James Merrell
Eve Felder, associate dean of culinary arts at the Culinary
Institute of America, in Hyde Park, New York, recommends
introducing your new knives to a steel (a round metal rod, shown at
right, that's sold at housewares stores for about $25 to $45), and
making sure the two stay acquainted. "Every time you make a cut,
the blade splays microscopically," she says. After a dinner's worth
of chopping and slicing, run both sides of the blade along a steel
at the same angle as the blade's bevel. This will hone it, or pull
it back in. Felder warns against using electric knife sharpeners,
since they don't adhere to each knife's unique angle and blade
shape.