🔪 Find your ideal Japanese knife
Answer 3 simple questions to discover the perfect knives for you
1What is your main use in the kitchen?
2What is your cooking level?
3How many knives would you like?
✨ Your personalized recommendations
What to remember in 2 minutes
Usage first and foremost
A Japanese kitchen knife should first be chosen according to your actual use: meat, vegetables, fish, or versatile use. The blade type and shape determine performance for each specific task.
Knife type
The knife type matters more than the brand if you are just starting out. Chef knife, santoku, nakiri, yanagiba: each blade shape has been designed for a specific use and offers optimal performance in its field.
Authentic steel
Damascus steel must be authentic, with real forged multi-layer construction. Be wary of patterns simply printed or engraved on the blade. True Damascus steel has visible, functional layers.
Exceptional sharpness
The main hallmark of a good Japanese knife: exceptional sharpness and excellent edge retention thanks to high-quality steel. A hardness of 58 to 62 HRC ensures precision and durability.
Easy maintenance
Easy maintenance depends on the materials chosen: stainless steel, good rust resistance, a treated wood handle or composite handle. A few simple steps are all it takes: clean, dry immediately, and store properly.
Professional quality
Choose authentic Japanese knives in multi-layer Damascus steel, with a core of high-performance steel. The build quality and blade balance make all the difference in everyday use.
Your decision path at a glance
Follow the path that matches your situation to find the perfect Japanese knife:
Define your main use
Identify which task you will mainly use your knife for:
Choose the right knife type
Depending on how you use it, here are the recommended knife types:
Determine your priorities
What matters most to you?
Available knife types
Explore the different categories of authentic Japanese knives, all made from 67-layer Damascus steel with a VG-10 steel core. Each type meets specific needs while guaranteeing professional quality :
The essential criteria for choosing a Japanese knife well
Before talking about models, you need to lay the foundations. Choosing the right knife means aligning several key elements that will determine your day-to-day satisfaction.
Type of use: meat, vegetables, fish
Ask yourself honestly: what do you do most often in the kitchen? This simple question determines 80% of your choice.
Varied everyday cooking
Varied everyday dishes: vegetables, meat, fish.
Choose a versatile knife such as a chef knife.
Vegetarian cooking
Lots of vegetables to cut, slice, and chop.
Choose a nakiri knife or a santoku knife.
Fish and sushi
Fresh fish, sashimi, sushi, precise cutting.
Opt for a specialized fish knife.
Typical matches
Gyuto knife (large chef knife)
Santoku knife
These two types of knives are perfect for varied everyday use. The gyuto offers maximum versatility with its long, curved blade, while the santoku excels in three areas: meat, fish, and vegetables.
Nakiri knife
With its rectangular blade and straight edge, the nakiri is the ideal tool for slicing, mincing, and chopping all types of vegetables with remarkable precision. Its shape allows optimal contact with the cutting board.
Honesuki
Boning knife
For butchery work and poultry preparation, these specialized knives provide the rigidity and precision needed to work around bones and separate joints with ease.
Bread knife
A Japanese bread knife with its specific serration lets you slice cleanly through all types of bread, from crisp crusts to soft crumbs, without crushing or tearing.
Paring knife
Utility knife
For precision work, peeling, turning vegetables and all meticulous tasks, these small knives offer maximum control and exceptional handling.
In summary
Don't start from a visual crush: start from how you use it. It's the best way to truly choose the knife that will serve you every day and become a true extension of your hand in the kitchen.
Infographic: Which knife for which use?
Blade Length and Blade Type
Blade length and blade type directly affect your comfort and precision. Choosing the right size means matching the tool to your actual use.
Classic all-purpose length: 18-21 cm for a Gyuto or Santoku knife
Shorter blade: 13-15 cm, easier to handle but less effective on large ingredients
Rectangular blade: ideal for vegetables with a rocking motion
For a first all-purpose knife, aiming for a blade length between 18 and 21 cm is a good compromise, whether it is a santoku knife or a gyuto knife.
In summary
If you are unsure, a Gyuto chef knife 20 cm or a Santoku 18 cm will suit 90% of cases for versatile everyday use.
Materials and Steel Types: Carbon, Damascus, Stainless Steel
The choice of steel determines your knife's performance: sharpness, durability, maintenance, and rust resistance.
Damascus steel refers to steel made from an assembly of several layers (often 67) forged together, combining a hard core for exceptional sharpness and softer outer layers for protection.
The main material families
Stainless Steel
Advantages
- Good rust resistance
- Easy everyday maintenance
- Ideal for beginners
Limitations
- Decent sharpness but less durable
- Requires more frequent sharpening
Carbon Steel
Advantages
- High carbon content
- High hardness
- Exceptional sharpness
- Very fine, precise edge
A good Japanese kitchen knife should disappear from your awareness: you focus on the cutting, not on the tool.
