Is there such a thing as a bone cleaver?
When I was growing up, my mother had a massive, MASSIVE cleaver that she kept in the kitchen. It was immense and heavy. My father had gotten it when he worked in a butchery. This cleaver has since been lost to us. I would like to find something similar. When I asked her what the specific type of knife was, she said it was a "bone cleaver." It was easily 60 years old when I was little 30 years ago.
For the life of me, I can't find references anywhere to bone cleavers. I can find meat cleavers (but most have warnings not to use them for bone). They're smaller than this was, and also lighter. I can also find references to vegetable cleavers and Asian style cleavers. Again, they're smaller and lighter than this. They're hammers compared to the sledgehammer this thing was.
My mom used to use it expressly for cutting through bone. You'd raise it up, give it a little force to accompany it's natural weight, and it could go through almost anything with relative ease (up to and including femurs).
I know bone saws exist, and usually I just keep a spare blade around for my hacksaw to cut through bone when I break down a carcass. So, is there such a thing as a bone cleaver? Would it be a special order thing these days? I'm wondering if it may have been a custom made knife back then because I have never seen anything else like it.
Best Answer
Absolutely.
I have this one here: J.A. Henckels International Classic 6-inch Cleaver ... it is billed as being designed "for chopping through joints and bones". These cleavers tend to have good, solid weight and a short blade bevel to give it endurance and power. You would not slice things with this. This is a momentum tool to crash through the target tissues with a confident swing. The hacksaw that you mention offers better control, in general.
The opposite of this is an Asian style cleaver that is used primarily for vegetables. Lighter, faster blade with a deeper bevel which makes it sharper for slicing but it would wear down faster under the impact of bones/joints.
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Quick Answer about "Is there such a thing as a bone cleaver?"
Here is more about what we do. Bold and brawny, the meat cleaver (also known as a bone chopper) is the largest and heaviest of kitchen knives. It's designed to break down meat, with the purpose of hewing through small to medium bones and gristly connective tissue.Can you cut bones with a cleaver?
Butchers use breaking knives or meat cleavers for cutting bone. Meat cleavers are the most common because they are more reliable for cutting through all types of bones as well as thick meat.What kind of knife can cut through bone?
\u3010RUST PROOF & WEAR-RESISTANT\u3011Bone cleaver knife blade is made of 100% 4Cr14 stainless steel with high quality that is rust resistant, easy to maintain, holding its edge retention and keeping long lasting sharpness. Heavy duty meat cleaver is the perfect tool for getting through tough meat and bone.How do you use a bone cleaver?
A Chinese chef's knife is not for bones. Even if you're cutting up a duck or a chicken in the traditional Chinese style across the bones, you should switch to a meat cleaver intended for bones. That can be a Western style or Chinese style bone cleaver.How to Use a Cleaver to Chop Pork and ChickenBones
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Answer 2
To add to the existing comments and answer. There are absolutely bone cleavers. The Chinese are very fond of cleavers. While, most commonly found Chinese cleavers that you'll find are "vegetable knives", they also make bone cleavers. If you have a chinatown or a asian restaurant supply store near you, you can probably find one for cheap. I have really nice Japanese chef's knives but see no reason to pay lots for a bone cleaver. I have one that cost me probably $20. I also have an good vegetable cleaver handed down to me, but that one doesn't get used on bones.
See here for more info: http://www.seriouseats.com/2010/08/how-to-choose-buy-care-for-a-meat-cleaver.html
Answer 3
http://www.chefknivestogo.com/cckcleaver.html This is billed as a "Rhino Cleaver" and is the biggest I've seen. If it's well balanced it would be a fantastic tool.
Answer 4
I have a cleaver that matches your spec's on your #1 choice, BUT the blade is about 4" (front) for veggie chopping and the rear 3" is a more fortified sharp blade angled section designed for bones. It has Chinese symbols so I don't know what brand it is. It works great, as I do not need/want a cleaver for each.
Answer 5
This one is a bone cleaver from Malaysia. Weigh approximately 1.6 Kilogram. Length of blade is 8 inches and height is 6 inches with the handle being 5 inches and a half. Most importantly blade thickness is approximately 1.3 centimeter. Made with soft steel with dull chopping edge. Essentially stated as a bone chopper.
Answer 6
This is old but pretty much if your looking for the real tang n knives any store would do but a hand forged one yeah the greatest ever I have this one knife/clever because it does both also it's better than all the commented knives/clever because it's heavy but light chops beef bones but slices vegetables
Answer 7
https://www.amazon.com/Sato-Heavy-Duty-Cleaver-Chopping-Butcher/dp/B016E3RGMQ this can chop bones as it say so in amazon as some already showed you but the link is for amazon if u still wanted to buy one. here are more links to other one https://www.chefknivestogo.com/cckbonechopper.html
https://www.amazon.com/Heavy-Cleaver-Butcher-Chopper-Carbon/dp/B073JBGQZ5
this one for sure will cop the bone as it did show it doing just that with pigs feet https://www.amazon.com/Cutting-Cleaver-Stainless-Chopping-Multipurpose/dp/B07QD7CPGT
this last one does not say if it can shop bone. but it look so cool that why i have add a link to it as well. https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07L8M41ZG
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