My Favorite Knife

Iโve gone through several kitchens in my life, lotsย of pots and pans, various mixers, food processors, blenders and even a number of espresso machines. Kitchen scales? Iโve tried them all. But my one constant is my knives. No matter where I go, or where I move to, my knives come with me. I bought my favorite paring knifeย back in the early 1980โs and itโs still theย most cherished item in my batterie de cuisine.
When I started my career as a cook I was told I needed to have two knives: a chefโs knife and a paring knife. Being new to San Francisco, I only knew about Whole Earth Access (now thereโs a blast from our past, Bay Area folksโฆ) but was told by the people I worked with in restaurant kitchens to go to Columbus Cutlery, in San Franciscoโs North Beach neighborhood.
A tiny square of a store, walking into the shop for the first time, I found myself surrounded by walls of knives of all kinds: Bread knives, vegetable turning knives, chefโs knives, mezzalunas, boning knives (which restaurant cooks, whose humor would embarrass a 12-year old, always call โboners,โ ie: โCan I use your boner?โ โ and even though itโs about as funny as โWhole Paycheckโ now is, we still say itโฆ), cheese knives, oyster openers, chestnut knives, meatย cleavers, and even sewing scissors and nail clippers.
This was in the era when Japanese knives werenโt as prominent as they are today. If you wanted a cleaver, you went to Chinatown. And being a restaurant cook didnโt have the same cachet as it does today. So Columbus Cutlery was sort of an โinsidersโ place. Sure, everyone could go there, but it was the only place professional cooks went.ย I didnโt have either a chefโs or a paring knife, so went into the store. The small, friendly old woman at the counter took care of customers and her husband sat behind a sharpeningย wheel that you could hear spinning in the back.
When you came to pick up your knifes if you dropped them off to be sharpened, they would be ready for you, tightly wrapped in butcher paper, taped closed, gleaming andย razor-sharp when you opened them. I donโt remember the coupleโs names but when I was looking them up recently, they were only referred to as an โimmigrant couple.โ Considering the neighborhood, Iโm sureย they were Italian. (The other bonus of going toย their shop was getting a Sacripantina at the nearby Stella Italian bakery.)
Duringย myย years as a cook and bakerย in the Bay Area, before parking tickets tipped the $100 markย in San Francisco, I would double-park and run into Columbus Cutlery to drop off, or pick up my knives left for sharpening. I didnโt trust my knives to anyone else to sharpen my knifes and I still donโt like to bring my knives in for sharpening anywhere else because I donโt trust anyone, no matter how competent they are. (Itโs just one of myย thingsโฆ) My philosophy on the best way to keep your knives sharp is to not let anyone else use them.
When people ask me, โWhat knife should I buy?โ I tell them to go into a store and try them, because there is no one-size-fits-all brand or style of knife. Much depends on what feels good in your hands. (Not mine.)ย I took my ownย advice and tried various knives, and one that the owner had me tryย was a 4-inch paring knife made by a German company called Constant, with three tiny spades embossed on the blade. Like the other fine knives at the time (before a wave of Japanese and Japanese-inspired knives came on the scene), they pointed out that it was German-made, but it was well-priced and less than the more famous brands. I think I paid $16 for it and it became my most cherishedย kitchen possession.
Anyone who works in a restaurant knows how important their knives are, and the first thing I did as a line cook at the beginning of my shift was to take outย my knives and carefully placeย them โ my chefโs knife, my paring knife, and my bread knife โ on a clean, folded kitchen towel, and no one was allowed to touch them without written permission.
One day, my paring knife disappeared. In restaurant kitchens, itโs a big no-no toย use someone elseโs knife without asking. (Preferably in writing.) Once, the head chef grabbed my chefโs knife and used the heel of itย to bust a hole in the top of a tin of olive oil. Ouch! I still cringe thinking about it today.
No matter how much I kept an eye on it, myย paring knife went wayward one night. I was distraught and it was never to be seen again, no matter how much I turned the placeย upside down, mobilizing the entire restaurant to find it for me. (The only time I threw a worse fit was when Barbra Streisand had come in for the dinner on my night off andย the next morning, they told me about it, but no one though to call me and let me know. Consequently, I wouldnโt talk to anyone in the restaurant for at least two weeks after that.)
I wonโt do the math because someone out there with better skills in that department could dispute how long itโs been, but I had that knife since my 20โs, and itโs decades laterโฆand I still have it. It came back to me by serendipity:ย it turned up ten years later in one of the silverware trays in the restaurant. A busboy found it and knowing that it was a cookโs knife, he asked around if anyone knew whose knife it was. I was stunned to see it again, and it was, remarkably, still in pretty good shape. Since then, we have not been separated (my knife and I, not me and the busboy) โ until recently.
I couldnโt find my paring knife in my apartment and figured someday, maybe in another decade, it would show up again. Iย decided to get a new one. I went online to try to find the exact same knife I had and it seems like it no longer exists.ย An internet search took me to this description: โFriedrich Herder Abr. Sohn, Constant-werk, Stahlwarenfabrikโฆis one of the oldest firms in Solingen tracing its roots back to 1623. The family was involved in the knife business for more 200 years before Friedrich registered the company in Solingen in 1840.ย They seem to have gone out of business and was bought out by another company, and donโt make the same knife.โ Merde.
So Iย went to Les Halles in Paris, to buy a new one at Bovida. They didnโt have a huge selection likeย Columbus Cutlery did, and I missed the lovelyย Italian woman giving me advice, but I suddenlyย rememberedย the thrill of buying aย new knife. My newย knife wasย wrapped in a toughย plastic package, so I couldnโt hold it before buying it, but the Dรฉglonย Sabatierย name is a good one and I have one of their old knives that I like. So I pulledย the paring knife off the wall display, which cost me around โฌ25, and brought it home.
The design of their knives hasnโt changed since who-knows-when. My friends at Quitokeeto sell vintage ones, which look similar to the ones sold today, whichย are now made of inoxย (stainless steel). But the design is identical. If ya got it right the first time, donโt change it. So far, Iโm very happy with my new knife and itโs the knife that I reach for most often because itโs so dang sharp.
However right after I bought it, by a stroke of luck, I found my old one a few weeks later. And now, they both now rest side-by-side on my kitchen counter. (Or sticklers for detailsย might point out, on my knife rack.) The new one is noticeably sharper than my old Constant knife so I did finally break down and tookย my old favorite to the knife sharpener at the Bastille market early one Sunday morning. They did a decent job โ and the guy who sees a lot of knives said to me, โThatโs a nice knife!โ โ but in all honestly, Iโve been reaching for my new knife more than my old favorite, Iโm sorry to admit. Since I let someone else aiguisรฉย my knife,ย Iโm pretty muchย over letting others touch my knives. And Iโm almost over not getting to meet Barbra Streisand. ย Almost.
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Related Posts and Links
Sacripantinaย (Emily Luchetti)
Dรฉglon Sabatier Paring Knife (Amazon)
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