Indian and Western Knives in the Kitchen: One Blade vs Twelve
If you open an Indian kitchen drawer and then a Western one, you see two completely different philosophies laid out in steel.
In India: one or two knives in the drawer or on the kitchen slab and a small one in the pocket. In the West: a wooden block with a minimum of 12 knives, each named, each with one job. The difference is not about money or skill. It’s about food, history, who makes the tools, who sharpens them, and what the knife means to each culture.
The Indian Kitchen: One Blade for Everything
In most Indian homes the kitchen knife never used to be from a brand. It was from the Lohar , the local blacksmith. For centuries he’s taken scrap steel, old car springs, railway files, heated them in a coal forge and hammered out a knife. Handle of wood, horn, or welded metal. Because it was forged to survive, you never needed more .
The traditional Indian kitchen typically makes do with just two knives, and there is sound reason for it. The first is a large, heavy knife , often called a Boti or cleaver , used for robust tasks such as chopping hard vegetables, splitting coconuts, and cutting meat. The second is a smaller, sharper knife for more delicate work: peeling, finely slicing onions and tomatoes, and preparing fruit. Indian cookery relies far less on an array of specialised blades and far more on grinding, pounding and hand-preparation with a mortar and pestle or mixer-grinder. Because most chopping is straightforward and ingredients are cooked down into curries, dals and stir-fries, one knife for power and one for precision is perfectly adequate. It is a practical, economical approach that keeps the kitchen simple, easy to maintain, and suited to everyday cooking.
So the rule has been: generally one or two knives in the kitchen and a smaller version in the pocket.
Who sharpens it?
The Indian bicycle knife sharpener is a street institution. Usually a man with a simple setup mounted on the back of an old bicycle: a foot-pedal powered grinding stone, a tray of water, and a few hooks to hang finished knives, scissors, and sickles. He cycles from gali to gali, announcing his arrival with a bell so homemakers, butchers, tailors, and vendors can bring out their dull blades. For a few rupees, he sharpens everything with practiced skill ; holding the blade at just the right angle, splashing water to cool the steel, and testing the edge on his thumb. It’s more than a service; it’s a piece of moving, sustainable micro-industry. No electricity, no shop rent, just skill, sweat, and a bicycle. In an age of electric grinders and packaged disposables, the bicycle sharpener still survives because he’s affordable, accessible, and part of the neighborhood’s daily rhythm. It was one man, one wheel, keeping the one knife that fed the whole family alive.
The Western Kitchen: The 12-Knife Block
Open a Western kitchen and the first thing you see is the block. Chef’s knife, paring knife, serrated bread knife, carving knife, boning knife, utility knife, santoku, cleaver, 6 steak knives. Add cheese and tomato knives and you’re at 12-15 pieces easily.This didn’t come from home cooking. It came from French professional kitchens.
In the 1800s Auguste Escoffier created the" Brigade system" . One cook for sauces, one for pastry, one for meat. Each had tools made for that one task. A boning knife is thin to go around joints. A bread knife is serrated to saw without crushing. A carving knife is long for clean slices at the table.
In the 20th century, manufacturers sold that system to homes. Cookery schools taught it. Magazines photographed it. “Starter sets” appeared in department stores. The message: serious cooks have the right tool for every job.
And sharpening became an industry.
No sparks on the pavement. Instead, branded motor vans drive through suburbs: “Professional Knife Sharpening”. Inside: electric belt grinders, water-cooled wheels, angle jigs, polishing buffers. Or you take your block to a kitchen store. At home there are electric sharpeners, whetstones, honing steels.
Because you own 12 or 24 knives, you need a system to maintain them. Each needs sharpening occasionally. Because they cost so much, you pay to have it done right.
Technique vs Tools : The real difference is philosophy.
India puts the skill in the hand. The same knife rocks, chops, pounds, scrapes. The cook adjusts force and angle. The food is mixed, so a rough chop is fine. The knife must be a workhorse.
The West puts the skill in the tool. The right knife makes the job easier and the plates look better. Thin tomato slices. Perfect dice. Clean roast carvings. The knife does part of the work.
Neither is wrong. They’re optimised for different food and different ideas of a meal.
Cost, Care, and Culture
India: Knife from blacksmith: ₹30–₹100 . Pocket knife: less. Sharpening charges : ₹10–₹30. If it breaks, make another. Wash, use, and repeat.
West: Block of 12 or 24 : A wedding gift. Displayed on the counter. A good branded stainless steel set of knives could cost between 600 to 1800 US dollars. After use, wash the knife by hand with regular dish soap, rinse with hot water and dry by hand immediately. Dishwashers are very bad for knives. Even worse for carbon steel knives.
Culturally too: In India the knife is invisible, like a spoon. Sharpening happens in public, with noise and sparks. In the West the knife block is visible , a status symbol of a “well-equipped kitchen”. Sharpening happens in a van or in the pantry with a gadget.
The Knife Beyond the Kitchen
Beyond cooking, the knife also took on meaning in literature and everyday language. Across cultures it became a symbol for mistrust, deceit, and the treacherous act. Because a knife works only up close, poets used it for betrayal by those near you. Because it is hidden, it came to mean hidden intent ; a smile with a blade behind it. Because it divides, it came to mean a cut in trust, a broken promise. From “Et tu, Brute?” to “peeth peeche chhura bhonkna” to “muh mein Ram, bagal mein chhuri”, the same object that feeds in the kitchen represents betrayal in stories. Who doesn't remember the iconic song lines from Raj Kapoor 's film " Mera Naam Joker".
"Aye bhai
Kaisa hai karishmaa
Kaisa khilavaad hai
Jaanavar aadami se
Zyada vafaadaar hai
Khaataa hai kodaa bhi
Rahata hai bhookha bhi
Phir bhi wo maalik par
Karata nahin vaar hai
Aur insaan yeh maal
Jis kaa khaata hai
Pyaar jis se paata hai
Geet jis ke gaata hai
Uss ke hi seene mein
Bhokataa kataar hai
......Aye bhai zara dekh ke chalo"
(Oh brother
What a farce it is
Animals are more loyal
than human beings
They eat beatings too,
they stay hungry too
Yet they never
attack their master
And this human,
whose salt he eats,
from whom he gets love,
whose songs he sings
He stabs a dagger
right into that very chest
......Oh brother, walk carefully)
( Avtar Mota )
CHINAR SHADE by Autarmota is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.5 India License.
Based on a work at http:\\autarmota.blogspot.com\.
















