DEV Community

Hamono Club
Hamono Club

Posted on • Edited on • Originally published at hamonoclub.com

The Best Japanese Knife Is the One That Matches How You Cook

The Best Japanese Knife Is the One That Matches How You Cook

Most "best Japanese knife" lists rank the same five blades and call it a day. That ranking does not help much, because the right knife depends on who holds it and what they cook. After putting dozens of knives against real cook profiles, one pattern holds up: match the blade to the cook, and ignore the leaderboard.

Why "best" is the wrong question

A knife a sushi chef swears by can be the wrong first knife for someone who mostly chops vegetables on a Tuesday night. What actually decides the fit is the steel, the blade geometry, and how much sharpening you are willing to learn. Fix those three against your own cooking and the field narrows fast.

The home cook who wants one knife that does everything

For most kitchens, a gyuto in a forgiving stainless steel covers almost everything. The Tojiro DP 21 cm is the reference: a VG-10 core from Takefu Special Steel at around 60 HRC, laminated between softer stainless layers that protect the edge and survive the occasional careless wash. It sharpens with standard whetstone technique and holds a clean edge for weeks of normal use, and it sits in a mid price range, well under the artisan tier.

The cook who already has a santoku and wants to level up

If you already own a decent santoku and cook with volume, a longer gyuto or a powder-steel blade is the next step. SG2 (also sold as R2) reaches 63 HRC and holds its edge noticeably longer than VG-10, though it asks for finer sharpening in return. This is the tier where you pay for finish and heat treatment rather than for the name on the blade.

The cook who works raw fish

Raw fish is its own world. A yanagiba with a single-bevel edge cuts sashimi cleaner than any double-bevel knife, because its concave back face (the urasuki) lets the slice release without dragging on the steel. The catch is that it demands a sharpening technique you have to learn, so it earns its place only if you cut fish often.

The honest summary

There is no single winner. A home cook who wants one knife is best served by the Tojiro DP gyuto, while someone cooking in volume gets more from a powder-steel blade, and anyone serious about raw fish needs the yanagiba. Pick the profile that sounds like your kitchen and the choice stops being hard.

Profile Recommended type Steel Why
Home, one knife Gyuto VG-10 Forgiving, all-round, easy to sharpen
Leveling up Gyuto / longer SG2 Longer edge retention, finer feel
Raw fish Yanagiba Single-bevel Cleanest sashimi cut

For the full breakdown by cook profile, with verified models and long-term notes, the complete guide is at hamonoclub.com/mejor-cuchillo-japones.

Top comments (0)