Japanese Hōchō: The Taxonomy and Care of Japanese Kitchen Knives
Japan — Sakai (Osaka) and Seki (Gifu) primary production centres
Japanese kitchen knives (hōchō, 包丁) represent one of the world's most refined and systematically developed cutting tool traditions — a tradition that extends back to samurai sword-making and the transfer of forging techniques to culinary implements in the medieval period. The full taxonomy of Japanese professional kitchen knives is extensive, with over 30 named forms. Beyond the sashimi knives covered separately, the primary cutting disciplines are: Deba (出刃): a heavy, single-bevel knife for breaking down whole fish — splitting the spine, removing the head, and filleting. The thick spine provides weight for the initial decisive cuts; the single bevel allows precise filleting work. Usuba (薄刃, 'thin blade'): a single-bevel, flat-faced vegetable knife for precision vegetable work — the katsuramuki (rotary peeling) technique requires an usuba. Gyuto (牛刀, 'beef knife'): the Japanese interpretation of the Western chef's knife — double-bevel, thinner than French equivalents, with a slightly more acute edge angle. Used for meat and general work. Nakiri (菜切り, 'vegetable chopper'): a double-bevel vegetable knife with a square tip — the home cook's equivalent of the usuba, easier to maintain. Santoku (三徳, 'three virtues'): the all-purpose home cooking knife — handles fish, meat, and vegetables — the most widely used Japanese kitchen knife internationally.