Passer aux informations produits
1 de 4

Sakai Takayuki Suigyu Kasumitogi Deba 165mm

Sakai Takayuki Suigyu Kasumitogi Deba 165mm

Prix habituel $237.00 CAD
Prix habituel Prix promotionnel $237.00 CAD
En vente Épuisé

3 $ de frais de livraison pour toute commande de plus de 100 $ au Canada. ?

À propos de la forme - Deba signifie « dent courte et grosse » et cela décrit la forme du couteau. C'est le premier couteau qu'un chef sushi utiliserait pour préparer du poisson. Il est utilisé pour fileter le poisson et découper la viande désossée. Le Deba est une lame japonaise traditionnelle qui n'est aiguisée que d'un côté. On appelle cela un « biseau simple ». Ne vous laissez pas tromper par la forme et le poids d'un Deba ; ils sont agiles et précis. Choisissez la longueur de votre Deba en fonction de la taille du poisson que vous découperez le plus souvent.

À propos de Sakai Takayuki Suigyu Kasumitogi - Sakai Takayuki est connu comme le plus grand fabricant de couteaux de Sakai. L'entreprise héberge de nombreux forgerons et artisans qui travaillent ensemble pour créer une vaste gamme de couteaux. Bien que la région de Sakai se spécialise traditionnellement dans les lames à un seul biseau, Sakai Takayuki fabrique de nombreuses formes différentes.

Le Suigyu Kasumitogi est parfait pour un jeune chef sushi ou un cuisinier amateur souhaitant se lancer dans le monde du sushi. L'acier au carbone Shirogami (blanc) est vraiment excellent. Il est super facile à aiguiser, prend un tranchant brillamment aiguisé, coupe comme de la soie et est très robuste pour sa dureté. Il suffit de le garder au sec pour éviter la rouille !

Shape Deba
Maintenance Level
Blade Length 165 mm |
Blade Height 52 mm
Thickness 6,6 mm
Weight 271 g
Steel Type Shirogami #3 (White Carbon Steel) Avec un revêtement en acier au carbone
Edge/Bevel Biseau simple - Biais droit
Handle Manche de style japonais (Wa) - Forme en D Magnolia Collier en Corne de Buffle
Knife Line Sakai Takayuki Suigyu Kasumitogi
Brand Sakai Takayuki
Made in Sakai, Osaka, Japon

A NOTE ABOUT RUST  

Carbon steel is an awesome material to make knives out of. It’s easy to get sharp and stays sharp a very long time. But this comes with a trade-off; It will rust if you let it. To  avoid “bad” rust (orange rust) Wipe the knife dry with a dry cloth after use. Over time, the  blade will begin to protect itself with an oxide layer (grey to dark grey “good” rust),  this will slow the reaction time but not inhibit the rust entirely. Maintain the good  habit of drying off your knife.  

USE  

• Only cut food you can bite through with this knife. Hard foods can chip the blade. No olive pits, bones,  lobster shells, woody stems or parmesan rinds. Cutting frozen food is especially bad  because the cold will make hard steel even more brittle. If you wouldn’t chew it with  your own teeth, don’t cut it.  

• Your cutting surface is the biggest culprit of dulling your knife. Use wood. End  grain wood is especially good. Plastic can be fine too, but certainly not glass,  granite or bamboo

• The edge of your knife works best sliding forwards or backwards. Scraping the  knife edge sideways will dull or damage the edge. Instead, use the spine of the knife to move foods across the cutting board. Do not twist the edge or pry with the edge, this is the worst screwdriver you ever bought and these motions will certainly  damage the edge. Listen to the knife! If you can hear the edge making a “tink”  sound on the cutting board, change what you are doing.  

CLEANING  

• After use, wash the knife by hand with regular dish soap, rinse with hot water  and dry by hand immediately. Dishwashers are very bad for knives.  

• Wood handles may dry out over time and exposure to water. Simply treat them  with some food safe mineral oil or beeswax.  

• If you see orange rust, remove it. The scrubby side of a sponge can do the trick.  If it’s still not coming off try baking soda and water mixed into a paste or a product  called Barkeeper’s Friend.  

STORING  

• Protect the edge; for your safety and to avoid edge damage. A simple blade cover  will do the trick if you keep knives in a drawer or travel case. 

