Walnut Cutting Board
$140.00
Order Your Walnut Cutting Board Today!
Our handcrafted Walnut Cutting Boards are a kitchen essential that blends craftsmanship with functionality. Carefully crafted by skilled artisans in the picturesque Hudson Valley, these cutting boards effortlessly double as a versatile entertaining accessory. Making them the perfect choice for creating a cheese board or charcuterie board.
These cutting boards are crafted from solid domestic walnut wood and offered in two convenient sizes – wide and long – allowing you to choose the perfect fit for your kitchen needs. Their handcrafted construction ensures every piece is unique, making it a striking addition to any kitchen. Designed with your safety in mind, these cutting boards are food-safe and the thoughtful addition of a hole in their handles makes them easy to store and display.
Design:
Handcrafted
Material:
Walnut
Made in:
United States
Each board may vary slightly in size and color due to its handcrafted nature.
Dimensions: Wide: 5.5" W ×18" L // Long: 7.5" W ×15.5” L
Weight: Wide: // Long:
Care: Hand-Wash & Dry.
We offer ground shipping to 48 states within the continental U.S. (excluding Alaska and Hawaii) and Puerto Rico.
Commitment is scary, so we always take returns. We’re confident you will love your purchase, but if you are unsatisfied for any reason, we offer no-fear returns. You can return your undamaged order (unless damaged upon arrival) for a full refund, 365 days a year, no questions asked.
Please visit our FAQ page for more information on shipping and returns.
Love + Reviews
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I grew up in the diaspora, born after my parents migrated from Puerto Rico to the U.S. in search of better opportunities. And like so many Puerto Rican families away from the island, food became one of the ways we kept our culture close. My mom’s homemade sofrito was a staple in almost every dish. She made her everyday version with what she could find: onion, peppers, garlic, cilantro, culantro/recao. Most of the time, if not always, ají dulce wasn’t part of her recipe.
I only came to understand through my visits to Puerto Rico that this particular ingredient was almost always included. In my grandmother’s version. In my aunt’s version. Yet my mom, perhaps due to circumstances, perhaps due to unconscious habit, never mentioned it and never included it.
I reflect on this sometimes. How a seemingly “silly” ingredient could disappear. Her culture dissipating before her eyes, without perhaps her full awareness. As it happens, so often, when you migrate to a new country and are forced to adapt to what’s available.
I’m sharing my mom’s version as it was. Everyday. In every dish.
A reminder that Puerto Rican sofrito is not defined by one recipe card. It is defined by the kitchens that keep making it.
Frozen Puerto Rican foods are often framed as convenience and for many families, they are.
This is not about shaming anyone for buying pasteles, alcapurrias, sorullitos, or empanadillas frozen. People are tired, and time is limited. Sometimes the frozen version is what keeps the taste close. I get it, but the other side to this is that traditional food knowledge is not only the recipe. It is the representation of our culture. The practice of keeping it alive. If that gets removed, the food may still exist, but the tradition is replaced.
An increasingly industrialized food system does not just feed us differently. It reshapes how culture gets passed on from generation to generation.
When our food becomes products built for scale and profit versus for the people and their heritage, we have to ask who benefits and why. It’s the hardest realization to see it happen before our eyes.
Sources / further reading:
Traditional Food Knowledge: Renewing Culture and Restoring Health, Jennifer C. Kwik
Time Spent on Home Food Preparation and Indicators of Healthy Eating, Monsivais et al.
Puerto Rican Women’s Perspectives on Food, Identity, and U.S. Colonialism, María E. Rodríguez
Behind the scenes of one of the recipes from my cookbook proposal.
These are my mom’s empanadillas, and making them still reminds me why this book means so much to me. Here’s to one day seeing them between the pages of my own cookbook. ❤️
Some dishes arrive long before we have the language to describe them.
Growing up this was a staple in our household. It was always there when something mattered. Holidays, birthdays, people arriving, people leaving. A celebration for the everyday moments.
Only later did I understand that a dish can be familiar and still be deeply historical. Rice, gandules, sofrito, sazón, pork or no pork, a caldero, every family’s own way of making it. None of it is accidental. It is the result of movement, colonization, African and Spanish influence, island ingredients, and Puerto Ricans making something completely their own.
As for me, I care about looking past the surface of our food. Not to make it feel heavier, but to give it the fullness it has always deserved.
Sometimes the dish everyone recognizes can also be the one we haven’t been taught to fully understand.
#arrozcongandules #puertoricanfood


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