Cutting board safety

Every month, Lori Yates from Foxes Love Lemons takes a lesson she learned in culinary school, while working with some of the country’s best chefs, and brings it into the home kitchen, where her tips will help make you a faster, better, and more confident cook. Welcome to her column, Home Chef. Today, we’re taking a break from holiday recipes and tips to talk about something you do a lot of, this season and all year long: chopping. 

Let’s talk about kitchen safety. It may not be the sexiest topic, but it’s a necessity. One of the most dangerous things possible in a kitchen is a slippery cutting board. You know the one. You’re trying to dice some carrots and slippppp – there it goes. Your hand and your knife will probably follow this cutting board around the counter while it takes a tour of the area.

Now, I just had my knives sharpened at the farmer’s market last weekend. The edges are razor sharp, making it even more imperative that my cutting board not slide around. I quite like all 10 of my fingers, covered in burns and scars though they may be.

Cutting board safety
Cutting board safety

There’s a couple of solutions to slippery cutting boards. One that a lot of home cooks like is a cutting board with nonslip grips built onto all four corners. However, I’m partial to my trusty bamboo cutting boards. I use a simple hack to make these nonstick: a cheap roll of non-stick mat material.

Square pieces of this material were issued to the culinary students before we even took out our knives. I like it because it’s cheap, it’s easy to find at craft and home improvement stores, it’s nearly impossible to destroy (I’m still using my original pieces from four years ago!), and you can even throw it in the dishwasher. Oh, and your cutting board will not budge when it’s resting on this stuff. Don’t want to buy a roll of this? Grab a tea towel or washcloth and do the same thing.

The towel method works best if either the towel is slightly damp, or the counter is slightly damp before you lay down the dry towel.


And guess what? In a pinch, you can use damp paper towel, too. Whatever method works for you – give it a try! Once you get used to confidently slicing and dicing on a stable surface, you’ll never go back to chasing your board around the counter again.