Contrary to popular belief, the bedrock upon which great kitchens are built is not the microwave, refrigerator or cabinet where you keep enough plastic bags to build a plastic-bag ladder from here to Bangkok.
It is the chef’s knife.
And Drew Hash — an actual chef by trade — makes handsome, functional, really sharp chef’s knives.
You’ve probably already eaten food that came out of a Drew Hash kitchen: he’s worked at Hawthorne Lane, Boulevard and Spruce. More recently, the culinary auto-didact has been working as a private chef in Silicon Valley.
When not feeding tech titans, though, he’s in his studio in Potrero Hill making top-shelf cutlery.
Hash’s Facebook page reveals a beguiling peek into his process and materials, from gorgeously variegated redwood burl to California buckeye to blue/green-dyed tiger-striped maple. The blades are generally made from stainless AEB-L steel or high-carbon 1084 steel.
One look and you’re going to want one of these knives even if you’ve never so much as fileted a hot dog, trust.
As you’d expect from a one-man shop, availability is limited.
Good knives come to men who wait — in this case, about six months, following the issuance of a $200 deposit for a custom piece. You can choose from paring knives (three-to-six-inch blade), or larger chef’s knives (10-inch blade).
Or buy one of the few that are currently available.
There’s aren’t many. But there’s this.
Get it before it’s gone.
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