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Santoku 200mm "C" Grind "Moonlight" Arbeitstier

Santoku 200mm "C" Grind "Moonlight" Arbeitstier

By Adonis Forged Arts


No longer available

Antoine Kniamen

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Die Leistung steht erwartungsgemäß an erster Stelle, aber nur wenige Handwerker sind so aufmerksam wie Antoine Kniamen, wenn es um die Ästhetik geht. Kleine Details wie das schöne, gravierte Namensschild oder die handgemalte Zwangspatina mit ihrem wolkenartigen Muster machen eine Adonis-Klinge zu einem einzigartigen Stück Kochkunst.

Aber wie gesagt, Leistung steht an erster Stelle, und dieses Messer wurde als Hochleistungs-Arbeitstier entwickelt, perfekt, um mühelos durch sommerliches Wurzelgemüse zu rasen. Ein robuster Rücken verleiht der Klinge Stabilität und Kraft, während der „C“-Schliff auf der rechten Seite der Klinge beim Herauslösen von Lebensmitteln hilft und dieser Klinge ein angenehm ausgewogenes Schnittgefühl verleiht, das sich zufriedenstellend durch Produkte bewegt und dabei nur sehr wenig Verkeilen, Quetschen oder Spalten aufweist .

Aus hochwertigem 1.2442-Wolframstahl geschmiedet und auf ca. 64 HRC gehärtet, ist die Klinge unglaublich zäh und scharf und behält bei regelmäßigem Gebrauch für lange Zeit ihre Schärfe.

Es ist eine absolute Freude, mit der Klinge zu arbeiten und verfügt über eine atemberaubende Legierungsstreifenbildung, die durch die Wolkenpatina sichtbar wird. Inspiriert von diesen kleinen Details, die beim Schmieden ans Licht kommen, scheint Antoine seine Klingen intuitiv mit atemberaubenden, geschmackvoll ausgewählten Griffmaterialien zu kombinieren. In diesem Fall eine unglaublich stabilisierte, klassisch geformte Box-Holunder-Maser im Achtkant-Stil mit Messing-Kropf und graviertem Namensschild. Das schöne Maserholz wurde mit einer Reihe von Farben gefärbt, die das Gefühl von "Mondlicht" hervorrufen und diesem Stück seinen Namen geben.

Wenn Sie mit Antoines Arbeit nicht vertraut sind, wird dieses unglaublich schöne Werk sicherlich beeindrucken.

Product Specification
  • Blade Type:
  • Edge Length: 200mm
  • Spine Heel: 3.68mm
  • Spine Mid: 2.81mm
  • Spine Tip (20mm before): 1.81mm
  • Blade Height: 57.6mm
  • Weight: 197g
  • Cutting Edge Steel:
  • Steel class: Carbon
  • HRC: 64+
  • Blade Construction:
  • Blade Finish: SchmiedeeisenSäuregeätzt (erzwungene Patina)
  • Grind:
  • Handle Construction:
  • Handle Materials: Stabilised Box Elder
  • Handedness: Beidhändig

Blade type

Santoku

三徳

A shorter, lighter all-purpose knife — usually 165 to 180 mm — built around the same "three virtues" the name describes: meat, fish, and vegetables. The edge is flatter than a gyuto's, with a rounded, sheepsfoot-style tip, favouring a straight up-and-down push cut over a rocking motion. Its compact length and modest height make it easy to control, which has made it the default home-kitchen knife across much of the world.

The santoku trades reach and tip precision for manageability. The flatter profile and shorter blade suit smaller hands, smaller boards, and cooks who chop rather than rock, but those same dimensions limit it on large proteins and tall vegetables where a longer, taller blade does the work more easily. Think of it as a gyuto's more approachable counterpart rather than a replacement.

View full knife type guide →

Cutting edge steel

1.2442

Low-alloy tungsten high-carbon tool steel

Typical HRC
62–65
Corrosion class
Carbon
Production
Conventional
Origin
Germany (DIN 115W8)

1.2442 is one of the more interesting niche European tool steels for kitchen knifemaking: about 1.10 to 1.20 percent carbon, around 2.0 percent tungsten, and very little else. The chemistry positions it as the European "answer to Aogami #1" — slightly less Cr, slightly more W — though the impurity tolerances are looser than the Hitachi product.

In a finished knife it runs at 62–64 HRC, sharpens close to the level of a clean carbon, and produces an edge with respectable wear resistance from the W carbides. Toughness is moderate; patina behaviour is conventional. A careful smith can get genuinely excellent results from 1.2442; a less careful one can get a steel that is more variable than its data sheet suggests.

You will most commonly see 1.2442 in boutique German maker work — the Solingen tradition and certain custom specialists — where the explicit goal is a tungsten-rich European carbon. Among the makers Modern Cooking carries, Oliver Märtens and Adonis Forged Arts work in 1.2442. It is an honest steel in the right hands.

View full steel guide →

Blade construction

Mono Steel

A knife forged from a single piece of steel — no laminations, no clad layers. The simplest and most direct construction. The entire blade is the cutting steel, with no softer outer jacket to protect or contrast it. Most contemporary Western kitchen knives in carbon and stainless steel are mono-steel constructions, as are honyaki and most European bladesmith work.

