Choosing a santoku knife
The santoku is a Japanese-origin all-purpose chef's knife, characterised by a wider blade with a flatter cutting edge and rounded tip. Hospitality Connect stocks Wusthof, Zwilling, Furi, and Kasumi ranges, covering hand-forged Japanese steel through to German-engineered alternatives. The santoku suits prep work needing fine slicing of vegetables, fish, and boneless meat — its flatter edge makes the rocking motion of a Western chef's knife less natural, but the push-cut technique it favours produces cleaner slices on softer products.
Material and construction
- Japanese forged steel (VG-10, AUS-10): the traditional approach — high-carbon stainless cores with softer cladding; very sharp and capable of fine edge angles, but require more maintenance.
- German engineered steel: Wusthof and Zwilling use proprietary X50 chromium-vanadium-molybdenum stainless; tougher edge, easier to maintain, slightly less sharp at extremes.
- Granton/dimpled edge: hollow indentations along the blade reduce stick on starchy vegetables and fish — the most common santoku feature in HC's range.
- Blade length: 125–180 mm typical; 165 mm is the commercial sweet spot for most prep tasks.
- Handle materials: traditional pakka-wood, modern composite, or full-tang stainless — choose by feel and dishwasher tolerance.
Use cases and care
Santoku excels at fine vegetable slicing, herb chopping, fish portioning, and boneless meat work — anywhere a flat-edge push cut is preferable to a rocking motion. Heavy break-down work (chicken, joint cuts) suits a Western chef's knife or cleaver instead. Edge angles matter: traditional Japanese santoku ground to 15° per side hold a finer edge but need more careful technique; German equivalents at 18–20° per side are forgiving but slightly less sharp at extremes. Hand-wash all santoku knives — dishwasher cycles dull the edge fast and damage handle materials. Use a steel between sharpenings, but switch to a whetstone (1000-grit minimum) for actual edge restoration on Japanese steel.
Working with our team
Hospitality Connect's catalogue depth in this category reflects 21+ years of supplying Australian commercial venues — single-supplier convenience across appliances, smallware, and consumables means fewer purchase orders, consolidated freight, and consistent specification advice from a team that's seen most operational scenarios before.
Specification matters more than buyers expect — undersized or oversized purchases waste both capital and operating cost. Our trade team spec'd thousands of fitouts across cafés, restaurants, hotels, function venues, and contract kitchens, and we'll match recommendations to your venue brief rather than push the catalogue.
Pair with
Build the knife rotation alongside steak knives, cutlery, Zwilling, food preparation equipment, and cutters and dockers for the full prep blade kit.