Are ‘kitchen scissors’ really an American thing?

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You’ll often see Americans in cooking videos using scissors to cut food, cheese, green onion, you name it… The idea of using scissors this way is foreign to me. I don’t have anything against it, but I never even thought about using them for anything but crafts/opening packaging. Do you guys have kitchen scissors?

Comments

  1. OhThrowed Avatar

    Yep. They are quite useful.

  2. WindyWindona Avatar

    Yes? They’re usually dedicated scissors for the kitchen, and not for anything else.

  3. Think_Profession2098 Avatar

    We own kitchen scissors, use them occasionally but mostly a knife will do + less hassle to clean.

  4. Key-Protection-7564 Avatar

    We actually need to replace our kitchen scissors

  5. RioTheLeoo Avatar

    My grandma had a pair, but as far as I know they were only ever used for opening difficult packagings

  6. WarrenMulaney Avatar

    I have TWO pair. They work really well.

  7. ur_moms_chode Avatar

    We have two pairs of kitchen scissors and use them a lot. We run the dish washer just about every night, and there’s rarely two days in a row that the kitchen scissors haven’t been used for something.

  8. Remarkable-Rush-9085 Avatar

    Yep, kitchen scissors stay in the kitchen and are only used for kitchen things!

  9. redcoral-s Avatar

    Oh yeah. Its a dedicated pair that gets washed in the sink, and the knife sharpening people by me will sharpen kitchen scissors as well

  10. jsmeeker Avatar

    yeah, I have them.

  11. SnowOverRain Avatar

    Yes, I have a pair that you can pull in half and throw in the dishwasher when dirty. My regular scissors would rust if I did that with them.

  12. Jswazy Avatar

    I always thought it was more of a Korean thing. 

  13. Luuk1210 Avatar

    Yes but I see this in almost every country. Kitchen shears are pretty standard I thought

  14. brak-0666 Avatar

    I mostly use them for opening packages, but occasionally for food.

  15. BelethorsGeneralShit Avatar

    I have a pair of scissors in my kitchen, but I just use them for cutting everyday household things, the same as any other pair.

    Rarely/virtually never do I use them on food. The exception is cheap frozen pizzas because once I couldn’t find my pizza cutter and just cut it with scissors and worked pretty well.

    Now that I’m typing it out, why do we call them a pair of scissors when there’s just one? Is each blade a scissor?

  16. Joliet-Jake Avatar

    I have them, but I didn’t until I saw them in use in S. Korea. They work very well.

  17. levi070305 Avatar

    Yeah, they’ll come with any type of knife set you get usually. They definitely have their place.

  18. Claxton916 Avatar

    They’re usually called “Cooking Shears”, but yeah. There’s cooking scissors (used on food) and scissors (used on everything not food).

  19. jackfaire Avatar

    I have scissors in the kitchen for opening packages of food but I don’t use them on the food itself. I can see their utility. I just prefer knives on my food.

  20. bananapanqueques Avatar

    Yes but they stay in the kitchen. We don’t use them for anything else but their designation and they go in the dishwasher after use.

  21. HotSteak Avatar

    Yes but you would never cut cheese with them.

  22. lacaras21 Avatar

    Yes absolutely, thought they were a normal thing everywhere, they’re dedicated for kitchen uses, not for use for anything else.

  23. yellowrose04 Avatar

    Yes, they’re in the butcher block. It comes with it but I have two other pairs in a drawer.

  24. cannot4seeallends Avatar

    So I know you aren’t Korean right away lmao

  25. Queasy-Extension6465 Avatar

    Yes, I cut bacon in half before frying. I also use them to butterfly chicken breasts to quicken cooking time. Lots of other uses as well. My main reason is that I don’t have to dirty the actual cutting board as I don’t need it for most tasks.

  26. Leinad580 Avatar

    Not an American specific thing, but it is something we do here. They’re a great tool in your “kitchen toolbox”, not a replacement for knives.

  27. Hoosier_Jedi Avatar

    Kitchen scissors are normal in Japan and South Korea too.

  28. Adorable-Growth-6551 Avatar

    They make cutting things like herbs and other greens super easy

  29. IngsocInnerParty Avatar

    Typically they’re made a little different than regular scissors and come in a standard knife block.

  30. AshDenver Avatar

    Yes, a few pairs. Hopped on that train after a Korean BBQ outing. Love those things.

  31. Dave_A480 Avatar

    Yes. Useful for opening the plastic packaging that a lot of food comes in….

  32. MmmIceCreamSoBAD Avatar

    I think every American home has a pair of kitchen scissors. How much they actually use it on food though Im sure varies wildly. I think most Americans will simply use knives for stuff you mentioned like cutting cheese (no clue why anyone would use them for cheese?) green onion and raw ingredients.

