Sharpening the Mind With a Sword

Dressed in traditional Japanese robes, Richard Sung unsheathes his 550-year-old sword in a large industrial room in Hong Kong. The chief executive of gold mining company Sino Prosper has a look of intense concentration as he raises the sword above his head and then smoothly cuts downwards through the air.

Christopher Shay for the Wall Street Journal
Mr. Sung practices a cut in front of old samurai armor.

Mr. Sung has been training in iaido, an ancient Japanese martial art based on the sword techniques of the samurai, for two years. Fascinated by Japanese history and ancient metallurgy, he initially just wanted to collect ancient swords. But when his sword dealer turned out to be an iaido sensei, or instructor, Mr. Sung, 40, jumped at the chance to learn how to wield his antique weapon.

Despite its age, Mr. Sung’s sword, for which he paid 110,000 Hong Kong dollars (US$14,100), is kept as sharp as it was centuries ago. Many swords made during the Edo period (1603- 1868) were tested on the corpses of executed criminals — the sharpest ones could split a person in two with a downward strike through the skull.

“One mistake,” he says, “and you’ll cut through your whole arm.”

Filed under  //  ancient   art   iaido   katana   kendo   martial   sensei   sword  
Posted by Bryan Hays 

Japanese Knives for Cooking - Where to Buy

Just thought I'd shoot you a few links.

Master Mizuno's family made my new yanagi for me.  I chose his deluxe aogane model as my next working knife.

http://www.japanesechefsknife.com/MizunoTanrenjyo.html

I've also used Korin for years.  They have a bit of a markup and sometimes their shipping charges are really high.  They do have a good selection often.  Both in western and Japanese knives.

http://korin.com/Shop/Japanese-Style-Knives

I have spoken with Mr. Murray Carter a few times. He's a very nice genuine fellow.  He makes great knives, period. I'd love to go take his knife making classes.  I plan to do that someday. he takes his students on knife making trips to Japan.  They get to see and do things most foreigners will never see.  My master did the same with me so I know the feeling.

http://www.cartercutlery.com/

These might get you on the right track for knives...

 

Brought to you by Chef Brent

http://www.chefbrent.com/

http://www.meetup.com/Japanese-Cooking-Meetup-Group/

Filed under  //  brent   chef   cooking   japan   japanese   katana   kitchen   knife   knives  
Posted by Bryan Hays