Crowmangler
WKR
just get a few Dexter fillet knives for around $50 total & that'll handle 90% of what you'll need
They were good back in the day, but moved all production to overseas. I still have a CC paring knife from about the same time period and they were good back then.We have a set of Chicago Cutlery that we got for a wedding present 30 years ago.
Unfortunately, not the same today.I have a bunch of Chicago Cutlery that my parents gave me when I got my first place out of college. That was almost 40 years ago and those knives might be 60-70 years old. Still going strong.
Victorinox IMO is the best bang for the buck out there. I have a bunch of expensive Wusthof but the Victorinox gets 99% of the use. Low cost, easy to keep the edge in shape with a steel. Speaking of, the best steel I've used is the Kramer/Zwilling.
A restaurant owner buddy turned me on to Mercer- Quality knives at a reasonable cost.What does everyone run for general use cooking knives. My wife and i have some offbrand junk from bath and body. And have been looking at something to replace them, but with all the options out there and so may iffy reviews i am lost. Iv looked at benchmade and MKC like most sportsman would. But damn the price makes a guy wonder if it is worth it. Any suggestions are welcome
If they're rolling and chipping, that sounds like a temper problem potentially as well. Hopefully the new profile and having a little more meat on the edge will reduce the issues.i'm not a fan of Shun. They look nice but I sharpen my wifes frequently the edges roll over and chip out due to porosity in the steel.. I might need to see if I can fix the issue by reprofiling to 25ish degree angle instead of a sub 20.
Was going to say the white handled dexter is what I use the most for actual cooking. Couple Old Hickory’s rounds out the rest.just get a few Dexter fillet knives for around $50 total & that'll handle 90% of what you'll need