Fruit Fly
- Brock O Lee
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- Location: Victoria, Australia
Fruit Fly
I've got a Dragonfly Salt 4 months ago as an experiment to try out H1 and serrations. I think I have found the perfect use for it... as a fruit knife.
The serrations work great for fibrous plant material (like these litchi peels), and the linerless FRN is perfect for a messy, juicy fruit massacre. If you're on the go without the opportunity to rinse it, no worries, because it laughs in the face of corrosion.
I was a bit surprised to realise that I use it more often than the more expensive and nicer looking G10 version...
Great little worker, and highly recommended! :)
Oh, and happy new year...
The serrations work great for fibrous plant material (like these litchi peels), and the linerless FRN is perfect for a messy, juicy fruit massacre. If you're on the go without the opportunity to rinse it, no worries, because it laughs in the face of corrosion.
I was a bit surprised to realise that I use it more often than the more expensive and nicer looking G10 version...
Great little worker, and highly recommended! :)
Oh, and happy new year...
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Hans
Favourite Spydies: Military S90V, PM2 Cruwear, Siren LC200N, UKPK S110V, Endela Wharncliffe K390
Others: Victorinox Pioneer, CRK: L Sebenza, L Inkosi, Umnumzaan
Favourite Spydies: Military S90V, PM2 Cruwear, Siren LC200N, UKPK S110V, Endela Wharncliffe K390
Others: Victorinox Pioneer, CRK: L Sebenza, L Inkosi, Umnumzaan
- araneae
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- Location: A lil more south of the Erie shore, Ohio
Very nice. The H1 does seem ideal for fruit, especially when you are on the go and can't wash the blades. I tend to lean toward an Opinel for fruit as they have the thinnest blades out there and slice like demons.
So many knives, so few pockets... :)
-Nick
Last in: N5 Magnacut
The "Spirit" of the design does not come through unless used. -Sal
-Nick
Last in: N5 Magnacut
The "Spirit" of the design does not come through unless used. -Sal
- Brock O Lee
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- Joined: Thu Jul 21, 2011 3:34 am
- Location: Victoria, Australia
Yes I hear you that a thin blade is great for slicing - I noticed that the FFG Dragonfly slices better than this hollow grind. The corrosion resistance is the big attraction for me in this application.
Do you use a carbon steel Opinel? If so, do you notice a loss of fine edge when you cut acidic stuff?
Do you use a carbon steel Opinel? If so, do you notice a loss of fine edge when you cut acidic stuff?
Hans
Favourite Spydies: Military S90V, PM2 Cruwear, Siren LC200N, UKPK S110V, Endela Wharncliffe K390
Others: Victorinox Pioneer, CRK: L Sebenza, L Inkosi, Umnumzaan
Favourite Spydies: Military S90V, PM2 Cruwear, Siren LC200N, UKPK S110V, Endela Wharncliffe K390
Others: Victorinox Pioneer, CRK: L Sebenza, L Inkosi, Umnumzaan
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- araneae
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- Joined: Wed Aug 09, 2006 10:10 pm
- Location: A lil more south of the Erie shore, Ohio
I try not to use the carbon Opinels for food as that steel has a distinct taste. Try it some time and you will know what i mean. :)Brock O Lee wrote:Yes I hear you that a thin blade is great for slicing - I noticed that the FFG Dragonfly slices better than this hollow grind. The corrosion resistance is the big attraction for me in this application.
Do you use a carbon steel Opinel? If so, do you notice a loss of fine edge when you cut acidic stuff?
So many knives, so few pockets... :)
-Nick
Last in: N5 Magnacut
The "Spirit" of the design does not come through unless used. -Sal
-Nick
Last in: N5 Magnacut
The "Spirit" of the design does not come through unless used. -Sal
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- Location: Fruita, Colorado, USA, Earth
Amazing
Just food for thought, and no pun intended, is there anything the Dragonfly Salt can't do? And, why do I not have one? :eek:
my first thought when i opened this was a mini catchermen fruit parer kind of thing
but thats a cool littel blade too
but thats a cool littel blade too
Lloyd R Harner III (Butch)
a step forward
working my way to a licence to drill
http://www.harnerknives.com
a step forward
working my way to a licence to drill
http://www.harnerknives.com
- Brock O Lee
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- Joined: Thu Jul 21, 2011 3:34 am
- Location: Victoria, Australia
Thanks, I did not know that... Looks like I need to try some carbon steel, even if its just for my own education.araneae wrote:I try not to use the carbon Opinels for food as that steel has a distinct taste.
