1 00:00:00,915 --> 00:00:03,114 Pinch Grip and Claw Grip 2 00:00:03,114 --> 00:00:05,217 Or How to Keep Blood Out of your Vegetables 3 00:00:08,355 --> 00:00:09,683 Hello, my name is Helen Rennie, 4 00:00:09,683 --> 00:00:11,678 I'm the founder of Helen's Kitchen Cooking School 5 00:00:11,678 --> 00:00:13,180 and today we're going to talk about 6 00:00:13,180 --> 00:00:15,743 cutting vegetables without cutting your fingers. 7 00:00:15,743 --> 00:00:17,952 To do that safely, you'll need to master 8 00:00:17,952 --> 00:00:19,954 a pinch grip on your knife hand 9 00:00:19,954 --> 00:00:22,723 and a claw grip on your guiding hand. 10 00:00:22,723 --> 00:00:25,993 To hold my chef's knife, I'm pinching the blade 11 00:00:25,993 --> 00:00:28,195 with my thumb and index finger, 12 00:00:28,195 --> 00:00:30,431 and wrapping my third, fourth, and fifth fingers 13 00:00:30,431 --> 00:00:31,904 around the handle. 14 00:00:31,904 --> 00:00:34,319 This handhold gives me a lot more stability 15 00:00:34,319 --> 00:00:36,603 than holding the knife just by the handle 16 00:00:36,603 --> 00:00:38,839 or placing an index finger on top, 17 00:00:38,839 --> 00:00:40,526 the way you'd eat a steak. 18 00:00:40,526 --> 00:00:43,343 You never want the knife to jump around the board. 19 00:00:43,343 --> 00:00:45,045 You want it to rock. 20 00:00:45,045 --> 00:00:46,313 Lift the back of the knife, 21 00:00:46,313 --> 00:00:48,549 and glide it forward on your board. 22 00:00:48,549 --> 00:00:50,918 If you just touch the knife to the board, like this, 23 00:00:50,918 --> 00:00:52,787 your pieces might not separate completely, 24 00:00:52,787 --> 00:00:55,122 and the herbs will get bruised. 25 00:00:55,122 --> 00:00:56,757 Now let's talk about your guiding hand. 26 00:00:56,757 --> 00:00:59,141 Its purpose is to hold the vegetable in place, 27 00:00:59,141 --> 00:01:00,976 and to position the blade of the knife 28 00:01:00,976 --> 00:01:02,195 to give you precision. 29 00:01:02,195 --> 00:01:04,798 It will need to get very close and personal with the knife! 30 00:01:04,798 --> 00:01:07,410 To do that safely, you'll need to use a claw grip. 31 00:01:08,302 --> 00:01:10,137 Imagine you're holding a small ball, 32 00:01:10,137 --> 00:01:12,272 so that your palm and all your fingers 33 00:01:12,272 --> 00:01:14,641 are in complete contact with it. 34 00:01:14,641 --> 00:01:16,777 See how my hand is nice and round? 35 00:01:16,777 --> 00:01:18,612 Now, any time one of my fingertips 36 00:01:18,612 --> 00:01:21,816 decides to leave the ball, SNICK! bad things happen. 37 00:01:21,816 --> 00:01:24,660 So do not let your fingers do that. 38 00:01:24,660 --> 00:01:25,753 By the way, lemons and limes 39 00:01:25,753 --> 00:01:28,122 make perfect balls for proper practice, 40 00:01:28,122 --> 00:01:29,482 depending on the size of your hand. 41 00:01:29,652 --> 00:01:31,325 Now stick the elbow out, 42 00:01:31,325 --> 00:01:34,900 so that the guiding hand meets your knife head on. 43 00:01:34,900 --> 00:01:37,531 With the knuckles on your second and third fingers, 44 00:01:37,531 --> 00:01:40,167 that's the first knuckles after the nails, 45 00:01:40,167 --> 00:01:43,576 glued to your knife in the widest part, like this. 46 00:01:44,546 --> 00:01:46,073 The reason you want to be here 47 00:01:46,073 --> 00:01:48,442 is because you'll need to lift your knife very little, 48 00:01:48,442 --> 00:01:51,345 versus here, where you'll need to lift your knife a lot. 49 00:01:51,345 --> 00:01:53,380 Not only is it slower, but more dangerous 50 00:01:53,380 --> 00:01:54,982 because you might nick your knuckles. 51 00:01:54,982 --> 00:01:57,351 You don't have that much blade, to place them here. 52 00:01:57,351 --> 00:01:58,619 Now let's talk about what moves, 53 00:01:58,619 --> 00:02:00,087 the knife or the vegetable. 54 00:02:00,087 --> 00:02:01,956 It is always the knife. 55 00:02:01,956 --> 00:02:05,492 The knife pushes against the knuckles of your guiding hand, 56 00:02:05,492 --> 00:02:08,495 and the guiding hand gradually crawls back 57 00:02:08,495 --> 00:02:11,131 on the vegetable. 