Vincent Lau’s job is to restore and maintain the blades of hundreds of clients a week. At Korin, the Japanese knife and kitchenware emporium where Lau does his work, you won’t find him using some automatic, industrial sharpener. Instead, Lau favors the time-tested techniques of traditional whetstone sharpening — even if it’s slower.
“Using a whetstone to sharpen knives isn’t really comparable to using a machine or knife sharpening tool,” Lau says. “Machines can’t accommodate any type of knife with any level of defect or dullness. I can.”
Here are the steps that Lau, who “easily sharpens more than 100 knives a day,” takes to revive a knife — as well as the gear you’ll need to do it at home.
Step 1: Gather your materials
To sharpen a knife like Lau, you’ll need two whetstones — one for the initial sharpening and one for finishing.
Whetstones are differentiated by grit numbers. The lower the grit number, the coarser the stone.
“Lower numbers are coarser and should be used on the first sharpen. Higher numbers are typically only used to finish an already sharp knife,” Lau says.