How and when should I use a bread knife?

How and when should I use a bread knife? - Close-Up Shot of a Person Slicing a Bread on a Wooden Chopping Board

I know the answer is "it's for cutting bread" but what I really want to know is when does its uniqueness actually help?

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What I've noticed is that it's sooooooooo much easier to use the santoku knives to cut breads with a harder crust like french bread or sourdough or a batard. They require no pressure, they easily cut all the way through, and they don't make a giant mess of crumbs. Where as when I try using the bread knife, since what I'm cutting is bread, it requires much more effort to cut, there is always a big pile of crumbs and the last cut, the cut needed to separate the slice from the rest of the bread is always very difficult without feeling like I'm going to accidentally saw the cutting board instead of the bread.

Am I doing it wrong or is the bread knife really not designed for hard breads but maybe only soft breads (the kinds that are usually bought already sliced?)



Best Answer

The "problem" with using your Santoku knives is that they dull fast when you use them on bread.

If you keep your knives well sharpened, you can do without the bread-knife.

Other uses for bread-knives, is cutting tomatoes, for instance. Another thing you can use a well sharpened Santoku knife for.




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How and when should I use a bread knife? - Elegant plate with bread and napkin served on decorated table



What do you use a bread knife for?

The primary job of a bread knife is to slice bread. A good bread knife should saw through a tough crust without mangling or compressing the tender crumb within.

Do you have to use a bread knife to cut bread?

Loaves of bread require a special knife to help cut through them. Because a knife with a flat edge would squash the bread downward as you cut it, a knife with a serrated edge is needed to saw through the bread.

Why should you use a bread knife to cut bread?

There's a reason a serrated knife is so often called a bread knife. The long blade with a series of sharp teeth excels at neatly cutting through the exterior of crusty loaves and gliding through soft ones without crushing them. The serrated knife is no one-trick pony, especially if you have a good one.



How to Use a Bread Knife




More answers regarding how and when should I use a bread knife?

Answer 2

I agree with BaffledCook, as well as a comment Joe made: most people don't keep their knives sharp. A dull straight-edged knife can be dangerous when trying to cut into a hard crusty bread loaf: it will require a lot of force and can easily slide off the domed surface of many breads. (I also don't necessarily want to use some of my more fragile sharp edges on very hard crusts, where I could easily chip or bend the straight edge of the knife.)

A serrated blade can more easily "dig in" to the hard crust of bread. But perhaps even more importantly, if you reach a soft interior, a dull straight-edged knife will simply squash your bread rather than cutting through. (I've been at many people's houses who have dull knives, and cutting bread is a nightmare unless they have a serrated knife.)

I do keep my (straight-edged) knives very sharp. But I have to say that I appreciate a bread knife most when trying to make many even slices of very soft enriched breads, particularly when the loaf is very large and tall. Yes, one can do it with a very sharp straight-edged blade, but the long sawing motion seems easier to guide to me. (It does generate more crumbs, though.) Perhaps I'm just used to it. Or perhaps I've just encountered far too many dull knives at other people's houses who ended up squashing loaves of bread as they cut. You really do need an exceptionally sharp knife to cut through soft bread without potentially squashing the loaf a bit.

Lastly, I'd say the place where bread knives are essential is in cutting hot bread. Every bread baker knows you're not supposed to cut bread right out of the oven, but every person who loves to eat bread usually wants it immediately. When you cut bread that hasn't "set" inside, it tends to leave a gummy residue on your knife as you cut. With a straight-edge blade, this can quickly become a disaster, as your fine edge gets gummed up with residue from the bread and no longer performs as well. The serrations on a bread knife, however, will keep the knife going even through very fresh bread. (On the other hand, hot bread tears easily, so you have the risk of tearing with serrations vs. the risk of squashing the bread with a straight edge. I tend to be more in favor of not squashing bread.)

Answer 3

For slicing real bread, a serrated blade is the tool of choice. Other blades such as a straight-edged knife will tend to squash the bread down. The name of the knife does not matter, but a good 'bread knife' will have serrations which are optimally designed for slicing real bread.

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