Wood Cutting Boards in Canada: What to Buy, What to Skip, and Why Canadian Hardwood Is the Right Starting Point
Walk into any kitchen store in Canada and you’ll find cutting boards made from bamboo, plastic, rubber, teak, acacia, and half a dozen other materials all competing for the same counter space. The marketing on most of them is confident. The reality is more complicated.
This post is about wood cutting boards specifically — what makes a good one, which species actually hold up in a Canadian kitchen, and why where the wood comes from matters more than most buyers realize. Whether you’re buying for your own kitchen, sourcing gifts, or placing a wholesale order for a business, the same principles apply.
Hard maple is the default for a reason that has nothing to do with marketing. Acer saccharum — Sugar Maple — grows abundantly in Quebec and Ontario, Janka hardness around 1,450 lbf, grain tight and even across the surface. The pale colour resists staining better than darker species. Knife marks stay shallow rather than channelling deep into the surface. It’s not visually dramatic. It’s the most practical Canadian hardwood you can put under a knife.
Cherry is a different conversation. Prunus serotina develops a warm reddish-brown tone that deepens with age and light exposure — the board you buy looks noticeably different from the board you use for two years, in a way that maple doesn’t. Softer at around 950 Janka, which makes it easier on knife edges but faster to show surface wear under daily heavy use. For a board that’s going to sit on a counter where people can see it, or serve food at a table, cherry earns its place. For a board taking abuse in a prep kitchen, maple holds up better across years of consistent use.
Walnut is the one people photograph. Juglans nigra. Dark grain, serious visual weight, Janka around 1,010 lbf. Costs more per board than maple or cherry by a meaningful margin, which is why it shows up at the gift tier rather than as a daily kitchen workhorse. A walnut board on a counter looks intentional in a way the other two don’t. That’s what it’s bought for — and it’s a legitimate reason.
Why Wood in the First Place
Plastic boards are easy to clean and inexpensive. They’re also soft enough to develop deep knife grooves quickly, and those grooves are where bacteria accumulate in ways that surface washing doesn’t reach. A plastic board that’s been in heavy use for a year is not a clean board, regardless of how often it goes through the dishwasher. Bamboo is marketed as sustainable and hard. It is neither in the ways that matter for a cutting board. Bamboo is actually a grass, not a hardwood, and it’s dimensionally unstable — it moves significantly with moisture changes and splits along the grain more readily than true hardwood. The hardness figures often quoted for bamboo are measured differently than Janka hardness ratings for wood, which makes direct comparisons misleading. Teak and acacia show up constantly in gift-oriented cutting board products. Both are technically hardwoods. Both are imported. Teak in particular has high silica content that dulls knife edges faster than Canadian hardwoods. Acacia grain is inconsistent in ways that affect how it performs at the surface — some pieces are beautiful, others are not, and batch consistency in bulk sourcing is a persistent problem. Canadian hardwood — specifically hard maple, black cherry, and black walnut — is a different category. These are species that grow in the forests of Quebec, Ontario, and the Great Lakes region. They’re harvested from established forestry operations, dried to controlled specifications, and milled to consistent dimensions. The result is a cutting board surface that’s predictable, stable, and genuinely appropriate for a Canadian kitchen’s seasonal humidity cycles.The Three Canadian Hardwoods Worth Knowing
Canadian hardwood cutting boards — species comparison
All three are Canadian hardwoods — grown in Quebec and Ontario, dried to controlled specifications, available in consistent dimensions. Ships unfinished. 24-board minimum per SKU for wholesale orders.