afish said:
Kind of messes up having matching set but my OCD will have to get over it, for now at least.
I'm actively looking at different models and brands for the different knives on purpose. Nothing worse than a block of 12 knives and the handles are all the same so you don't know which is what!
afish said:
... This whole knife thing has sent me down the sharpening rabbit hole now. [huh]
I've just gone down that same knife/sharpening hole.
Changshan's "Thomas Keller" series is very good, and
Amazon has the 8" Chef's and a pairing knife set in a cool walnut block for $93.
This
site has lots of good reviews.
There's everything from Rockwell hardness (higher is harder but also more brittle so more likely to chip), to balance, to sharpening angle, to looks to consider. In general, the German brands go with relatively low hardness (~57) and lower sharpening angles (16-20 degrees), but that makes them easier to sharpen/hone and less likely to ship. The Asian brands go for higher hardness (~62) and sharpening angles (10-14 degrees), which is great if you don't cut bones or frozen things. For handles, chefs often use a "pinch grip" which means their thumb and forefinger are gripping the actual blade, so that affect handle design. Finally, there's whether the knives have bolsters, which help with safety (blade vertical edge near the handle) but make it harder to sharpen.
The Tom Keller knife set I linked about is a middle ground - pretty hard (61), and pretty steep angle (16º). There are better and worse knives, but for that price it was too hard to pass up (cheaper doesn't save much and you'd have to spend 3X or more to get anything noticeably better, IMO).
For sharpening, I'm looking at the Horl rolling knife sharpening thing (https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08JYKN185 ). It's two pieces: One is a wood block with embedded magnets to hold the knife at the sharpening angle (I'd cut my own block to match the knives I'm buying) and the other is a cylinder where the two ends are diamond plated. You just put the knife against the magnetic block, edge up and in, and then roll the sharpening cylinder past it. Kind of pricey for what it is, though.