    They can be quite nice if you’re like separating chicken, de-shelling shrimp or anything else the involves getting through bone, cartilage or tendons. Thats what I use them for. Everything else is just a knife on a cutting board.

  33. tsukiii Avatar

    Have you ever met a Korean? Lol!

  34. TinyRandomLady Avatar

    Yes, we use them. They’re also a huge deal in Korea.

  35. Confetticandi Avatar

    Yes. They’re a separate set of scissors kept clean and sharp and stored with the kitchen knives to only be used for food. 

    We’re actually not the only culture that does this. Koreans use scissors a lot for food too! In the US, we mainly use scissors when we’re cooking, but Koreans use them to cut up the food that they’re eating into more bite-sized pieces. 

  36. WinterRevolutionary6 Avatar

    There’s a lot of packages that need to be opened in the kitchen and shears are also good for cutting food into smaller consistent pieces. If ok cooking a chicken meal with bite size chicken, I’m gonna use shears to get good bite sizes

  37. Nohandsmc Avatar

    Don’t they have scissors on the table at Korean barbecue places?

  38. Burnt_Toast_Crumbs Avatar

    Just wanted to add that a lot of “kitchen scissors” are able to come apart for easier washing, another subtle difference.

  39. nigliazzo5626 Avatar

    Yep! I just bought some that are bat shaped because I love all things Halloween

  40. GlassZealousideal741 Avatar

    Just wait until you see what we do with game sheers, kitchen scissors big brother.

  41. Maleficent_Coast_320 Avatar

    I use them so much that I have more than 10. We wash most of our dishes in the dishwasher, and it isn’t uncommon to have between 5 and 8 in the dishwasher to be washed. I even have poultry shears. They are perfect for making a spatchcock chicken.

  42. LostExile7555 Avatar

    They’re mostly used for opening food packaging (a lot of meats are sold in thick vacuum-seal plastic, which is really awkward to open with a knife). But kitchen shears are also really helpful in cutting large bunches of small stuff like chives, spring onions, parsley, and cilantro. They stay in the kitchen and are only used for food or food packaging.

  43. SnooPies7504 Avatar

    Yea many knife block sets come with cooking scissors aka kitchen shears

  44. Ayangar Avatar

    Hardly just an American thing.

  45. Double-Bend-716 Avatar

    I’m an American and I never had dedicated kitchen scissors until I got a job at a Chinese restaurant and part of my side work was using scissors to snip the ends off green beans.

    I thought it was a Chinese thing I adopted, the same way I still make congee when I’m sick or sad even though that was a decade ago, I didn’t know it was an American thing

  46. Dupagoblin Avatar

    Wait until OP learns about our garbage disposals in the sink.

  47. Chickenman70806 Avatar

    What kind of savage society do you survive in without kitchen scissors?

    (I cannot, however, understand taking scissors to cheese.)

  48. keIIzzz Avatar

    It’s not just an American thing

  49. Purple-Drop7787 Avatar

    2 pairs in the kitchen: 1 for packaging and 1 for food.

    Fabric scissors not to be used anywhere else.
    Paper scissors
    Craft scissors
    Weed scissors
    More paper scissors for gift wrap

  50. sammyg301 Avatar

    Kitchen/Butcher’s scissors are standard in every knife set here. Never used them for cheese tho, and only rarely for green onions, etc. I mostly use them for deboning chicken, which is why they’re often called butcher’s scissors. Highly doubt they’re an Americanism. But, yes, quite standard.

  51. ReticentBee806 Avatar

    Kitchen shears* (differentiates them from other types of scissors). A good pair of shears can cut through bone.

  52. Sad_Construction_668 Avatar

    You saw them used first in high volume food service. They were just using sewing shears a first, but they sped some tasks up so much that people started asking for specialized shears that could come apart to be washed more thoroughly .

    I like them to take backbones out of chickens. I can do it with a knife, but it’s faster and less messy on the hand than traditional knife technique.

  53. _iusuallydont_ Avatar

    Yes, I have kitchen scissors. Every set of knives I’ve purchased has come with some. Also, I don’t know that this is strictly an American thing. I’ve lived in both Europe and Asia and seen them used there too.

  54. ShakeWeightMyDick Avatar

    I was in a Korean restaurant and the waitress brought out a big chunk of kimchi, which she proceeded to cut up at my table with scissors.

  55. westgate141pdx Avatar

    The best kitchen scissors I own are from the UK and Germany.

  56. Missing4Bolts Avatar

    Amazon UK lists lots of them; they’re really not some special American-only thing.