Hey woodies,

I’m not a woodworker by any means, but figured it could be here to ask about my question. I love and own some wooden kitchen utensils and cutlery, but want to it to last as long as possible. I never put it in the dishwasher, always wash by hand. However I have heard its possible to oil wooden utensils and such to make it last longer, I assume it prevents the water from deteriorating the wood(?)

So my questions are:

  • What oil should I use?
  • Do I use cheap oil?
  • How do I oil them? Apply with paper, or let them sit in oil over time?

Appreciate any tips or tricks to this!

Have a wonderful day 🌻

Edit, thanks for all the answers and advice, I’ll research properly before buying either type of oil.

  • evasive_chimpanzee@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Do not just go to the hardware store and buy linseed oil. It is not food safe cause it is just meant as a wood finish, and has additives to make it dry quickly. You can buy linseed (aka flaxseed) oil that is meant to be eaten, but I’ve only seen it in small bottles for a lot of money.

    Mineral oil can be purchased from a pharmacy for very cheap; it’s actually sold as a laxative if you intentionally consume a bunch of it. That is what any wooden spoons or cutting boards you buy would be treated with. Some people mix it with melted beeswax, which gives a nice finish. You can also just buy it premixed and sold as " butcher block conditioner". It’s a little pricy, though, and I think it’s easiest to just use the mineral oil

    • admiralteal@kbin.social
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      8 months ago

      You can buy pure pelletized beeswax from online vendors for dirt cheap too. Making your own Butcher Block conditioner is very inexpensive and you can control how thick you want it

      The biggest downside of these finishes is that they never dry. They are always constantly washing and wiping away.

      I use beeswax and mineral oil finishes a lot for my own stuff because it’s just so cheap, and it feels so soft and nice.

      I’m don’t recommend it for anything you’re going to give away because you can’t trust the gift recipient to be maintaining it. Gifts should not be imposing any kind of burden.

      If you’re really wanting Best in Class you want a drying type oil - pure tung or pure flaxseed. The downside is that because they dry they have a shelf life. And expensive in comparison.

      Basically any curing finish is going to be food safe once fully cured, but the problem is you have no way to identify when it is fully cured, and something like store-bought linseed oil is full of extremely toxic drying agents to speed it up, some of which will get trapped just below the surface and be sealed away from the air or moisture that leads to their curing - until something like a knife cut scratches the surface and releases it onto your food. Not great. But pure boiled linseed oil and pure tung oil both are free from anything truly toxic - you’re just going to have to order them online or go to a specialty store to find the real thing.

  • bjg13@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Pure Tung oil for the win!!! Slop it on with whatever you feel like, wipe it off 45 minutes later, let it dry for a day and repeat. If it forms a white crust, you didnt wipe it off quite enough, this can be removed with a bit of 0000 steel wool. You can drink it out of the bottle if you’d like.

    • nis@feddit.dk
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      8 months ago

      Where can you buy steel wool in bottles? And what does it taste like?

  • fujiwood@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    100% pure Tung oil.

    Once a day for a week.

    Once a week for a month.

    Once a month for a year.

    Once a year every year.

  • Eheran@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago
    1. Linseed oil
    2. Should not matter, just buy local stuff (so not made in somewhere-without-regulations)
    3. Hands, brush, paper, rag,… Whatever you like. For the tiny amount of stuff in the picture just use fingers and or paper.

    I would not use oil based (as in crude oil) stuff for food. They also do not harden, which is a big plus for linseed oil. Linseed oil has been used for hundreds of years, we know it is good for this job.

    Also, the oil going rancid is how it hardens. But unlike cooking oil linseed oil does not smell bad or stay tacky or whatever.

    • Lunch@lemmy.worldOP
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      8 months ago

      Good to know! I’ll try to find that here asap. How often do you recommend doing this for the items in the picture?

      • Eheran@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Not often. Depending on how often you use them and how you then clean them, obvious, but roughly every year should be fine.