I would not attempt to slice up a watermellon with this little blade. A SE H1 millie, on the other hand... :)
Hans
Favourite Spydies: Military S90V, PM2 Cruwear, Siren LC200N, UKPK S110V, Endela Wharncliffe K390
Others: Victorinox Pioneer, CRK: L Sebenza, L Inkosi, Umnumzaan
Favourite Spydies: Military S90V, PM2 Cruwear, Siren LC200N, UKPK S110V, Endela Wharncliffe K390
Others: Victorinox Pioneer, CRK: L Sebenza, L Inkosi, Umnumzaan
once a carbon steel builds up its patina there is nearly no taste that can be found (i know a pile of chefs that use carbonsteel all the time )
the patina also helps protect the steel for pitting type rust
oo and with all things in life some steels are a bit more reactive then others
the patina also helps protect the steel for pitting type rust
oo and with all things in life some steels are a bit more reactive then others
Lloyd R Harner III (Butch)
a step forward
working my way to a licence to drill
http://www.harnerknives.com
a step forward
working my way to a licence to drill
http://www.harnerknives.com
- phillipsted
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- Location: North Virginia
I used my carbon-bladed Opinel for an all-purpose food prep knife while hiking in Europe a few years back. It got a lot of use and developed a rather ugly patina over time - although I kept the edge razor sharp with a small stone. I stripped the patina off earlier this year with a polishing block, buffed out the blade to a nice satin finish, and coated it with TufGlide. Man, that thing will get sharp!
I didn't notice any odor/taste on my food, now or then, araneae. Maybe yours was coated with a protective oil?
TedP
P.S. - ...and yes, the Dfly rocks! I've got five! Let's see if Sal will make one in orange G10!
I didn't notice any odor/taste on my food, now or then, araneae. Maybe yours was coated with a protective oil?
TedP
P.S. - ...and yes, the Dfly rocks! I've got five! Let's see if Sal will make one in orange G10!
Worry less - Breathe more...
Spydie Fanatic #185
Spydie Fanatic #185
That's an interesting thought. All of my good kitchen knives are carbon steel with a heavy patina and they impart no taste whatsoever. They're all pretty old (35-40 years for some) so I don't recall if there were any instances where food cut with them tasted "off" prior to their patina developing.butch wrote:once a carbon steel builds up its patina there is nearly no taste that can be found (i know a pile of chefs that use carbonsteel all the time )
the patina also helps protect the steel for pitting type rust
oo and with all things in life some steels are a bit more reactive then others
- Brock O Lee
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- Posts: 3998
- Joined: Thu Jul 21, 2011 3:34 am
- Location: Victoria, Australia
Hehe, with all this talk of carbon steel, maybe we need a carbon steel Dragonfly - the polar opposite of the H1... Superblue anyone? :D
Now that I think of it, this was discussed before. Sal said something like we should not waste Superblue on a small blade like this. Bummer, because the DFly is already made in Seki... :rolleyes:
Now that I think of it, this was discussed before. Sal said something like we should not waste Superblue on a small blade like this. Bummer, because the DFly is already made in Seki... :rolleyes:
Hans
Favourite Spydies: Military S90V, PM2 Cruwear, Siren LC200N, UKPK S110V, Endela Wharncliffe K390
Others: Victorinox Pioneer, CRK: L Sebenza, L Inkosi, Umnumzaan
Favourite Spydies: Military S90V, PM2 Cruwear, Siren LC200N, UKPK S110V, Endela Wharncliffe K390
Others: Victorinox Pioneer, CRK: L Sebenza, L Inkosi, Umnumzaan
- ValueKnifeLover
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- Location: North Florida
I'd buy an H1 Para2 in a heartbeat. :DAfriadOfSpyders wrote:An H1 pm2 and milli would be a dream come true
"Laws that forbid the carrying of arms..disarm only those who are neither inclined nor determined to commit crimes. Such laws make things worse for the assaulted and better for the assailants; they serve rather to encourage than prevent homicides, for an unarmed man may be attacked with greater confidence than an armed one." - Thomas Jefferson quoting Cesare Beccaria
- araneae
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- Joined: Wed Aug 09, 2006 10:10 pm
- Location: A lil more south of the Erie shore, Ohio
Nothing on my blades but mineral oil, which is tasteless. Its definitely the steel. Perhaps as butch mentioned the patina protects from the odd taste. My Opi's definitely have a taste. Maybe I'll have to taste test one of mine with a heavier patina and see if that does the trick.phillipsted wrote: I didn't notice any odor/taste on my food, now or then, araneae. Maybe yours was coated with a protective oil?
TedP
So many knives, so few pockets... :)
-Nick
Last in: N5 Magnacut
The "Spirit" of the design does not come through unless used. -Sal
-Nick
Last in: N5 Magnacut
The "Spirit" of the design does not come through unless used. -Sal