What are the types of Japanese knives?
Japanese kitchen knives differ greatly from Western knives in blade shape, sharpening angle, steel hardness, and sometimes an asymmetric blade.
Chef knife / Gyuto
Blade length: 20-24 cm
Blade type: Slightly curved profile
Use: Versatile (meat, fish, vegetables)
In summary
The Gyuto chef knife is the best choice if you want a single versatile knife for 80% of your tasks.
Santoku knife
Blade length: 16-18 cm
Blade type: Short, tall, reassuring
Use: Meat, fish, vegetables
In summary
If you mostly cook at home and want a versatile, easy-to-handle knife, the Santoku is an excellent first choice.
Nakiri knife
Blade length: 16-18 cm
Blade type: Rectangular, straight blade
Use: Vegetable specialist
In summary
For a very plant-based kitchen, the Nakiri is the vegetable specialist to have in your knife set.
Deba knife
Features: Thick, sturdy blade
Blade type: Beveled, asymmetric
Use: Fish and poultry
In summary
The Deba is an ideal fish knife if you regularly fillet fish and carve poultry.
Yanagiba knife / sushi knife
Blade length: 24-30 cm
Blade type: Long and thin
Use: Sashimi, sushi, ultra-thin slices
In summary
A specialist tool, reserved for raw fish lovers who want a perfectly clean cut.
Other specialized types
Kiritsuke knife: Gyuto/Yanagiba hybrid, very pronounced tip
Mioroshi knife: Intermediate Deba/Yanagiba for fish
Sujihiki knife: Long, thin knife for slicing roast and meats
These knives are intended mainly for advanced enthusiasts, already equipped with an all-purpose knife.
Which knife for your use? 5 practical scenarios
Chef knife / gyuto knife 20 cm
Santoku knife + nakiri knife
Gyuto knife + deba knife
Gyuto + Santoku + Office + Bread
Santoku → add Nakiri → add chef knife
How do you choose the blade length?
Blade length is a major criterion for choosing the right knife. It determines efficiency, handling, and ease of use.
Blade length and use
| Knife type | Length | Ideal for |
|---|---|---|
| Santoku knife | 16-18 cm | All-purpose knife for home cooking |
| Gyuto knife | 20-24 cm | Chef knife, large quantities |
| Nakiri knife | 16-18 cm | Vegetable specialist |
| Deba knife | Variable | Fish, shorter but thicker |
| Yanagiba knife | 24-30 cm | Long blade for sashimi and sushi |
The longer the blade, the more effective it is on large cuts and long slices (roasts, sashimi), but the more skill it requires.
A straight blade (Nakiri) is reassuring for vegetables, while a beveled blade or asymmetrical blade (Deba, Yanagiba) requires a bit more experience.
In summary
For a first chef knife or all-purpose knife, aiming for a blade length between 18 and 21 cm is an excellent starting point.
Is it really worth investing in a Japanese knife?
The question "Is it worth investing in a Japanese kitchen knife?" is a valid one. Let’s look at the facts.
Durability, hardness, and HRC
The durability and longevity of a Japanese knife depend on several key factors:
- The hardness of the steel (expressed in HRC)
- The carbon content in the composition
- The quality of the alloy and composition
- The quality of the initial sharpening and regular maintenance
A good Japanese knife that is properly maintained can accompany you for years, even decades. It is a lasting investment.
Easy maintenance = everyday comfort
Investing in a good knife also means asking whether the maintenance is realistic for you:
- Higher-stainless steel offers easy maintenance and good rust resistance
- A steel richer in carbon requires more attention, but offers exceptional sharpness
In summary
It is better to have one or two high-quality Japanese kitchen knives that you actually use, than a complete low-end set that ends up at the back of a drawer.
The optimal balance point
Damascus Steel
67 layers
Properly treated Damascus steel offers the best balance between quality, ease of maintenance, and exceptional sharpness
How do you care for a Japanese knife?
Proper care helps preserve your knife's exceptional sharpness, ensures its durability, and protects its materials.
Clean and protect
Hand washing
Always wash by hand, never in the dishwasher. Use warm water and mild soap.
Rinsing
Rinse thoroughly to remove all soap or food residue.
Immediate drying
Dry the blade AND the handle immediately to prevent any oxidation.
No soaking
Avoid leaving the blade to soak, as this can affect the handle and encourage rust.
