That serrated edge on kitchen scissors is actually super useful, and most people don’t realize it isn’t just decorative. 🔪
What it’s for
1. Cutting slippery foods
- The serrated teeth grip items like tomatoes, herbs, or raw meat better than a smooth blade.
- Prevents them from sliding while you cut, giving a cleaner, safer cut.
2. Crushing and opening
- Some serrated sections on kitchen scissors are designed to crush garlic cloves or crack nuts.
- A few have a notch for twist-off bottle caps.
3. Tearing packaging
- The serrated edge can tear plastic wrap, food packaging, or cardboard easily without slipping.
✅ Tip:
- Use the serrated part for small, delicate, or slippery items.
- Reserve the straight edge for general chopping and snipping.
Fun fact: some chef scissors even have a built-in bottle opener, nutcracker, and serrated section all in one—basically a Swiss Army knife for the kitchen.
If you want, I can also show 3 clever ways chefs use the serrated part of scissors that most home cooks never try.