Appears in
The Japanese Cookbook

By Emi Kazuko and Yasuko Fukuoka

Published 2024

  • About

If you cut ingredients properly you are assured of success in Japanese cooking, and the cutting board becomes your stage. The Japanese word for chef, itamae, means literally “before the board”, and no Japanese cooking is done without a board. Because of hygiene considerations plastic boards are more popular among housewives, but professionals still prefer wooden boards, since they are gentler to knives, as well as to ingredients.

Boards should be washed thoroughly after use and different ingredients, particularly raw fish and meat, should never be placed on a board at the same time.