The trade-off is straightforward: mono-steel knives are easier to forge, sharpen, and reason about, but the entire blade carries the cutting steel's properties — including its reactivity if it's a clean carbon. There is no soft jacket to protect a more brittle core from impact, so the heat treatment and geometry have to do all the work.

View full construction guide →

Grind

Compound Grind

A category covering blades ground with more than one geometry stacked into a single cross-section — typically a convex (or flat) primary bevel at the very edge, with one or more hollows ground higher up the blade face to relieve material behind it. The aim is food release and reduced wedging: the hollow opens an air gap so dense produce breaks away from the blade instead of clinging to it, while the convex steel at the edge keeps the apex strong and the knife driving through the cut.

The named variations in the Modern Cooking catalogue differ in where the hollows sit, how many there are, and whether the two faces are ground alike:

S-Grind — a convex primary bevel at the edge with a hollow ground into both faces just above it. The symmetrical "S"-shaped cross-section is the classic food-release grind: relief above the edge, strength at the edge.

C-Grind — an asymmetric S-grind. Both faces keep the convex primary bevel, but only one face carries the hollow above it. The single-sided relief biases food release to one side, and is simpler to grind and to maintain than a full S.

B-Grind — a stacked twin-hollow grind: a tight, narrow hollow immediately above the edge, with a second, broader and wider hollow above that. The staged relief gives especially strong food release across the height of the blade.

S-Hook Grind — also called a hook, harpoon, or J grind. An S-grind taken to an extreme, with the hollow placed very close to the cutting edge. The aggressive near-edge relief gives outstanding food release, at the price of being the most maintenance-sensitive of the family.

Asymmetrical-B Grind — a B-grind in which the twin-hollow structure is carried on one face while the other is ground differently (or left without the upper hollow), off-setting the edge. It combines the staged food release of a B-grind with the handed, steering character of an asymmetric grind.

In every case the gain is food release and reduced drag, and the shared cost is sharpening: as the edge is thinned over the knife's life, maintenance eventually reaches the hollowed steel, which cannot be flattened on a stone the way a convex or flat bevel can. How soon that happens depends on how deeply the hollows are cut and how close to the edge they sit — exactly what separates a gentle S-grind from an aggressive S-hook. These are high-craft geometries, prized by makers and experienced users for their cutting feel, and best appreciated by a cook who maintains their own edges.

View full grind guide →

Handle construction

Hidden Tang

A construction in which the tang runs into the handle but stays concealed inside it, rather than showing between two scales. A narrower tang — a full-length stick or a shorter projection — is set into a drilled or burned channel in a one-piece handle and secured with adhesive, a friction fit, or a threaded fitting drawn up against the blade. This is the traditional construction of Japanese wa-handles and many European hidden-tang knives.

The design puts the handle material in charge of the look and feel: a single piece of wood, horn, or composite — often with a ferrule or spacers at the front — is shaped into any cross-section the maker wants, from the classic octagonal and D-shaped wa profiles to fully rounded Western forms. With no steel showing along the grip, the handle can be slim and light, and is frequently made to be removed and replaced, with the balance sitting toward the blade.

View full construction guide →

Shipping & Returns

Shipping

We process orders 5 days a week (Monday - Friday) and ship from our shop in Sydney, Australia. We ship with FedEx, UPS and DHL.

We are happy to offer free international shipping on a variety of orders depending on location and order value.

Free Shipping Regions and Minimum Order Values

For Australia and New Zealand the minimum is $500AUD. For the rest of the world it is approximately €1000EUR. The discount is applied automatically when you reach the minimum cart value at checkout.

Returns

If you're not entirely happy with your purchase, you can return it within 14 days of delivery for a refund. The item must be in its original condition with all original packaging.

  • Returns are accepted for 14 days
  • The customer is responsible for return shipping costs
  • A 15% restocking fee may be applied to change-of-mind returns
  • We do not accept returns on second-hand items for change of mind

Faulty or Damaged Items

You must notify us within 5 business days of receiving your order. Photographic evidence of damage is required. Once approved, Modern Cooking will cover return shipping costs.

Product Care

Cleaning: Clean by hand with warm water. Avoid wetting the handle when possible.

Sharpening: We advise using whetstones to sharpen your knives and a honing rod or steel to maintain the burr between sharpening sessions.

Reactive Steels: Reactive steels like Aogami Super, Apex Ultra or premium reactive German and Swedish steels are susceptible to rust if not properly cared for. Keep the knife dry between uses and when storing for longer periods, wiping the blade with Tsubaki oil or another food-safe oil is a wise choice. A patina can be a beautiful personal feature on your knife and helps to stop rust forming.

Handle Care: For non-stabilised wooden handles, apply Tsubaki oil or another food-safe oil from time to time. Food-safe wax can be applied to both stabilised and non-stabilised wooden handles. Never apply hot wax or oil as you risk warping or damaging the handle.

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