Milk Street

Milk Street Kitchin-to™ Knife

Sale price $62.97 Regular price $89.95 (30% OFF)

Standard chef’s knives are big and heavy because they evolved from Middle Ages daggers, which were designed for defense. It stabs fine, but how well does it handle standard kitchen tasks such as chopping and slicing? Our solution was to look toward Japan, where knives are based on the design of the featherweight samurai sword. Japanese knives are thinner and designed for the task at hand. Based on these lighter, safer knives and our own cooking experience, we developed an all-new modern chef’s knife that’s remarkably easy to use. It’s the Milk Street Kitchin-to, part Chinese cleaver and part vegetable knife. It can handle small jobs such as slicing garlic but also makes heavy-duty jobs a breeze. With the Kitchin-to, you let the knife do the work!

Net Weight: 200 grams
Blade Length: 7.48 inches
Blade Steel: German 1.4116 steel
Handle: Black Polymer
Spine Thickness: 1.5 millimeters
Note: This is the 2nd Edition with German 1.4116 steel. The previous edition used Japanese AUS 8 steel.

The knife must be washed by hand and dried after each use immediately to ensure no staining occurs. Do not put in dishwasher.

To maintain the blade's edge, sharpen the Kitchin-to at a 17 degree angle.

Milk Street Kitchin-to™ Knife

Sale price $62.97 Regular price $89.95 (30% OFF)
$49.12Store Member

A New Kinda of Knife For the New Home Cooking

  1. Stays Razor Sharp

    High-quality German 1.4416 blade steel lasts a lifetime with regular honing.
  2. Safer

    The tall blade and rounded sheepsfoot tip shields fingers.
  3. Lock-in Comfortable Grip

    Lock-in polymer handle fills the palm for a secure grip.
  4. Lightweight and Easy Sharpening

    Without the thick, heavy bolster of a western-style chef’s knife. the Kitchin-to is lightweight and easy to evenly sharpen.
  5. Handles Big and Small Jobs

    The Kitchin-to offers power when you need it but is also great at smaller tasks such as chopping shallot or slicing garlic.

customer reviews