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Chopping boards - wooden or plastic?

In the world of chopping boards there are two main competing kinds - wooden and plastic.

Most wood-made things have a charm and warmth to them, but I'm not always convinced that when washed they are as clean as plastic, though that's just me! Plastic can be more flexible in terms of colour, if you're the colourful kind.


Contemporary Kitchen · Maggiori informazioni

So - which do you prefer? Or do you have both depending on what it is you are cutting? Share all chopping board related thoughts with a vote and comment below!


Plastic
Wooden all the way
Why not both?

Commenti (28)

  • PRO
    FPA architects
    7 anni fa

    what about a glass chopping board?

  • Heather Griffin
    7 anni fa

    Both, of course. :) I love my bamboo boards, they clean nicely. I use plastic for meat-products.


  • PRO
    Saku Design Studio
    7 anni fa
    I use my wooden one for sconces and pastry making coz I don't want knife marks all over it and plastic for everything else. I find that veggies like carrots and butternut stain the boards so you either have to give them a thorough scrub or clean with bleach every so often.
  • UK Busy Man
    7 anni fa
    wooden are supposed to be more hygienic
  • PRO
    Meistrauju.LT
    7 anni fa
    we use three of them. Glass one - for raw meet. Wooden - for bread, cheese, sousage or alike. Plastic, when the rest of them are used or not cleaned.
  • Tidy Towers
    7 anni fa

    Wood, but I scrub with steel scrubbie after each use if raw meat.

  • tiredoldwoman
    7 anni fa

    Wood for bread , I love the sound . Anything bloody or smelly gets chopped on my plastic ones . Then I spray with bleach cleaner . My glass one is way too noisy !

  • Harriet
    7 anni fa
    I use wooden for vegetables and plastic for meat
  • t_abbott
    7 anni fa
    Standard kitchen hygiene practices dictate plastic for meats and wooden for all other.
  • robrory1
    7 anni fa

    I have a set of different coloured plastic chopping boards. I think they are much more hygienic as I can put them in the dishwasher.

  • Kit O
    7 anni fa
    Wood does have natural antibacterial properties. I have an immense dislike for plastic, it's a blight on the environment so I prefer to use bamboo (sustainable product) and for cleaning I use diluted hydrogen peroxide (1%) food grade.
  • Ellie Telford
    7 anni fa
    One colour plastic board for fruit or other colour plastic for vegetables and use meat scissors first wash it by pot after warm when cook.
  • Daisy England
    7 anni fa
    Glass for hygiene purposes.
  • Susan Jamieson
    7 anni fa

    Nothing but wood - never had a problem with raw meat over 53 years. Just scrub it off with the sink scrubbie.

  • Chris Goodchild
    7 anni fa

    As Kit O says some woods such as beech have natural antibacterial properties. I make my own from scraps of wood left over from projects, I prefer to use beech or iroko, iroko is very water resistant and resists cut marks. The best are end grain boards which you will always see in butchers shops and the best professional kitchens, particularly beech, end grain also closes around a cut so it always looks good unless it suffers the kind of wear and taer that a butcher gives it.

    Plastic tends to suffer from cut marks that hold residues and become difficult to clean, glass as mentioned is death to the cutting edge of a knife and marble is to some degree porous, blunts knives and is heavy, so wood every time for me.

    I have to confess I am a little biased as I am a carpenter.

  • dorisanddoris
    7 anni fa

    Wood has natural antimicrobial properties. http://faculty.vetmed.ucdavis.edu/faculty/docliver/Research/cuttingboard.htm

    Try not to increase demand for endangered hardwood products by making sure it's FSC approved.

  • Joanna Biddolph
    7 anni fa

    Wood or bamboo for me. And I find it really useful to have one small one - for slicing lemons for my G&T..

  • rosebud1969
    7 anni fa
    I use both and just wash with Ecover washing up liquid - no need for harsh chemicals.
  • Sonia
    7 anni fa

    I have two wooden ones. One just for meat, and the other for veg etc. I've tried plastic but they get very tatty, developing deep knife marks. Glass should not be used as it will blunt your knives in seconds. I scrub the wooden ones with washing up liquid, and I'm still alive so must do the job!

  • Anne
    7 anni fa

    My polythene chopping boards go straight into the dishwasher after use. Life's too short for hand-washing. I do have a heavy, end-grain wood block that looks great but requires care - it only gets used as a cheese board these days.

  • karencarter44
    7 anni fa

    glass blunts knives, plastic cuts easily and harbours germs, wood (particularly beech) has antibacterial properties - thats why it used to be used for loo seats.

  • PRO
    Bio Fires
    7 anni fa

    Wood is more homely and authentic.

  • spittle71
    7 anni fa
    I have a wooden chopping board that stays out on the kitchen counter (£12 from IKEA) and plastic trays (£1 from IKEA) which I use todo most of my chopping. I renew the plastic trays (hygiene) often as their so cheap.
  • User
    7 anni fa
    OMG I can't believe I haven't killed anyone!
  • User
    7 anni fa
    What is 'end grain board'?
  • PRO
    The Engraved Oak Company
    7 anni fa
    I have to say Oak, I do make them after all.
  • PRO
    Crystal Woods
    7 anni fa

    Wood certainly has a lot more to offer in both style and feel and practicality, you can not put a hot pan on to a plastic chopping board.

    There are various designs of chopping boards you can produce with wood, as well as enhancing the natural beautiful grain and colour of the various wood species. The three species most ideal and compatible for a kitchen and food environment are Beech, Maple & Sycamore, The most beautiful and admired chopping boards are the ones that are also Spalted (showing scattered black lines) It is possible to get Spalted Beech, Spalted Maple & Spalted Sycamore, Also ripple back and birds eye Maple are exquisite.

    Not a great picture but these two boards are Spalted Beech


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