What kind of knife should I use to slice tomatoes?

What kind of knife should I use to slice tomatoes? - Kitchen Knife

Is it better to use a serrated knife, or a regular chef's knife that is really sharp?



Best Answer

A really well-sharpened santoku-style chef's knife is usually my choice. But, it does depend on the type of slicing... such as thick/thin discs, wedges, or dicing.

While I understand that a serrated blade can help with slicing a super-ripe tomato, when I want really thin disc-shaped slices, something very sharp and preferably a thinner spine. The favorite in my kitchen is definitely a Henckel santoku chef blade. Some versions can have a very thick spine, and wouldn't work as well, though. This type of choice is also more utilitarian if you're cutting any other veggies at the same time, or making additional cuts in the tomatoes, such as when you're also going to be halving the discs or full-on dicing.

Things I like the thinnest slices on are a ham and cheese melt, roast beef sammy, a sub for the road, and sometimes for a garnish. (hors d'œuvre, anyone?)

Also, when I'm cutting tomatoes into wedges, I also like to use this same type of sharp, non-serrated blade. Otherwise, I find it harder than necessary to do the smaller divisions after the 1/4-of-a-tomato size. I nearly always do 1/8 or 1/12 sized wedges for salad, so it isn't terribly often I use a "real" tomato knife. When I do, is when it's for a lunch and I don't want to sully a larger blade, or when doing large batches. Getting the core out is certainly easiest with a smaller, serrated blade.




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Do you need a serrated knife for tomatoes?

There is one more knife, however, that is essential for cutting bread and tomatoes: the serrated knife. While you can cut tomatoes with a chef's knife (in fact, knife sharpeners sometimes use tomatoes as a test), your blade has to be ultra-sharp to do a good job.

What knife do you use for cutting through crusts and tomatoes?

Serrated Knife Serrated knives are often thought of simply as bread knives. Their serrated edge makes cutting through crusty breads easy. That serrated edge also makes it easy to cut through fruits with slippery or shiny skins, like tomatoes, citrus fruits, and watermelon.



You've Been Cutting Tomatoes Wrong This Whole Time




More answers regarding what kind of knife should I use to slice tomatoes?

Answer 2

Anything this guy sells: http://knifewear.com/

He brings in a bag of ripe tomatoes every morning to show off his blades (and lets customers try them all). The quality of the Japanese steel makes my professional Henkels blades look like toys. He gets all of his blades direct from the masters in Japan. The blades are so sharp, they sort of just fall through the tomatoes...

I use one of these: http://knifewear.com/knife-family.asp?family=5 for most things and have another smaller paring knife to use as well.

But the point is if you use a very sharp knife, you don't need a "tomato" or serrated knife. If your sharp knife doesn't cut through the tomato, it's not sharp.

Disclaimer: I have no affiliation with Knifewear. I just made the mistake of going in one day and buying some knives from him. He has shown me the error of my ways.

Answer 3

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomato_knife

A tomato knife is a small serrated kitchen knife designed to slice through tomatoes. The serrated edge allows the knife to penetrate the tomatoes’ skin quickly and with a minimum of pressure without crushing the flesh. Many tomato knives have forked tips that allow the user to remove the seeds more easily.

Serrations are not required to cut tomatoes – a sharp straight blade works – but the serrations allow the knife to cut tomatoes and other foods even when dull. Compare bread knife and steak knife, which are similarly serrated.

I aways use a aerated knife as it doesn't matter how soft the tomato is, it will still slice it with ease

The best tomato knife I ever had, had a high carbon steel blade about 13cm long, and only 1cm in height. The short height and the rough carbon steel surface meant that the slices didn't stick to the blade as you cut, and fell away cleanly. It broke one day when pushed to hard into soft wood chopping block. Never found another one like it

Coated knives like this should be good

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Images: Lukas, Lukas, Lukas, Katerina Holmes