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santoku

American  
[san-toh-koo] / sænˈtoʊ ku /

noun

  1. a multipurpose Japanese kitchen knife, usually 5 to 7 inches long, with a fairly straight cutting edge and rounded tip.


Etymology

Origin of santoku

First recorded in 2000–05; from Japanese: literally, “three virtues, three uses” (slicing, dicing, mincing), from san “three” + -toku “use, virtue”

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

A Santoku knife is a Japanese chef’s knife with small indentations along the straight blade, in the style of a Chinese slicing cleaver.

From Washington Times

The shorter blade is slightly more curved at the tip and the shape borrows aspects of a Japanese santoku, so it’s wider than a Western chef knife, a useful feature.

From New York Times

To cut the corn, Jawad recommends using a santoku knife because it "is lighter and smaller in size as compared to a chef’s knife."

From Fox News

Other available Teigen products include her 12-piece aluminum cookware set and Serrated Santoku Knife.

From Fox News

The set’s Santoku knives can chop, dice or mince ingredients.

From Salon