Slice with Style! 🔪 Elevate your culinary game with this artisan knife.
The 9 Inch Kitchen Kiritsuke Chef Knife is a high-quality, hand-forged kitchen tool made from three-layer composite steel, featuring a stunning olive wood handle. With a Rockwell hardness of 59±2 HRC, this knife is designed for precision and durability, making it ideal for both home cooks and professional chefs. It comes beautifully packaged in a gift box, perfect for any culinary enthusiast.
Handle Material | Olive Wood |
Is the item dishwasher safe? | No |
Blade Material | Alloy Steel |
Construction Type | Forged |
BladeType | Plain |
Blade Color | Silver |
Color | 9" Kiritsuke Knife |
Item Weight | 0.82 Pounds |
Item Length | 14.56 Inches |
BladeLength | 9 Inches |
H**M
Great value for the price point
The knife looks beautiful and feels nice- if a little front heavy. No full tang which puts the balance point right about where the logo on the knife is. Fine for me since I use a pinch grip but, if you aren't used to it, the balance could make for an uncomfortable experience. I already had an 8in kiritsuke knife which has better balance but, this 9in one is really nice by comparison because the slightly longer blade lets you make some nice long and even cuts on meats, fish, or… other long foods… eggplants.It had a nice edge out of the box - nice but not perfect. Tomato test passed. Paper test passed. It will do the job well but if you’re a stickler, go ahead and touch up the cutting edge before trying to shave a kiwi (the fruit not the bird).I am a home chef and I have no idea what a professional chef’s knife is supposed to feel like but this one feels good to me. The octagonal grip is octually super comfortable and gives a nice grip texture. Because of the blade shape, the Japanese kiritsuke-style knife makes flat cuts way easier (like julienne for example) without sacrificing any of the functionality that you may be used to from a western chef knife (or gyuto).Also, I’d say it’s pretty durable. I was concerned that some of the reviews said that it wouldn’t hold up so… I tortured it a little bit. I didn’t go full “Mythbusters” on it or anything but I'm pretty confident that you would have to put in real effort to break this knife- even without a full tang. I mean I really beat the devil out of this thing on my cutting board to see what kind of a battering it would endure and, to my delight, it went right along like nothing happened. I really don’t know what some of these reviewers are doing to their kitchen knives to give it a low rating based on durability, but I really let this thing have it - far more punishment than it would ever reasonably receive in a cooking environment. There’s nothing you can do to this knife in your kitchen that’s going to break it… I mean, unless a ninja shows up at your house… Best of luck if that happens. Don’t sword fight with this knife. You’ll probably lose.TL;DR - I like the Ink Plum kiritsuke knife, and I recommend it. It’s tough, beautiful, and inexpensive. It’s everything you could ask for at this price point.
J**Y
Worth every penny
Such a good quality knife. Make sure to buy the stone a well. This knife will last a lifetime
M**L
Sharp and comfortable in hand
Ordered the gyuto. Blade has a good weight to it, knife came very sharp. Hexagonal handle shape is very comfortable in the hand. Wood handle is the same/very similar color as pictured.
N**E
Beautiful presentation, ok performance
9 Inch Kitchen Kiritsuke Chef Knife: $49.99 at the time of reviewI’m a sucker for a good knife. There’s just something about a beautiful, functional kitchen tool like a knife that really appeals to me. When beauty, design, and usability all combine I’m willing to pay a lot of money (sadly, I find that most knives you can only have two of the three). This knife from Ink plums looked like it might check off all of those boxes so I gave it a shot.*What I liked*:The presentation of this knife is gorgeous. It’s a fabulous retail package with a beautiful folding box that is sealed by magnets in the lid.The knife itself continues the theme of beauty. The oiled olivewood handle is a wonderful counterpoint to the Kiritsuke blade, which on its own is artful thanks to the sandwiched steel blade.This would make a great gift to someone who appreciates beautiful kitchen tools.*What I didn't like*:Unfortunately there are a couple of issues that I have with the blade.The problem I have is the fact that the blade is *not* full-tang and that is immediately noticeable in the way it handles (it is *very* front-heavy in the blade). If you’re not familiar, the tang is the portion of metal that comes off of the back of the blade and continues on into the handle. A full-tang blade means that the metal by which the handle is affixed to the blade extends all the way to the end of the handle. I personally consider it a necessity, as not only are full-tang blades much less likely to experience issues with the handle detaching, but the added weight of the metal balances the blade better and makes it feel better in the hand and when in use. Tang is a weird place to skimp on a blade.The other issue I have is that the factory edge isn’t as good as I expected. This one is minor (to me, at least) because anybody with a sharpening stone can fix it. But if you don’t know how, you’ll need to pay someone to sharpen this.*The Bottom Line:*Between the lack of a full tang and the factory edge being sharp but not sharp enough, this blade was a bit of a letdown for me. At a $50 price point for a single knife, I expected more. That said, the presentation is just excellent, and for someone who it less concerned about knife-nerd stuff, this would make a great gift. So it still ends up at four stars out of five from me. I don’t think I’d order it over again for myself though for the above mentioned reasons (mostly the tang issue).
A**R
Great chef knive
Very sharp, good price, I am replacing my old chef knive with this one, so far is great
D**T
Decent for the price
I took these to work today and they were pretty good for what I paid. A little heavier than I expected but that's okay. That standard chefs knife was a little lighter than a Wustof but much heavier than a Takayuki for comparison. However, they didn't show up very sharp, if you have your own whetstone or a local knife sharpener they should be fine. Overall this set is worth the price
J**N
Good product
Es la tercera ves que lo compro, solo para los que saben usar este cuchillo lo podrán usar correctamente, ya tengo 2 años con este cuchillo y mantiene un filo excelente, es una hoja de 3 capas.
M**S
Nice product
Awesome 👏🏻 thanks
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