🍳 LESSON: The Only Knife Skills Guide You Need
A complete instructional module based on the referenced video.
This page contains a link to the original video by Joshua Weissman. All credit for the video content belongs to the original creator.
🎯 Lesson Overview
This lesson teaches foundational knife skills that apply to every cutting task, not just specific vegetables.
Students will learn:
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How to choose an appropriate chef’s knife
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How to hold the knife with proper control
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The claw technique for safety
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Three core cutting motions (rocking, vertical, drag)
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How to develop intuitive feel and confidence
📘 Module 1 — Introduction & Mindset
Timestamp: 0:05–0:45
Key Idea:
Most people use a knife incorrectly — and it can be fixed quickly with proper fundamentals.
Learning Objectives:
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Understand why knife form matters for safety & speed
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Shift from “just cutting food” → “using a tool skillfully”
Teaching Notes:
Start by breaking the myth that technique is only for professionals.
Knife skills are universal — once mastered, they make every cooking task easier.
📘 Module 2 — Knife Selection Basics
Timestamp: 0:45–1:35
Key Teaching Points:
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Use a knife that is comfortable in your hand
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Ideal chef’s knife length: ~8 inches
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Handle types:
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Western (curved, molded)
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Octagon (angular grip with ridges for stability)
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Why This Matters:
A poorly sized or uncomfortable knife leads to fatigue, poor control, and dangerous habits.
Student Exercise:
Handle 2–3 knives and identify:
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Which feels balanced?
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Which feels stable?
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Which grip shape allows the most control?
📘 Module 3 — The Proper Knife Grip
Timestamp: 1:35–2:20
Technique:
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Use thumb and index finger to pinch the blade just forward of the handle
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Wrap the other three fingers comfortably around the handle
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Relax your grip — don’t choke the handle
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The knife should feel like an extension of your hand
Why This Matters:
This grip:
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Increases precision
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Reduces wrist strain
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Prevents the blade from twisting during cuts
Drill:
Grip the knife properly and practice air chops focusing on:
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Smooth wrist movement
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Lack of tension
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Control over the tip
📘 Module 4 — Dangerous Incorrect Grip
Timestamp: 2:20–3:00
Mistake to Avoid:
Holding the knife by the back of the handle, fingers far from the blade.
Why It’s Harmful:
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Reduces control
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Increases risk of slipping
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Can cause serious injury if the knife twists unexpectedly
Teaching Cue:
“If you cut like this, one mistake and you're done.”
Student Challenge:
Show students the incorrect grip and ask:
“What goes wrong when you try to slice something thin with this grip?”
📘 Module 5 — The Claw Technique (Guiding Hand)
Timestamp: 3:00–3:30
Technique:
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Form a claw with your guiding hand
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Middle finger becomes the leading guide
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Curl fingertips inward
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Press your knuckles lightly against the flat of the blade
Purpose:
This technique protects fingertips and controls thickness of each cut.
Drill:
Practice the claw on a carrot or cucumber:
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Slowly move fingertips backward after each slice
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Keep knuckles in constant contact with the knife
📘 Module 6 — The Three Core Cutting Motions
🔪 6A — The Rocking Cut
Timestamp: 3:30–3:55
Technique:
Rock from tip → rear → tip → rear, keeping the tip in contact with the board.
Best For:
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Herbs
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Onions
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General vegetable chopping
Beginner Drill:
Chop a line of celery using ONLY the rocking motion.
Focus on rhythm: tip down → heel down → tip down.
🔪 6B — Straight Up-and-Down Cut
Timestamp: 3:55–4:15
Technique:
Lift the knife vertically and slice straight through the ingredient.
Best For:
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Thin slices
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Precision work (e.g., scallions, peppers)
Drill:
Cut uniform thin slices of potato using only vertical motion.
Goal: Consistent thickness.
🔪 6C — Drag Cut
Timestamp: 4:15–4:45
Technique:
Pull (drag) the blade toward you while slicing.
Notes from Chef:
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Looks cool
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Not very useful
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Best reserved for meat where a pulling motion can reduce tearing
Drill:
Practice drag cuts on soft items (e.g., mushrooms).
Focus on gentle, controlled draws.
📘 Module 7 — Developing Feel & Personal Style
Timestamp: 4:45–5:20
Key Insight:
Restaurant experience teaches that everyone develops a slightly different style once they understand the fundamentals.
Teaching Message:
These techniques are guidelines, not rigid rules.
Once you learn them, you can adapt to whatever feels natural and efficient.
Reflection Questions:
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Which grip feels most balanced?
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Which cutting motion feels most controlled?
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Where do your movements feel tense?
📘 Module 8 — Closing Remarks
Timestamp: 5:20–end
Summary Points:
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Master the basics, then personalize your technique
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Knife skills are a universal kitchen foundation
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Practice is essential
Encouragement to Students:
You should now be able to cut safely, confidently, and efficiently regardless of the ingredient.
🧪 Final Practice Assignment (End-of-Lesson Drill)
You will perform:
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Rocking chop → 20 repetitions
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Vertical thin slices → 15 repetitions
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Claw technique walk-back → 1 whole carrot
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Hybrid chopping (student’s choice) → 1 onion
Goal:
Smooth movement, consistent thickness, and relaxed grip.


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