I’m a bit fed up with my cutlery drawer…
I don’t mind spending a little or a bit
Something that feels really nice in the hand and looks stylish
Full sets feel like a waste as I’m not fussed about spoons…. Just nice knives and forks
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I’m a bit fed up with my cutlery drawer…
I don’t mind spending a little or a bit
Something that feels really nice in the hand and looks stylish
Full sets feel like a waste as I’m not fussed about spoons…. Just nice knives and forks
Bias for Sheffield ... I like the David Mellor cutlery, especially Embassy , Pride and Classic lines
We have an 'assortment'...but my go to dining knives are Viners Select steak knives. I use them at every available opportunity.
Do check that whatever you buy fits into the dishwasher cutlery tray/basket. Some of the nicer stuff is rather thick and won't go into the grids that separate the cutlery. You can guess how I know this might be an issue (but thankfully the Viners fit).
Not too bothered about my eating spanners to be honest; anything that will double as a gasket scraper.
You can't really go wrong with Viners, we've had a stainless set for 20+ years as they are still going very strong.
What do you eat pudding, cereal, soup with?
We’ve got Viners for posh and Ikea for everyday.
Can’t say I’ve noticed a difference when shovelling shepherds pie into my cakehole.
Wooden cooking spoon with a cut down handle.
Mrs. B and I treated ourselves to a set of Culinary Concepts Hammered Knot for our 10th wedding anniversary - it wasn't cheap at the time, but it's been our everyday cutlery for the past 21 years, so it amortizes out quite well:
https://www.culinaryconcepts.co.uk/d.../hammered-knot
We also have the carving set, the Olive bowl, spoon and fork, pickle spoons and various other pieces.
For steak night, we have a set of Forge de Laguiole knives which were another indulgence from many years ago when we were young and foolish.
https://www.farrar-tanner.co.uk/6-st...caAvyxEALw_wcB
A mix ‘n’ (not) match of Ikea, Hema and other no-name stuff that comes from the local supermarket. Total value: less than a tenner I guess.
We use it for nearly 30 yrs now. And we see no reason to change.
Arthur Price - John Lewis used to have a per-weapon set with hollow handles.
Same here!
Love the Embassy - he won the contract to design a line to be used in British embassies across the world in the early 60s
The factory is not far from me and me and my wife actually went on the factory tour on Sunday last week.
We have his London range at home.
https://www.davidmellordesign.com/cu...s-steel/london
I wanted Embassy but my wife thought it was too refined for me…
https://i.imgur.com/G9R33LI.jpg
Monogrammed, of course
https://i.imgur.com/NBVUQvP.jpg
Though for day-to-day use we simply use these from Procook
https://www.procook.co.uk/product/pr...ece-4-settings
There was a time when you got a good canteen set from someone - when you got married.
If buying yourself - make sure you don't go for style attributes like:
- Very narrow handles - look lovely on the table but don't give any control in the hand
- Square handles - popular on some 'bistro' sets - very uncomfortable and little control.
- All polished finish - If you get matt/brushed handles, you don't have to go around the table polishing out finger prints.
Viners for me. £18 set from TKmax😁
What a time to be alive.:biggrin:
I have these in the caravan:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/360666948...Bk9SR6bl38LHYw
We have this stuff, it's great:
https://www.ikea.com/gb/en/p/dragon-...teel-90091760/
Design is perfect, goes through the dishwasher, doesn't break, doesn't stain.
Ha!
I did a bit of thinking…. I spend half an hour a day with these tools in my hand, so felt like they deserved some attention!
I quite liked the opinel knives and enjoyed using an opinel #8 in a posh French bistro…
Franco - great suggestion and some lovely designs…. It may be a worth a trip to the factory shop (my boy is at uni there)
Carltonbrowne - I hope you only cut the finest wagyu with those knives - they look exquisite!
The monogram canteen looks awesome too, but I just want knives and forks as we rarely do pudding
I’m after something very well made, weighty and simply designed but well engineered…
You can also look at Oneida. We’ve had ours for 20y+ as the Christofle set doesn’t get much use. [emoji6]
Tons on facebook local - Selling for lack of use, or selling to make ends meet?
Ha! Possibly.............. :tears_of_joy:
People's habits have changed - with many eating from their laps in front of the TV or managing with a 6 setting 'Bistro' cutlery set. I only use my proper set when I lay a table with guests.
