Anonymous
Not logged in
Talk
Contributions
Log in
Request account
Rest of What I Know
Search
Editing
Blog/2026-01-27/Life Is Intense
From Rest of What I Know
Namespaces
Page
Discussion
More
More
Page actions
Read
Edit
History
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
[[File:Carbon Steel Sabatier Knife Grape Slice.webp|thumb|Not the best knife work or care but good enough for the point]] I recently took a few of our knives to [https://www.google.com/maps/place/Bernal+Cutlery/@37.7606847,-122.4244035,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x808f7e5bfe0b4d43:0x13c52491a71d9de0!8m2!3d37.7606847!4d-122.4218286!16s%2Fg%2F1233dpk4k?entry=ttu&g_ep=EgoyMDI2MDEyMS4wIKXMDSoASAFQAw%3D%3D Bernal Cutlery] to get them sharpened. == The Knives == When Julie and I combined our household supplies we each had a nice Japanese carbon steel knife and then someone gifted us one for our wedding. For the first few years that I owned my knife I took pretty good care of it, but I wasn't entirely professional with it and if you know high-carbon-steel knives they eventually get all these marks and this and that, and they're also harder on upkeep. Anyway, I took the knives to Bernal Cutlery who have a massive backlog but are familiar with the Japanese edge-bias and with the double-bevel of the Sabatier. It took them a month to get to them, which is perfectly fine (though it seems they get most of their business through the rush orders which take a few days) and it cost me $82 for the total of 25 inches or so including fixing a chip on one of them. I brought them home and tried to cut off a thin slice of a grape and I did adequately well, I think. If there was a flaw in performance it wasn't the knife's fault. == The Tasting == But the striking thing for me was ''how tasty the thin slice'' of the grape was. If this small slice provided so much of the taste, what was I doing when I was eating the whole grape. I cannot say that it was 1/fraction_of_grape the amount of taste sensation I got from fraction_of_grape! We all know intuitively of sensory adaptation but that the mere fraction delivers such a large amount of the final output is unbelievable to me. It was just the other day when [[Astra Meridian|Astra]] was eating that I marveled at the variety of foods that she got to try. While I had no shortage of savory cuisine to try and also no shortage of tropical fruits, both were from India. Astra gets to try all this Chinese food, Indian food, and all the various cuisines common in the US. She has had such a varied range of flavours and textures without being even a single year old yet. But also the intensity of these flavours has to be certainly a lot more than what we used to have. The grapes are outrageously sweet and seedless, the oranges are all universally orangey, and we have [[wikipedia:Envy (apple)|Envy apples]] now which are an outrageous creation of [http://wikipedia:HortResearch Mankind's best biochemists]. I won't pretend that we didn't have things beyond the ken of most Americans. There is no such thing like a [[wikipedia:Banganapalle (mango)|Banganapalle mango]] here. It isn't even easy to get a good one here because they have to ripen off the tree. But those were seasonal. You might wait an entire year before you get your next batch. And how many could you possibly get? That hasn't changed for that mango but the grapes and blueberries and other fruit common here in the West are available year-round, either through improved horticultural techniques or, more likely, better preservation methods that allow a crop to be frozen and thawed so that it is available for purchase throughout the year. == A Time Of Glory == Either way, this degree of abundance is unbelievable to me. Now that I have a child, I think back to how my parents would remark with incredulity at the fact that electric power and motor vehicles were commonplace. In conscious memory, I have always lived with electricity and there have always been a few motor vehicles around, though not nearly as many as today. I see their existence as natural, not as some kind of modern luxury. But in the US, I see piped drinking water as amazing. I usually rinse out the kitchen sink at the end of the night to clean it, and so many times I've caught myself staring at the sheer amount of drinkable water I'm flushing down. It's less than a litre, maybe a few hundred millilitres but even that seems like a luxury. I could have had that to drink! We truly live in an era and place of unbridled prosperity. But Astra will grow up knowing it as normal. I wonder what wonders she will talk to her children about. About what will she say "You won't believe it, but when I was growing up we didn't have..."? {{#seo:|description=The author shares their experience of getting their knives sharpened at Bernal Cutlery and the surprising delight they found in tasting a thin slice of grape}} [[Category:Blog]] [[Category:Reviews]]
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to Rest of What I Know are considered to be released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (see
Rest of What I Know:Copyrights
for details). If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly and redistributed at will, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource.
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Navigation
Navigation
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
Wiki tools
Wiki tools
Special pages
Page tools
Page tools
User page tools
More
What links here
Related changes
Page information
Page logs