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Blade Length | 210 mm |
Total Length | 335 mm |
Steel Type | Aogami Super (Iron Clad) |
Handle Material | Walnut |
Ferrule | Black Pakka Wood |
HRC (Rockwell) | 62 |
Spine Thickness | 2.5 mm |
Height Spine to Heel | 46 mm |
Weight | 148 grams |
Bevel | Double |
Moritaka Hamono
Moritaka Hamono was founded in 1293 during the Kamakura period by Kongohyoe Minamoto no Moritaka, who was the head swordsmith for the Buddhist priests at Mt. Homan in Dazaifu, Fukuoka. His descendants then followed in his footsteps in the same city for 13 generations. In 1632, the family followed the Higo Daimyo Mitsunari Hosokawa (The feudal ruler of the Higo region) and moved to Miyaji-machi, Yatsushiro City in Kumamoto. For another 13 generations in this city, they forged swords for Buddhist armies, the Daimyo's army, and also for the Daimyo himself. Moritaka swords were unique because they were made and used to help attain Buddhahood. Five generations ago, master swordsmith Chuzaemon Moritaka decided to expand and apply their forging techniques to kitchen knives. Since then they’ve been dedicated to producing a large variety of kitchen knives and edged gardening tools for agricultural use and forestry.
Moritaka Hamono knives are known for their rustic aesthetic, having clad their knives in soft iron, with an Aogami Super core steel. The blacksmith finish or kurouchi is distinctly rough, and the warikomi technique, where the core steel is folded into a single piece of soft iron, is a traditional practice, as opposed to sanmai, which uses two separate pieces of soft metal as the cladding. Since Moritaka Hamono employs more traditional knife-making techniques, their production is limited to smaller batches, as they like to honour their inherited methods. Their blades are heat treated to approximately 64 HRC and have a midweight profile, mostly holding their width down towards the edge. Notably at the tang, Moritaka Hamono has developed a unique feature, where despite having an iron clad/carbon core steel knife, the tang area is protected in stainless steel, hence the change in colour – to prevent rust around the handle area, and prevent the tang from rusting inside the handle.
The Knife
The Gyuto is the Japanese equivalent to the western styled chef knife. Equally as versatile and capable however not always, but usually featuring a flatter profile. This knife is a great example of that flatter profile make it excellent at smaller slicing tasks as well as having a very usable tip.
142 JAMES ST. S HAMILTON ON L8P3A2
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195 NORSEMAN ST UNIT 14 ETOBICOKE ON M8Z0E9
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