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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Henckels Twin Cermax Santoku Knife, September 20, 2005
This review is from: Zwilling J.A. Henckels Twin Cermax M66 8-Inch Chef's Knife (Kitchen)
Choosing a knife from one of the fine knife makers (e.g. Kasumi, Wusthof, Global, Shun, etc.) is ultimately a personal preference. The fact is that they all make knives that are physically capable enough for the most demanding of chefs. This means that there is no one best knife for every user. The Henckels brand maybe poo-pooed by elitists for its ubiquity in department stores and its production of very low quality knives under the same basic Henckels name (e.g. the one man line) but this knife is very different. The blade is made in Japan, unlike most Henkels knives, and it is aesthetically one of the most beautiful knives you'll see with its layered linen handle. The 7'' Santoku has a very nice weight for those of us that don't feel strong enough for the stout Wusthofs, or feel too strong for the featherweight Globals. The balance is much more even throughout the blade than the handle-end heavy Henckels 4/5 Star Santoku knives. The knife comes sharper out of the box than any knife that I've ever seen. Keeping it that sharp over time is up to you. Its certainly worth trying to see if this knife suits your own personal preference, as it suits mine.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
the art of cutting, January 25, 2009
This review is from: Zwilling J.A. Henckels Twin Cermax M66 8-Inch Chef's Knife (Kitchen)
This knife feels like an extension of your hand.
The blade is best described as a laser or scalpel. It cuts, slices, dices, chops and minces better. The Cermax is durable and very handsome, more so than the picture imparts. As for the cutting edge- it looks the same as any other knife until it touches something. You will detect a difference but it is hard to describe. If I had to put it in words I would say "this knife cuts with confidence" if there could be such a thing.
Unlike the other reviewer, I was unable to get my knife to rust but I did try; perhaps water salinity is lower here in Atlanta? I feel I got what I paid for. I have no regrets after one month of use. This is now my "go to" knife.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The best!!!!, December 10, 2007
This review is from: Zwilling J.A. Henckels Twin Cermax M66 8-Inch Chef's Knife (Kitchen)
Talk to a chef about knives and they all have their favorite. Just like cars, some like Porsche, some Ferrari, some Lamborghini, Rolls Royce, BMW, Infiniti, etc... Which is the best....I guess it's personal preference based on what you grew up on or had good experience with. If your father drove Chev you'll like chev. If he drove Ford you'll prefer Ford. The reality is both make a good truck and neither is better...just different.
Old time chefs who grew up on Wusthof Trident love those and defend them as best. Same goes for J.A. Henckels. Global is becomming popular and people are starting to defend those as the best saying they are better then German design. Friedr Dick are used in schools and popular as well. It's an age old debate. And the truth was nobody was the best. Top of the line Henckels was equal to Wusthof.
Henckels markets to everyone..they are the biggest. They make good and they make cheap. They have lost their prestige factor associated with the best such as Wusthof. If you have a $200 Henckels knife in your kitchen will people comment since it looks just like the $20 Henckels from Walmart? Probably not. This is the reason old time Wusthof fanatics do not like Henckels. If you have a Wusthof people will comment on what is that Whuthof never heard of it? You can claim it's the best and German and used by Chefs around the world. But Henckles is jsut a boutique brand sold at Walmart and Zeller's...blah!!!! No wonder Chef's don't want to try Henckels. ANd I don't blame them...Wusthof is a fine knife. The Cordon Bleu series was probably the best in the world before Henckels did the Cermax line.
Now there is a best. Cermax M66. The best knife money can buy. But you pay for it. If your a pro and want the best...this may be it. Otherwise I'd probably lean towards the Wusthof Cordon Bleu or Henckels Twin Cuisine which are half the price. But price asside we now have a clear winner as best knife in the world. Then again you must try the knife before purchasing...if you don't like don't buy it. A cheaper knife may be more comfortable and suited for you.
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