People are putting less emphasis on using a knife and fork too. So many use a fork like a 'spork' or (like a lot of Norwegians) swap arround Knife and Fork - to always use the fork in 'spoon' orientation.
We are big Viners fans. Not too heavy just right feel and good quality.
However, they were bought out a few years ago and the quality of Viners these days is shocking compared to the proper stuff. Sad, but true.
True enough I reckon and then the Yanks can barely use a knife and fork even in a restaurant...I once caused much amazement, some consternation even, by using a fork and spoon to eat an entire portion of spaghetti and meatballs without spilling a drop of sauce on myself...had we been in Salem rather than Philadelphia, I dare say my fellow diners might have burned me for a warlock.:glee:
Canteens of cutlery go for £washers at our local auction house usually (with on-trend exceptions like Georg Jensen and suchlike).
Our cutlery drawer is like an archaeological excavation of my wife and I's past lives - random bits assembled from well-meant gifts and the rest filched from restaurants that annoyed me. She's overly fond of an incomplete set with the most horrendously heavy and clumsy handles + badly-designed business-ends, each and every one the cure for good ergonomics, and possessed by demons which hurl them to the floor almost constantly since they're incapable of balance. Little by little these fall into the recycling bin 'on-accident'... She is from Yorkshire, and will never rid herself of anything that is merely surplus or useless. Which is fortunate for me...
Amongst all this wannabe scrap are forty 316L sporks (looking at you Mr Curta), purchased for our self-catered wedding 'cos they were cheaper than decent disposibles! These continue to get used far more than is anything to be proud of TBH...
We're using a set of Viners we have had for 30 years, they don't wear out.
I did pick up an overflow set of ss cutlery from a yard sale in the US for $3 in case we have a lot of guests. :stung:
We also have full canteens of silver Viners and a bronze set from Thailand which are never used.
Oneida set from 20yrs ago, regularly used and pretty much unmarked. The only thing I'd change is that the knives are a little handle heavy but they've been great vfm. I used to wonder why people have sets as presents but a good set really days last a lifetime.
I see your spork
and raise you one splade
https://i.imgur.com/naXFEew.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/BFlPFTM.jpg
It is like the spork iirc, but with what is fondly imagined to be a cutting edge on each outer tine. Cut they do not, though they make a passable fist of sectionalising a burger.
Not trying to wee on anyone's chips but having given it a moments thought of all the meals that I've had the good fortune to enjoy the only cutlery/ eating implements that I can raise even a mild nostalgia for is those little wooden 2 pronged forks we used to get with our jumbo sausage, chips and curry sauce during Summer's spent at the public swimming pool in Skeggy, swimming and playing chase around the pool with my cousins.
Will also never forget a mate in NZ, RIP Dave, who used the plank which served as the gangway to get into the family caravan by a beach in NZ, as his chopping block for the Paua we'd collected. Though in fairness not cutlery. Amazing flavour/ texture, cooked up in cream, the puau not the plank.
We've just got all manner of 'unknown maker' stuff from years gone by. However, I have a specific knife, fork, dessert spoon and teaspoon. I will not use anything else than those at home....ever. The wife has often asked if we can get a decent matching canteen, but when you feel comfortable with certain items then why change. Yep, it does cause me annoyance when eating out - can't stand having to use most of the cutlery that eateries present!
You could perhaps consider having a bespoke leather, or something more exotic, hand crafted artisanal cutlery case made, carry along your preferred eating irons within, when eating out...why endure even a minor irritation? And it will improve the taste of the food.:playful:
I love watching them eat when we are on holiday.
Seems to be cut multiple things up, place knife down, swap fork to other hand and then shovel in. Once small pieces have been shovelled, swap hands, pick up knife and repeat.
Some seem to use a knife to pull apart the food vs cutting it through it like a knife is meant to be used. Even in some expensive hotels too, I’d love to attend a business dinner in the US to see if it was just the chimp tea party I’m imagining.
Back on topic, my Oneida set has been going strong for 24 years since I bought my first house. Keep thinking about changing them, but they are still in pristine condition, so very little point.
I've got Robert Welch - Stanton cutlery. Was bought small set as a gift a number of years ago and have built it up from there. They are available as single pieces from John Lewis Fenwicks etc
Super sturdy and have a really nice classic look and feel to them
Catering supply company, got ours from here, after using it in a restaurant. Can get an many or as few as you need.
https://www.ascotwholesale.co.uk
Surely the answer is:
https://laguiole.store/category/laguiole-cutlery-set/
Stellar raglan going strong here after many years of use.