How to Use a Petty (Paring) Knife - Japanese Kitchen Knife Skills

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 25 кві 2024
  • How to Use a Petty (Paring) Knife - Japanese Kitchen Knife Skills
    Petty knives are the ultimate utility tool for small jobs in the kitchen, and the perfect companion to a larger gyuto or santoku. Using a paring knife is simple enough, but former chef Mike has some handy tips for using petty, paring, and utility knives like a chef. Join him for this Japanese kitchen knife skills lesson!
    Knives used in the video:
    Haruyuki Goma 80mm Petty: knifewear.com/products/haruyu...
    Tojiro DP 70mm Bird's Beak Knife: knifewear.com/products/tojiro...
    Haruyuki Zanpa 235mm Petty: knifewear.com/products/haruyu...
    Masashi Kuroshu 150mm Petty: knifewear.com/products/masash...
    Masashi Shiroshu Ko-Bunka: knifewear.com/products/masash...
    Seki Kanetsugu 150mm Petty: knifewear.com/products/seki-k...
    Kamo Damascus 150mm Petty: knifewear.com/products/kamo-v...
    For all of your knife, sharpening, and kitchen related needs, head to knifewear.com
    Or visit Knifewear stores in Calgary, Edmonton, Ottawa, or Vancouver.
    Join our community:
    ▶ Instagram / knifewear​
    ▶ Facebook: / knifewear​
    ▶ Twitter: / knifewear
    ▶ Discord: / discord
    Intro 0:00
    80mm Petty in the Hand 0:31
    135mm Petty on a Cutting Board 2:06
    150mm Petty on a Board 3:31
    Supreming Citrus 5:56
    Trimming Meat with a Petty 8:22
    Deboning Meat with a Petty 10:52
    Which Petty is Right for You 13:42

КОМЕНТАРІ • 48

  • @jkbcook
    @jkbcook 6 місяців тому +1

    Great master class. The sign of a good teacher is the small steps between A and B explained well. Always learn something new every time I watch one of these videos. Thank you.😊

  • @VinegarAndSaltedFries
    @VinegarAndSaltedFries 14 днів тому

    Hey Mike, just wanted to say I took your advice and purchased a Ko-Bunka (Masakage Koishi Ko-Bunka)It was my first Japanese knife. Awesome knife. Incredibly sharp and useful. Great advice.

  • @zynskavzynskav4465
    @zynskavzynskav4465 Рік тому

    Japanese knives are the best. Artistic, have many blade types, sharp, durable, and authentic.

  • @rayschoch5882
    @rayschoch5882 4 місяці тому

    30 years ago, I had one kitchen knife, and it was dull. Now I have a dozen 3" paring knives, a pair of 8" chef's knives, and a trio of these "in-between" Petty Knives, which are the ones I use the most often. Kept sharp, they're versatile, comfortable, and easily my favorites of the whole group, and I use them for just about any kitchen cutting task.

  • @joseramirez-hh2sw
    @joseramirez-hh2sw Місяць тому

    Ko-Bunka is exactly what I've been looking for and did not know existed

  • @CMG321
    @CMG321 10 місяців тому

    Good call out on the carrots and hummus after doing a grocery shop! Thanks for the video, very informative just as I'm about to make a purchase of one.

  • @Ouga_Official
    @Ouga_Official 2 роки тому +8

    I know this might be basic stuff for more hardcore cooks but honestly I learned so much from this video. I have an extreme fear of getting cuts (it is more painful to me than physical injury) but I also love cooking.
    I just invested in two very nice Japanese knifes and I am trying to learn as much as possible so I can use them faster but still safely.

    • @KnifewearKnives
      @KnifewearKnives  2 роки тому +1

      That's our goal, so I'm glad it helped you learn the basics!

  • @SalVitroNY
    @SalVitroNY 6 місяців тому

    4:28 love the enthusiasm for this ko-bunka 😂 idk that matching petty seems tall enough for me wish I could hold them both before making final decision

  • @RB-dw1yb
    @RB-dw1yb 2 роки тому +1

    Always appreciated… love the videos

  • @WanderingBobAK
    @WanderingBobAK 2 роки тому

    Nice vid, very informative. Love the editing and touch of humor.

  • @edro3838
    @edro3838 2 роки тому +1

    Purchased my Masakage gyuto and nakiri from Knifeware. Good people to do business with.

  • @jamestyrer6067
    @jamestyrer6067 2 роки тому

    Great video will help me in blade size choices. Also love the cutting board !

  • @andrewm1136
    @andrewm1136 2 роки тому +1

    Great video as always Mike .. I love the ko-bunka as well because of the height and constant contact with my knuckles .. and as a bonus, I'm not going to get those that must, commenting on my onion cutting jokes, thanks for the save!

  • @DANVIIL
    @DANVIIL Рік тому +1

    Excellent - I love my Petty knife. I think it's around 160mm and it's super useful, very thin and I keep the AS edge sharp as possible.

    • @KnifewearKnives
      @KnifewearKnives  Рік тому

      That's a super useful size, I love my Aogami super petty!

  • @joshuatoh7787
    @joshuatoh7787 Рік тому +1

    cool sir!!

  • @sherriclark9016
    @sherriclark9016 Рік тому

    Great video, thank you so much.

  • @dimmacommunication
    @dimmacommunication 2 роки тому

    Here in Italy we make " Kaimano " paring knives , super cheap and work super well.

