I know more than one person who has had their (expensive) cutlery ruined by the guy in the knife sharpening truck.
That sounds so ominous!
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I know more than one person who has had their (expensive) cutlery ruined by the guy in the knife sharpening truck.
That sounds so ominous!
right?
sounds like motive in a mystery novel.
My stainless Chicago cutlery has a sharpener in the knife block. Set so that I can't really do it particularly wrong.
Also. What is wrong with my ear? It seems like I have water in it, but it started the day after I showered, not the day of. It makes me want to take a bath to submerge my ears as if doing it backward would clear it. Okay, I probably just want to take a bath. But still.
I am so tired, y'all. I don't know how to shake it. And I have so much shit to do, but I cannot make myself do it. I just want to go to bed.
Timelies all!
Gary's out of town this week, so his mom took me out to dinner tonight. whee.
Yay Dana!
My meeting this morning went very well. I'm so pleased.
My stainless Chicago cutlery has a sharpener in the knife block. Set so that I can't really do it particularly wrong.
Per Alton Brown, those kind of things mostly re-straighten knives, rather than actually sharpen them.
Well, a lot of times what feels like a dull edge is really a thin edge that's curled to one side or the other, so a "sharpener" that straightens out that edge can make the knife "sharper" and function better.
I hmphed at Alton Brown and went to see what the internet said, and huh. There are a lot of people who spend a lot of time sharpening knives. I did not know this.
Anyway, I am apparently content with the level of sharp my implements are. I suppose we should have them sharpened.
Honing is different than sharpening but it makes knives last longer between sharpening.
S. just uses one of those round metal stick ... things.