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Wüsthof Classic 26-Piece Mega Block Knife Set with Block

Wüsthof Classic 26-Piece Mega Block Knife Set with Block

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Brand: Wüsthof
Category: Kitchen

List Price: $1,945.00
Buy New: $1,309.99
You Save: $635.01 (33%)



Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 12 reviews
Sales Rank: 156209

Shipping Weight (lbs): 19.8
Dimensions (in): 16.9 x 10.7 x 10.1

MPN: 8275
Model: 8275
EAN: 4002293827506
ASIN: B00005MEGF

Release Date: July 31, 2001
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • Knives include 5-, 6-, 8-, 10-inch cook's; 2-3/4-inch peeling; 3-1/2-inch paring; 4-1/2-inch utility; 5-inch tomato
  • 5-inch boning; 9-inch bread; 6-inch sandwich; 7-inch flexible fillet; 8-inch carving; and 6-inch cleaver
  • Set also includes eight steak knives, sharpening steel, kitchen shears, 25-slot oak block
  • Blades, bolsters, tangs forged from single pieces of high-carbon stainless steel
  • Full tang with triple-riveted, high-impact polypropylene handles

Accessories:

  • Wüsthof Long-Term Knife Care Kit
  • Wüsthof Classic 5-Inch Cook's Knife
  • Wüsthof Classic 10-Inch Hollow Edge Ham Slicer
  • Wüsthof Classic 10-Inch Long Slicer
  • Wüsthof Classic 10-Inch Wide Cook's Knife

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
The ULTIMATE Classic Block Set w/ Classic Forged Steak Knives

Amazon.com Review
Tough polypropylene handles with full, visible tangs and the traditional three rivets distinguish Classic knives from Wüsthof's other cutlery lines. Otherwise Classic knives are identical to other Wüsthof knives, embodying all the virtues that have earned the German manufacturer world renown. The principal parts of a Wüsthof knife--blade, bolster, and tang--are forged from a single piece of high-carbon stainless steel, and the blade is precisely tapered from bolster to tip and from back to hand-honed edge. The blades and beautifully formed bolsters are not as thick as on some knives. As a result, despite their heft, strength, and durability, Wüsthof knives are pleasingly delicate and marvelously balanced in action.

This set equips a serious cook with nearly every cutting edge imaginable--there are 14 kitchen knives and eight 4-1/2-inch steak knives--plus a 10-inch sharpening steel to keep their edges aligned, tough kitchen shears, a 6-inch serving fork, and a 25-slot oak block to store everything on the counter within reach. The kitchen knives include a 2-3/4-inch peeling knife, a 3-1/2-inch paring knife, a 4-1/2-inch utility knife, a 5-inch tomato knife, a 5-inch boning knife, a 9-inch bread knife, a 6-inch sandwich knife, a 7-inch flexible fillet knife, a 5-inch cook's knife, a 6-inch cook's knife, an 8-inch cook's knife, a 10-inch cook's knife, an 8-inch carving knife, and a 6-inch cleaver. These knives should be hand washed. --Fred Brack

What's in the Box
5-, 6-, 8-, 10-inch cook's; 2-3/4-inch peeling; 3-1/2-inch paring; 4-1/2-inch utility; 5-inch tomato, 5-inch boning; 9-inch bread; 6-inch sandwich; 7-inch flexible fillet; 8-inch carving; 6-inch cleaver, eight steak knives, sharpening steel, kitchen shears, 25-slot oak block


Customer Reviews:   Read 7 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Cutco redux   May 7, 2004
 6 out of 8 found this review helpful

I own most of the knives in the set and use them daily. I also used Cutco extensively once upon a time when I was young and didn't know any better. All I can say is that anyone who can sit there and say that Cutco is in any way comparable in quality to Wusthof is either a Cutco salesperson or delusional. If you're not willing to take the extra minute per night to hand wash and properly steel a Wusthof (or any other fine forged blade), by all means, get the Cutco or K-Mart specials or whatever. Otherwise, comparisons are simply unfair. You need to use a Wusthof to fully appreciate the difference. I did, and I couldn't retire my old knives fast enough.


5 out of 5 stars Web Solicitors   April 11, 2004
 6 out of 7 found this review helpful

Just to let you guys know, Cutco hires what they call "web solicitors" to hype up their products on sites like this. Also, Cutco is sold through demonstrations by Cutco salespeople only and these salespeople have an interest in bashing other knives on the net. Master Chef Wylie Dufresne told GQ magazine "I have plenty of friends whose parents have Cutco in a knife block. You pull them out and they're all as dull as can be." Norman Weinstein, a nationally recognized kitchen knife skills instructor was quoted by the Baltimore Sun newspaper as saying this about Cutco: "Why, why, would you buy such a knife?"


5 out of 5 stars Cutco?   December 17, 2003
 10 out of 12 found this review helpful

Are you kidding me? To compare Cutco to Wusthof-Trident is like comparing a Chevy to a Mercedes-Benz. Wusthof Classic knives are forged and well balanced, prefered by professional chefs. Cutco knives are stamped and WAY overpriced, prefered by "country bumpkins" who bought them from their sons or daughters. Please take reviews praising Cutco with a grain of salt. They are most likely Cutco salesmen pushing their inferior product. Why else would they be mentioning Cutco on a site that does not even sell it?