• A convenient wall magnet made with wood is a great way to show off your knives.  Be sure to put it back spine first, then roll it onto the blade face. This will keep the  edge from contacting the wood first.  

• The good-ol’ counter top block can keep knives at the ready and protected. So can  drawer inserts. Whatever the method, keep the edge from touching anything else. 

Barcode: 4582226391088
SKU: ST-06336

Expédition et retours

Chez Knifewear, nous nous engageons à expédier votre commande dans un délai d'un jour ouvrable. En cas de retard, nous nous efforcerons de vous en informer et de vous donner un délai.

Nous offrons la livraison à 3 $ pour toute commande de plus de 100 $* partout au Canada et de 200 $* pour les clients aux États-Unis. Nous livrons partout dans le monde et proposons des tarifs actualisés de notre partenaire d'expédition DHL.

*Les grils Konro et certains autres articles plus volumineux sont exclus de l'offre de livraison gratuite.

Comment puis-je retourner une commande en ligne?
Pas de soucis, nous avons ce qu'il vous faut. Rendez-vous sur https://knifewear.com/returns et suivez les instructions.

Puis-je récupérer ma commande en bordure de trottoir / en magasin?
Absolument, tant que tous les articles que vous recherchez sont en stock à l'emplacement où vous souhaitez les récupérer, vous pourrez sélectionner cette option à la caisse. Si un ou plusieurs articles ne sont pas disponibles à l'emplacement de votre choix, nous serons heureux de vous les expédier.

Request Additional Info

Afficher tous les détails
Great customer service
large Selection
Satisfaction Guaranteed

Overall rating: 4.6 / 5 from 10 reviews.

AI Generated Review Summary

Summary topics

Review topics: ["edge","knife","steel","sharpness","grind"].

Review highlights

Reviews

Very good knife

"This carbon steel deba knife is fantastic and a joy to use at home. With proper care, this will last decades."

Peter P. (5/5)

Deba knife so good

"It is a knife that I am very satisfied with in terms of openness, stability, and sharpness."

Mincheol S. (5/5)

Would recommend for intermediate fish butchering

"Good edge out the box, wood wasn’t quite lined up with the horn, but still solid, carved through ocean trout no problem."

Jackson H. (4/5)

A solid deba

"Been using this in the kitchen for a while and it keeps its edge after breaking down a couple of red snappers."

Michael D. (5/5)

Good knife steel for the price!

"The knife steel is very good, but the initial grind on the primary bevel that you get from the factory is not the best. It appears that it was done on a belt sander which causes the lines of the knife to be rounded, and the microbevel was a little more than I would have liked. Near the heel of the knife the corner was quite rounded and the grind was not even throughout the belly of the knife. It was very sharp out of the box though! It took a longer (2h) than usual sharpening session to bring a visually decent grind to the blade. (Pardon my lack of terminology, I'm new to this). I had a jizuya finger stone lying around and just had to use it to get the best finish for the photo. This knife can fillet 2 walleyes, 2 trout and 2 northern pike before the edge was noticably dull. I highly reccommend this knife if you have the patience to sharpen it."

Jonathan W. (4/5)

Terrific knife

"This was a gift for my husband — he loves it. Well-balanced knife, the weight feels good in the hand. It cut through frozen tuna loin easily. A nice addition to our kitchen knife collection."

Sylvia L. (5/5)

just ok for the price

"My first Deba and my third Japanese knife. As an exercise, I filleted two sea bream. It did the job well. But upon closer inspection, the sharpness isn't what I expect from a Japanese knife at this price point. The processing of the handle could be better, the transition from the dark ring to the light wood has an unsightly step. So I resharpened for 1 hour, starting with the 400 grit for a long period, up to the 5000 grit. Now I'm happy with the sharpness."

stephan l. (3/5)

Seba Beauty

"Didn't kill the bank account but man a beauty for preparing protein."

Doug S. (5/5)

You need one of these.

"OMG it is so wonderful to use a really good knife. This blade is spectacular for the price and I expect it to last generations."

James D. (5/5)

Amazing knife!

"Amazing knife!"

Diego D. (5/5)

Q&A

Hi, I know there's a soft iron cladding version of this knife. Is it truly cladded with carbon steel? Thank you, Jonathan
Hey there! This knife has a hard carbon steel cutting edge, and is cladded with soft carbon steel on top to help keep it from being too brittle. Both types of these steels are carbon.

Consultés récemment