jJ

[email protected] (John213a)

16/12/2004 1:47 PM

Chinese Chopping Block - what wood?

I was watching "The Iron Chef" last night and the challenger was using a
Chinese style Chopping block that looked like it was just a chunk of tree
trunk, maybe 18" in dia. and 8" high. It did not seem to have been glued up
from individual parts and there was no metal band to keep it from splitting. I
am wondering what wood or woods would be best for making one for myself or for
gifts. Is any special drying proceedure needed. I know Rock Maple is usually
used for the glued up checkerboard butcher block style cutting boards, but are
there other woods that are traditional for the Chinese style round cutting
block? Maybe some wood that is food neutral and still resists splitting? Or
will any chunck of tree work with the proper drying proceedure?
I have seen round checkerboard butcher block style Chinese Chopping Blocks for
sale at prices that amaze me (over $200)


This topic has 2 replies

KY

Ken Yee

in reply to [email protected] (John213a) on 16/12/2004 1:47 PM

16/12/2004 4:05 PM

[email protected] (John213a) wrote in
news:[email protected]:

> trunk, maybe 18" in dia. and 8" high. It did not seem to have been
> glued up from individual parts and there was no metal band to keep it
> from splitting. I am wondering what wood or woods would be best for
> making one for myself or for

It does split a little eventually. You might want to just go to a
local chinese supermarket if you're close to a big city. Stuff
there is way cheap.

I prefer Boos cutting boards myself. The chinese chopping stumps
seem to get kinda slimy eventually (no clue why) and don't clean
up as easily. You don't have to oil them like you do the standard
maple cutting boards though...

ken

Ww

WD

in reply to [email protected] (John213a) on 16/12/2004 1:47 PM

16/12/2004 10:13 AM

On 16 Dec 2004 13:47:16 GMT, [email protected] (John213a) wrote:

In South East Asia they use Ramin or Chengi (spell ?? weather resistance and
very hard tropical hardwood). Recently, I seen it in our neighbour Asian
supermarket a small (12" dia X 4" high) chopping block for $12.

You could use hard Maple trunk if you can find one. I too came across someone
selling it at ebay from pieces of maple glue up to a round piece.

>I was watching "The Iron Chef" last night and the challenger was using a
>Chinese style Chopping block that looked like it was just a chunk of tree
>trunk, maybe 18" in dia. and 8" high. It did not seem to have been glued up
>from individual parts and there was no metal band to keep it from splitting. I
>am wondering what wood or woods would be best for making one for myself or for
>gifts. Is any special drying proceedure needed. I know Rock Maple is usually
>used for the glued up checkerboard butcher block style cutting boards, but are
>there other woods that are traditional for the Chinese style round cutting
>block? Maybe some wood that is food neutral and still resists splitting? Or
>will any chunck of tree work with the proper drying proceedure?
>I have seen round checkerboard butcher block style Chinese Chopping Blocks for
>sale at prices that amaze me (over $200)


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