58 00:02:11,131 --> 00:02:12,532 And the knife follows it 59 00:02:12,532 --> 00:02:15,744 by zig-zagging on the cutting board. 60 00:02:15,744 --> 00:02:18,405 Of course, if you are slicing a celery stick, 61 00:02:18,405 --> 00:02:20,941 you can just move the celery stick forward 62 00:02:20,941 --> 00:02:24,378 instead of moving the knife back. 63 00:02:24,378 --> 00:02:27,581 But try that with a diced celery stick 64 00:02:27,581 --> 00:02:29,142 and it does not work too well, 65 00:02:29,142 --> 00:02:32,386 because all those french-fry pieces of celery 66 00:02:32,386 --> 00:02:34,424 move at a different pace. 67 00:02:34,424 --> 00:02:36,757 People often complain that when they use this handhold, 68 00:02:36,757 --> 00:02:38,407 they cannot see what they are doing, 69 00:02:38,407 --> 00:02:41,061 because their hands are so close together. 70 00:02:41,061 --> 00:02:42,763 Well, you don't need to see what you're doing, 71 00:02:42,763 --> 00:02:44,798 you need to feel what you're doing. 72 00:02:44,798 --> 00:02:46,400 If you rely on your eyes to tell you 73 00:02:46,400 --> 00:02:47,903 where to place the knife, 74 00:02:47,903 --> 00:02:50,070 you will never be able to get really small pieces 75 00:02:50,070 --> 00:02:51,338 or gain any speed. 76 00:02:51,338 --> 00:02:52,606 By the time the signal travels 77 00:02:52,606 --> 00:02:54,375 from your eyes to your brain to your hands 78 00:02:54,375 --> 00:02:55,075 to tell them to move, 79 00:02:55,075 --> 00:02:56,646 you've already cut yourself. 80 00:02:56,646 --> 00:02:58,746 Here's some common mistakes that I see 81 00:02:58,746 --> 00:03:01,182 with claw grip in my classes. 82 00:03:01,182 --> 00:03:03,083 Problem 1: Collapsed claw grip 83 00:03:03,083 --> 00:03:05,819 where your fingertips are lying on the board or vegetable. 84 00:03:05,819 --> 00:03:07,587 Holding the vegetable with your knuckles 85 00:03:07,587 --> 00:03:09,756 is very ineffective. 86 00:03:09,756 --> 00:03:11,892 You should hold it with your fingertips. 87 00:03:11,892 --> 00:03:13,602 Problem 2: Flat claw grip 88 00:03:13,602 --> 00:03:16,153 Very tense; you won't last long in this position. 89 00:03:16,153 --> 00:03:17,447 Round up. 90 00:03:17,447 --> 00:03:19,269 Problem 3: Raised wrist 91 00:03:19,269 --> 00:03:20,992 Gets tiring very quickly! 92 00:03:20,992 --> 00:03:24,074 Lower that wrist and relax your shoulder. 93 00:03:24,074 --> 00:03:26,740 Problem 4: Elbow against the body 94 00:03:26,740 --> 00:03:29,610 I realise that this position is not very comfy at first, 95 00:03:29,610 --> 00:03:32,752 but a chopped-off thumb is not very comfy either. 96 00:03:32,752 --> 00:03:34,052 Problem 5: Fear of the blade 97 00:03:34,052 --> 00:03:35,983 Great fear of touching the knife blade 98 00:03:35,983 --> 00:03:37,617 with your guiding hand. 99 00:03:37,617 --> 00:03:40,187 That's like being afraid of touching a ruler with a pencil 100 00:03:40,187 --> 00:03:42,076 while trying to draw a straight line. 101 00:03:42,076 --> 00:03:43,924 It doesn't work too well, does it? 102 00:03:43,924 --> 00:03:45,759 The only way you'll have an effective guide 103 00:03:45,759 --> 00:03:47,694 is if you're smack against it. 104 00:03:47,694 --> 00:03:50,130 If you want, practise with a pastry-scraper tool 105 00:03:50,130 --> 00:03:51,155 on an empty board. 106 00:03:51,155 --> 00:03:54,893 It's dull; there is no way to cut yourself. 107 00:03:54,893 --> 00:03:58,205 Last but not least, is go slow. 108 00:03:58,205 --> 00:04:00,407 Nobody is born with a perfect claw grip. 109 00:04:00,407 --> 00:04:03,677 It takes lots of practice and feels awkward at first. 110 00:04:03,677 --> 00:04:05,813 But when you've been doing it with perfect technique 111 00:04:05,813 --> 00:04:08,534 for about a week, you can pick up speed. 112 00:04:08,534 --> 00:04:10,515 From Helen's Kitchen in Boston, 113 00:04:10,515 --> 00:04:11,830 happy cooking and baking to you. 114 00:04:14,876 --> 00:04:16,490 Produced by Helen Rennie. Music by Django Reinhardt. 115 00:04:16,490 --> 00:04:18,159 Copyright (C) 2011 by Helen Rennie. All Rights Reserved. 116 00:04:18,159 --> 99:59:59,999 More techniques at beyondsalmon.com