just want to point out that maintaining a knife is a whole hobby that requires a time investment of learning the skill and storage of additional tools and materials. i'm surprised at all the apparent knife enthusiast posts trashing this device. I take my victorinox (which is absolutely nothing special and surprises me that it costs $60+ dollars) to the farmers market for sharpening but sharpness isn't even the problem. Potatoes in particular stick to the blade like a strong magnet and it takes me 5x longer to prep. I enjoy cooking but not chopping endless veggies and i'm hoping this thing can carry some of that weight without looking like i'm using an oversized electric toothbrush.
non_aligned|5 months ago
You're right that's a hobby. But the hobby's definition of "proper maintenance" and what it "requires" is basically just people nerding out about things that don't matter the slightest in the real world.
To maintain a kitchen knife so that it cuts a tomato without squishing it, you don't need a book on knife science. Further, that nerdery is probably actively harmful, because instead of simple solutions, people are told they need an inspection microscope and a variety of jigs and other implements. So they buy an objectively bad electric sharpener and move on.
YeGoblynQueenne|5 months ago
nkrisc|5 months ago
Properly maintaining a knife does. Most people don't need to properly maintain a knife. You can do it good enough with a honing steel and some crappy automatic sharpener.
I enjoy cooking good food for my family and myself, but cooking is not a hobby of mine. So if my knife can slice a tomato without crushing it, then that's good enough for me. I don't need to shave a tomato so thin that the slice is transparent.
Does the crappy automatic sharpener work? Well the knife cuts better after I use it, so yes, it does.
appcustodian2|5 months ago
its-summertime|5 months ago
I can attest to this as I have improved knifes day one of trying despite my lack of any sort of skill
xandrius|5 months ago
Because that is just general maintenance to me.
If you don't put your good knives in the dishwasher and wash/dry them right after usage, they'll last a long time.
cyberax|5 months ago
This is enough to get your knives to be sharp enough to shave hair.
Time investment is more individual. It took me about 3 hours to get good enough.
ripley12|5 months ago
rcpt|5 months ago
asah|5 months ago
minor pain to clean, but MUCH faster than a knife, totally safe (pusher keeps fingers away from the blade) and you get precise thickness cuts every time, which means they cook precisely too.
Especially good for vegetables like potatoes, onion, eggplant, etc.
ricardobeat|5 months ago
peteforde|5 months ago
Home cook deli slicers are the most slept on, underrated pantry upgrade.