Goot
Well-Known Member
So I was looking at damascus billets today on a European website, and I noticed a warning on the technical sheet that said "Not for contact with food." Why? I googled around and fell into the rabbit hole that is Jay Fisher's website. He brings up a lot of points about food safety regulations, why kitchen knife features like carbon steel, damascus, roughly finished flats, and non-mirror polishing all are terrible and unsafe for the consumer. How we and fabled Japanese chefs are ignorant of the issue. He writes like an elitist asshole very often throughout his articles, but he brings up a lot of good arguments about knifemakers, our industry, our hobby, and what we all are overlooking when it comes to creating the best possible product for our customers.
This has made me really question my methods, finishing techniques, and knife steel choices. After reading through his website, what is the general consensus about him here? I think he considers himself a pariah because he mentions a lot of safety concerns that we sweep under the rug because we're too lazy to do a proper job when making blades.
There's so much information on his website that I'm not even sure what knife steels are good to use anymore.
This has made me really question my methods, finishing techniques, and knife steel choices. After reading through his website, what is the general consensus about him here? I think he considers himself a pariah because he mentions a lot of safety concerns that we sweep under the rug because we're too lazy to do a proper job when making blades.
There's so much information on his website that I'm not even sure what knife steels are good to use anymore.