  • @illomens2766
    @illomens2766 2 роки тому +2

    I have a nice Japanese handmade paring knife but I never end up using it :/ I find myself using my Santoku (200mm) for pretty much every task
    Great video and presentation though

  • @jmadd1000
    @jmadd1000 2 роки тому +1

    Here I thought mike was going to demonstrate perfect spud turning technique! Nice work

    • @KnifewearKnives
      @KnifewearKnives  2 роки тому +1

      It was very hard for him to resist the urge!

  • @KwaPaN3R
    @KwaPaN3R Рік тому

    thinking about a 140-150 petty with a narrow blade just for trimming meat. For any cutting on the board tasks I prefer a larger knife like my 180 Santoku.

  • @gregrudzinski
    @gregrudzinski Рік тому

    I like your chefs bib ! A link to that please. Thanks.

    • @KnifewearKnives
      @KnifewearKnives  Рік тому +1

      Hey, you can find it here!
      knifewear.com/products/medium-rare-henry-black-apron?variant=22171068203056

  • @markust8904
    @markust8904 2 роки тому

    After deboning chicken bits and other things, it would be great to see you hone up the knife after use. How many strokes etc. I get that if the knife is sharp in the first place it shouldnt take that long with the honing rod to put the edge back on. But every time i hit the knuckle on a chicken bone for example i feel i have done some damage to the edge.

    • @KnifewearKnives
      @KnifewearKnives  2 роки тому

      That's a great point, we'll work it into the next skills video! I would say a good 20 strokes should be tons after deboning a.chicken or two!

  • @durace99
    @durace99 2 роки тому

    i use my TF 135 petty for everything , it out performs my 200mm gyuto.

  • @JETBLACKPRIEST
    @JETBLACKPRIEST Рік тому

    I find the ricaso detail on that musashi petty interesting.
    Small story, this all comes back, trust me. I lost half a golf ball of steel on my 12 inch do all cold steel chef knife fighting a frozen block of chicken, no big loss. But last week I decided to snap the handle off grind everything above and behind the missing chuck of steel into a japanese style tapered tang since there was 8 inches of blade infront of the very large "chip", if you could even call it that, it was the whole fucken potato tbh. I was still using it with the usable edge starting 4 inches infront of my hand since everything else in the house was somehow worse but something needed to be done so I decided to settle for the 8 inches of blade it had left and a new handle (8 inches was alot more reasonable than its original size for how the purposes I used it tbh, like nobody should be cutting chilli with 12 inches of steel lmao.) I had decided to rehandle it with a wa style handle since I thought it hit a few design elements of a japanese knife now that the blade was so tall with its new proportions aswell as being suitably thin, with a bit of effort it could be revived. I had also been bitten by the bug. You know it of course, its why im here. I wanted a japanese (looking) knife and I was willing to commit sacriledge to get it. I used wood from an axe handle, probably hickory, removed heeeeaps of fat till I got a vague rectangle, then laminated some maybe 3.5mm thick black paper micarta I made between two sheets of copper I flattened from a pipe. I come more from the western knife crowd so I used two vertical hidden pins in all 5 layers of my handle for rigidity then burnt in the tang after forming the slot in the handle, once I got solid fitment I pulled the blade, notched the tang and used epoxy to set it and fill/plug the slot where there were gaps. If I do it again I want to try the dowel method and some nicer materials and better tools like a bench grinder I wish I never got rid of, this was just cobbled together by hand but im proud of it, especially how well I did hand filing the octagonal shape and making something pretty out of otherwise junk materials, I couldnt really be happier with how it turned out. (linked photos below)
    TL;dr:
    The interesting part is how I ground the heel, I too swept it out like that but I ended up with a slightly more agressive transition in the armpit, only cause I liked how it looked though and I somehow managed to pin the balance point right on the very beginning of the heel by complete accident and it feels superb in the grip shown, I guess now I know why haha, pretty stoked accidentally jacked a solid design principle.
    I've also learnt that while one (very large) knife can do most stuff, it probably shouldnt(which is a hilarious thought looking at those knfe racks), I picked up a yaxell ran plus kiritsuke for a stupid good price while I was working on the cold steelu mustinky (ive named it) and obviously since im here, im looking into other knives to round out the collection and hit certain niches to spare knives of tasks outside their purpose.
    Added some photos to go with such a long winded story.
    (imgur.com/a/lx7WxHg?fbclid=IwAR3ZD-l7-nDBffvAqtjHWBZJjneahCKBPAk-Pz5IlLLotWN9PiYcBxwVhc0)
    Yes I did most of this bare foot on my garage floor lmao.

  • @90sumbeats7
    @90sumbeats7 9 місяців тому

    There’s a hatchet on the middle magnet last one on the right what is that looks insane

  • @ok-tchau
    @ok-tchau 2 роки тому

    The price of that ko-bunka is $479! 🤑

  • @bobdobalina8680
    @bobdobalina8680 2 роки тому +1

    How petty if you 😆

    • @KnifewearKnives
      @KnifewearKnives  2 роки тому +2

      I like your style 😂 We almost used that one..

  • @BabyBoomersDoomer
    @BabyBoomersDoomer 2 роки тому

    Hey. Did you get more handsome?

  • @aimeem
    @aimeem 2 роки тому

    This video has some great information, but the way you were waving those knives around made me seriously twitchy. If I were in that kitchen I'd be all, "Oh, don't mind me, just staying as far away from you as I can get..."

  • @slodoco
    @slodoco Рік тому

    Don't mean to be petty about it, but it's pronounced "Ko Boonka". 😉🔪

  • @giovannichiesa8051
    @giovannichiesa8051 Рік тому

    Coltelli giapponesi ma stile di taglio occidentale.