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"If you only have room for one blade in your life, make it this one" - The Strategist

The only knife you really need is shaped like a torpedo. It is 100 percent stainless steel, unspoiled by even a particle of plastic, but still made for just about any kitchen, anywhere. After consulting 25 experts — chefs, restaurateurs, cookbook authors, James Beard nominees, and an iconic knife dealer — I can confidently say that if you’re going to buy one knife, it should be the Global G-2. It’s a chef’s knife, which means it’s an all-purpose tool in a category of five- to eight-inch blades that cover just about all of your chopping needs. You can spend less than $10 and more than $1,200 on a chef’s knife; this one costs $100. That price buys you something that feels like a piece of engineering in your hand, when it feels like anything at all.

To be clear, our panelists didn’t unanimously pick the Global G-2: Some cooks prefer heavier knives or shorter knives or knives that cost as much as a sofa. Actual chefs describe what they expect of their knives in a few ways. "Really, what you want is a knife that’s durable, that holds its edge a long time", says restaurateur Tim Love, who owns several meat-centric restaurants in Texas, including Lonesome Dove Western Bistro in Austin and Fort Worth, and who likes Global’s products. Deb Perelman of Smitten Kitchen says almost the exact same thing: “My favorite knife is the Global G-2; it holds a sharp edge very well.” Other chefs more quickly refer to the size of the blade as the most essential quality: “If you’re using a knife constantly, you want it to feel comfortable,” adds Amanda Cohen, the chef-owner behind New York vegetarian restaurant Dirt Candy. “It should be your friend,” and your friend, Cohen says, won’t be too long or heavy for a petite chef doing the arm work.

A few knives gained enough mentions to rise to the top, so I tested those at home on a Waldorf salad for lunch and a roasted chicken with carrots for dinner, with the logic that between the crunchy produce (apples and celery in the salad; carrots for the main dish) and the juicier but sinewy chicken, we’d be asking the knife to really perform.

The Global passed both Love’s and Cohen’s tests in my kitchen: The stainless steel seemed easily sturdy enough to last for years, and while some blades over six inches long can feel unwieldy if you’re doing anything short of butchering a deer, I found the eight-inch — but still ultralightweight — Global G-2 to be appropriately sized for ordinary fruits and vegetables. And while it gets frequent shout-outs from reviewers for working best on produce, it halved the whole roast chicken in one smooth stroke. Under pressure from the blade, the root end of a carrot snapped off swiftly and smoothly.

Global G-2 Chef’s Knife 8”

Global knives are made in Japan, in an explicit homage to samurai warriors. The G-2 has an unusual dimpled handle that feels like a bicycle grip. This same handle is hollow, which explains the knife’s mere 7.84 ounces. These attributes — samurai-inspired and hollow — mean the whole thing feels like it disappears into your hand when you use it. And when you’re done with it, it’s forgivingly easy to clean and handsome to display.

Source: Nick Marino, The Strategist 2018

 

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