/Bevel | Double (50/50) |
Handle | Wa (Japanese) Handle, Oval/Octagon Chestnut wood handle with water buffalo horn collar |
Blacksmith | Masashi Yamamoto |
Knife Line | Masashi Kemuri |