Store and keep
To protect your knife every day:
- Store it on a clean magnetic strip, in a knife block, or with a sheath
- Avoid drawers where the blade can knock against other utensils
- Proper storage ensures the edge lasts longer
Sharpening, honing, and durability
Sharpening and honing are the key to long-term performance:
- Light, regular honing is preferable to infrequent heavy honing
- Use a stone suited to the hardness (HRC) and blade type
- Respect the sharpening angle (often finer on Japanese knives)
Good materials (high-quality stainless steel, carbon steel, Damascus steel) combined with proper honing ensure durability and exceptional sharpness.
In summary
A well-maintained Japanese knife, regularly sharpened and properly protected allows you to cook with precision for a long time.
FAQ - Frequently asked questions about Japanese knives
The main types of Japanese knives are:
- Chef knife / gyuto knife : versatile for all uses
- Santoku knife : versatile for home use, the three virtues
- Nakiri knife : vegetable specialist
- Deba knife : fish and poultry
- Yanagiba knife / sushi knife : sashimi and thin slices
- And more specialized models such as kiritsuke knife, mioroshi knife, sujihiki knife
Japanese kitchen knives differ from Western knives in hardness, sharpening angle, blade shape, and type of steel.
For easy and effective care:
- Always wash your knife by hand (never in the dishwasher)
- Dry the blade immediately to preserve rust resistance
- Store it in a suitable holder to protect it
- Sharpen it regularly (with a stone or suitable system) to maintain exceptional sharpness
Materials (stainless steel, carbon steel, Damascus steel), hardness (HRC) and carbon content influence durability and sharpening frequency.
The best choice when choosing a Japanese knife as a beginner is generally a versatile knife:
- Santoku knife (16-18 cm) or
- Gyuto knife (20 cm), a type of chef knife
These Japanese kitchen knives offer:
- Exceptional sharpness from the very first use
- A comfortable ergonomic handle
- Intuitive use
- Reasonably easy maintenance (especially on good stainless/Damascus steels)
The main materials are:
- Carbon steel: high carbon content, great hardness, very fine cutting edge, but more demanding maintenance
- Damascus steel: multiple layers, good durability, strength, aesthetic appeal, high quality
- Stainless steel or modern alloy blade: rust resistance, easy maintenance, a good balance of performance and comfort
We look at hardness (HRC), alloy composition, the finish and sometimes the wooden handle to assess the overall quality.
To choose the blade length well:
- Santoku knife: 16-18 cm, perfect as an all-purpose knife for home cooking
- Gyuto knife: 20-24 cm, ideal as a chef knife for those who cook a lot
- Nakiri knife: 16-18 cm, ideal for vegetables
- Deba knife: shorter but thicker, suited to fish
- Yanagiba knife: 24-30 cm, for sashimi
A long blade is effective for slicing in one motion, a straight blade (Nakiri) is reassuring for vegetables, and a beveled blade or asymmetrical blade requires more skill but offers extreme precision.
For vegetables, the best options are:
- The santoku knife: versatile with a high blade
- The nakiri knife: a vegetable specialist with a straight rectangular blade
These Japanese kitchen knives allow clean, even, and quick cuts for all types of vegetables.
For meat and poultry:
- Chef knife / gyuto knife for general cutting
- Deba or honesuki knife for working around bones and deboning
The gyuto offers versatility and efficiency, while the deba/honesuki provides the sturdiness needed for more demanding tasks.
For fish:
- General use: a well-sharpened gyuto knife
- Fine slicing, sashimi, sushi: yanagiba knife or sushi knife
- More rugged work (heads, bones): deba knife
The yanagiba is the quintessential traditional Japanese knife for ultra-thin slices of raw fish.
Some steels (notably carbon steel) can develop a natural patina. However, actual rust usually means:
- Insufficient drying after washing
- Poor protection or unsuitable storage
- An environment that is too humid
Using a good stainless steel or a well-maintained Damascus steel improves rust resistance while preserving performance.
No, never. The dishwasher damages the blade, the handle, the edge, and negatively affects durability.
It is strongly recommended to wash your knife by hand to ensure its longevity. Harsh detergents, heat, and impacts in the dishwasher can:
- Damage the blade edge
- Harm the handle (wood or composite)
- Promote oxidation
- Drastically reduce the service life
It depends on your use and the hardness (HRC) of the steel:
- Regular cooking: light honing every few weeks
- Heavy use: check the edge every week
- Occasional use: every 2-3 months depending on feel
If you feel the blade slipping instead of cutting cleanly, it is time to sharpen it again. Regular maintenance prevents premature wear and keeps the edge exceptionally sharp.
Nakiri Knife Bread Knives Utility Knives Boning Knives Paring Knives <\/div> <\/section> <\/div>