Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Always hardwood. One of mine is 20 over years old and still going. As long as you maintain them they will be fine. Never had an illness from them.
Can you please describe how you use it? It’s a dumb question, but how do you clean it between meats and everything else?
Anonymous wrote:Always hardwood. One of mine is 20 over years old and still going. As long as you maintain them they will be fine. Never had an illness from them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since you’re going to wash it, anyway, what is the point of having separate boards for meat vs. other?
Because in both wood and plastic cutting boards it's possible for contamination to remain in the fine or microscopic cuts in the boards. This is why people moved away from wood back in the day. You can hit plastic with a bleach product or vinegar to disinfect but the same treatment will damage the wood. The we learned we were adding plastic into our food by using the plastic boards.
This. I've never owned a plastic board in my over 20+ years of cooking daily. If you clean as you go, cross contamination will not be an issue. If you are a disgusting slob, well...
People moved away from wood cutting boards to plastic because they thought plastic was neato and the future. It turns out, plastic is just dead dinosaurs that are destroying out planet and our bodies.
Anonymous wrote:Following this topic to avoid microplastics it not interested in anything that cannot go in dishwasher.
Anonymous wrote:Epicurean. Light, dishwasher safe. Made in USA. Wont destroy your knives
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since you’re going to wash it, anyway, what is the point of having separate boards for meat vs. other?
Because in both wood and plastic cutting boards it's possible for contamination to remain in the fine or microscopic cuts in the boards. This is why people moved away from wood back in the day. You can hit plastic with a bleach product or vinegar to disinfect but the same treatment will damage the wood. The we learned we were adding plastic into our food by using the plastic boards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since you’re going to wash it, anyway, what is the point of having separate boards for meat vs. other?
Because in both wood and plastic cutting boards it's possible for contamination to remain in the fine or microscopic cuts in the boards. This is why people moved away from wood back in the day. You can hit plastic with a bleach product or vinegar to disinfect but the same treatment will damage the wood. The we learned we were adding plastic into our food by using the plastic boards.
Anonymous wrote:Since you’re going to wash it, anyway, what is the point of having separate boards for meat vs. other?