🔪 Unleash Your Inner Chef with Dexter-Russell!
The Dexter-Russell 8" Stainless Heavy Duty Cleaver, S5288, from the Traditional Series, is designed for serious culinary tasks. With a thick, stain-free high-carbon steel blade and a robust hardwood handle, this cleaver is built to withstand the rigors of professional kitchens while providing exceptional performance for over 200 years.
L**H
What A Knife! This Cleaver Rocks!
>.. I make dog food for my two standard poodles. They require a fair amount of bones in their diet. Some I grind up into their food, but they need "recreational bones" as well, both to clean their teeth and to balance out the calcium needed.>.. I had been using a light weight oriental cleaver from earlier years, but it was not really up to the task. I needed to chop the thin part of turkey necks from the fat part. I need to separate the ribs from the spine, not just for poultry, but larger bones like pork and beef necks, and medium to light ruminant bones. I doubt that the heavier bones in the legs that support all that weight can only be cut with any thing but a saw.>.. I wanted a heavy duty cleaver to do the jobs that I needed done. I am 5 foot 10 inches tall and have fairly normal hands for my size. This cleaver weighs more than 2.5 pounds, for a knife, that is VERY HEAVY. The grip was a bit TOO LARGE for my hands, but only just. I felt that to control the knife with one hand, I needed to trim the handle just a little, so I used a sander to reduce the outer edges of the wooden handles by about 1/4 inch. That DID THE TRICK. I am now CONFIDENT that I can control the knife while it is in motion as it descends into the bony joints.>.. The blade is about 1/4 inch thick at the top, and that thickness extends all the way through the handle, as seen in the picture. The knife arrived sharp enough to cut computer paper, but that is not it's job. It does an exemplary job of separating joints, in cutting and portioning the choppable bones I encounter. It also cuts meat away from the bone for the gross cuts, a boning knife does the rest.>.. From the limited use I have put this through, I should expect this to last for several generations, provided that no one abuses the blade edge. It can hang from the hole in the blade, or you can make a cover out of any heavy-duty cloth (overly torn jeans?) and duct tape. Once formed a second layer could be added to both sides, and if you have a sewing machine it could be sewn together. Or if you are a quick and dirty tool user, like me, just use the duct tape on the canvas. and replace as needed.>.. I mentioned weight. I do not think that I could wield this a full day, or likely even a half-day. I am not a professional butcher, nor do I want to be. But for those with age-atrophied muscles like mine, there is a solution. For accurate separations, I do what I saw a person do on YouTube. I bought a one-foot length of nylon rod, Mine is just on the edge of too big, at 2 inches thick. for others with smaller hands a 1+3/4 or 1+1/2 inch thick rod would suffice. The rod is used like a baton (not the musical kind, the bushcraft kind - used to assist the knife in splitting a big stick, even a log into smaller pieces). Thus the knife is positioned where one wants the cut, with the blade touching the meat or bone. Then the rod is raised up high and forcefully slammed down to strike the back of the blade, forcing it down, into, and likely through the bone. The rod is heavy enough, and strong enough to do the job, but soft enough not to injure the blade. The rod does take dents this way, but the dents do not interfere with the intended use, nor do they actually touch the meat or bone. The nylon can be sanitized in any way that suites you, except perhaps in steam autoclave, likely would melt and deform the rod.>.. For those that need a real butcher's cleaver, this is the one for home use. I don't know if this would be suitable for a professional, but I suspect that when in training, student butchers would be pointed at the right tools for their trade. Some would quibble bout the money needed to purchase this knife. Be sure you are getting what you want, I did.
R**D
The only REAL meat cleaver on Amazon
I used to work as a meat cutter in a meat and seafood dept. I have been looking all over for a proper meat cleaver on Amazon. There are hundreds that call themselves "meat cleavers" but they are all, thin, light weight, and cheaply made in China (many 2-3 times the price of this). I've ordered several and then returned them. Most are only suitable for vegetables and could not even handle small, thing lamb rib chops and even or even thick ice. This is also MADE IN THE USA! This is heavy and mine came razor sharp.The only problem is Amazon just throws it in a box with some brown paper and ships it unprotected. The 1st one I got had cut its way out of the box the the knife was sticking out of the box by about 2 inches which chipped off the point of the blade and damaged the knife edge. That shows how heavy and sharp it is. I highly recommend this cleaver, BUT when you order it, call customer service and demand it be packaged properly. This could easily take a finger or toe off if it cuts its way out of the box unnoticed and you pick up the box when it is delivered. Packaging is a complete joke and dangerous.
K**S
Great tool
Awesome tool! Easy to use, and very effective.
S**H
This is a big heavy hitter!
This is exactly what I was looking for! It’s a beast, feels a bit like an axe in your hand. It’s big and heavy. This is for butchering/processing, not for minor work on a grocery store whole chicken on a small cutting board in the common kitchen.I split spine vertebrae on hog carcasses to make bone-in chops and standing rib roasts, etc. this thing is perfect for stuff like this.I also want to throw out there, for education and safety… you don’t have to always swing/chop with these! I use a batoning technique, common in Bushcraft knife skills. It’s where you place the blade at desired cut spot, then use a piece of wood to smack the back of the blade, tapping it through the bone safely and with accuracy. Swinging this thing would be hard to aim. But it’ll baton right through a hog femur, pelvis, or spine! In just a few taps on the back of the blade with a piece of 1 1/2” dowel rodI have been through a few of the lighter weight cleavers over the years then I found this one and it’s the end. I love it
C**S
It is an impressive knife, came wrapped in paper lol
It's exactly what I wanted, after a lot of research. It is the heft of a knife a home chef could want to have for generations to come.For the love of God though, please ship your knives more safely. I don't care if it cuts into profits, a hair popping 2lb knife should not be poking through the box upon arrival. I can sharpen past a chip or two on 2lbs of steel, but the delivery guy only has 10 fingers and they can't exactly buff those out.
B**B
This cleaver is a beast.
Wow, this thing has some heft and seems to be very well made, mine weighed in at 2lbs 10 5/8 oz, more than 4 times the weight of my quality chefs knife, probably heavier than my hatchet.If you are looking for a chopping machine, look no further. This is a classic meat cleaver meat for chopping things like bone, melons, or large crustaceans. Don't plan on using this to thin slice kohlrabi, dice an onion or anything like that, it might be able to do it, but it would be tiring. It came very sharp but not sharp enough to shave arm hair (which it doesn't need to be) and there were a few small nicks along the blade. The blade is super thick and has a nice curve to it unlike the thin Asian cleavers which are more meant to be used as chefs knives.I cant wait to use this to halve some dungeness crabs or split a chicken bone in chicken breast.Edit 9/6/2016: I have since used this to chop some rock crabs in half and it worked like a charm. I also put it to the test by chopping the fins off of about 30 albacore tuna collars. These fins are very tough and you cannot slice though the spines in the fins with a knife. It sometimes took two swings but this cleaver was able to get the job done just fine. A lighter cleaver would have had a difficult time.