5 out of 5 stars for a cooking couple, it's worth the money   February 24, 2003
 15 out of 16 found this review helpful

I didn't buy my Wusthof knife collection as a set, but I wish I had. This block set includes everything I've aquired over the years, plus a couple of items that are still on my wish list. It may sound like overkill, but nothing here (with the exception of the steak knives) is redundant or unneeded in a well-stocked kitchen. The only improvement I would make is to add a second paring knife.

THE BROAD BLADED (CHEF'S) KNIVES:

-- Which chef's knife to use depends on the size and balance of your hand, and how fine the task will be. Petite and average-sized women tend to prefer the 5 or 6-inch blade, average-sized and large men tend to prefer the 8 or 10. (Most sets ship with the 8). If you are a cooking couple, these four will provide a knife comfortable to both sets of hands, and appropriate to both coarse tasks (such as cutting up a watermellon or large squash, or opening a wheel of cheese) and fine ones (chopping an onion, slicing up a bunch of veggies for stir-fry).

THE NARROW BLADED KNIVES:

-- The 3.5-inch paring knife gets used for everything. Trimming and cleaning vegetables, mincing small amounts of herbs, creating garnishes, and other places where a chef's knife would be too big and unwieldy.

-- The 4.5-inch utility knife works as a paring knife for a larger hand, with a longer blade and a heavier handle. A smaller hand may prefer this to the boning knife for boning.

-- The 6-inch sandwich knife is appropriate for sandwiches (spreading filling and spreads, and cutting sandwich meats as well as the finished sandwich), but is also useful for carving chicken or cutting pies.

-- The 8-inch carving knife is for slicing roasts or turkey, but will also work well for cakes, including cheesecake. (Use the sandwich knife for carving chicken).

THE SPECIALTY KNIVES:

-- The boning knife has a narrow blade to slip around and between bones and tendons. Use this for raw meat - use the carving or sandwich knife for cooked stuff.

-- The tomato knife is serrated to cut through tomato skins without crushing, and forked to serve the slices afterward. It also works well on salami and sausage (the edge is the same as the Wusthof sausage and brunch knives, though those don't have a fork). I prefer it for citrus over the utility knife, since it also won't crush the delicate pulp.

-- The bread knife cuts through tough bread crusts without crushing the delicate inside of the bread, and can also be used as a larger tomato knife.

-- The flexible filet will slip easily under the ribs of fish or poultry, and can also be used for skinning.

-- The cleaver is for even heavier chopping tasks than the chef's knife - cutting right through bones or very tough vegetables like sugar cane. Use the flat of the cleaver to crush garlic, and the back of the cleaver to hammer meat to tenderize it, or to pound ginger or galangal before putting it in the pot. (Unlike a real chinese cleaver, this one doesnt' have the front edge sharpened, so you can't use it as a spatula).

-- The peeling knife (also known as the "bird's beak") is not only for peeling thick veggies like broccoli stalks (use a regular veggie peeler for carrots), but also just the right thing for trimming delicate herbs and mushrooms - any task where the cutting surface is the curve of your thumb and not a cutting board. The sharp point and thin profile also make this best for cutting out the cores and stems of peppers or thin-skinned squash.

Other reviewers have commented on the dishwasher-ability of the Wusthof Classic line. I've been washing my knives in the dishwasher for many years, and the rivets do corrode eventually from the detergent. The blades do just fine, however (as long as you have a basket to keep them from knocking together). Hi-carbon stainless is a compromise between stainless (which can't hold an edge) and carbon steel (which first turns black from soap, and then dissolves into a pile of rust if not dried right away). The choice of how much work you're willing to put into your knives is up to you.

It's true that a new cook can survive with a chef's knife and a paring knife, but if you can afford this, get it.


4 out of 5 stars I had to add my two cents here   January 3, 2003
 21 out of 24 found this review helpful

Straight up, I do not own this exact set, but I do own some of the knives in the set. I was obliged to make a comment because of another review. I like the Wusthof line, and think that they are of impeccable quality. I also feel that there are knives of equal quality available at far less cost. Be that as it may, I wanted to pass along that my ex wife and I bought a Cutco knife set early in our marriage (for a small fortune), and I cannot for the life of me understand how ANY reviewer could even begin to compare them to a proper forged knife set. For years, I thought that I had really bought the best, until I was introduced to a quality forged knife. There is no comparison in the overall handling and performance. To understand the benefit of a proper forged knife, you really have to try one. Don't get me wrong, the Cutco knives are among the finest of the stamped steel knives, and have a great warranty, but their price is based on the way they are marketed (like the old whole life insurance policies), and they are not in the same utility class as a forged knife set. Buy Wusthof or a more value oriented brand of forged knives and sleep well. Leave the stamped steel knives to the newlyweds.

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