Cutting Boards
John Boos Au Jus 18-by-24-Inch Maple Cutting Board
(Kitchen) John Boos
Measures 18 by 24 by 1-1/2 inches
Hand wash and oil regularly for best results
Cutting board with handy juice groove channel
Great alternative to plastic--easier on knives and won't harbor bacteria
Solid maple, edge grain construction; natural oil finish
Price:
$112.95
$86.76
Customer Reviews:
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Big & Brawny
This is big, thick, heavy board. It's not the biggest they make but it's right on the edge of huge. If were any larger my wife would have a hard time moving it. So when doing small jobs, we tend to grab one of our smaller boards. Now before this scares you off you need to consider that this may... -
In love with a cutting board??
Possibly. I find myself caressing it now and then, and pay much more attention to its care than other cutting boards. The 1-1/2" thickness is just right for us, not too heavy and doesn't add too much to the counter height. We've been using both sides, with one side for vegetables and the au jus...
Alaska Airlines Flight 261 is heading for Seattle via San Francisco but its trimmable horizontal stabilizer jams due to a worn jackscrew assembly ...
Alaska Airlines Flight 261 is heading for Seattle via San Francisco but its trimmable horizontal stabilizer jams due to a worn jackscrew assembly ...
Alaska Airlines Flight 261 is heading for Seattle via San Francisco but its trimmable horizontal stabilizer jams due to a worn jackscrew assembly ...
Twitter Stream
Seattle School Board races hinge on whether district needs change
In all four Seattle School Board races, the incumbents and challengers agree that next month's election is all about change — but they strongly disagree on whether that change would be good or bad.
While the activist-minded challengers argue that fresh faces would lead to greater school-district accountability and more community input, the business-backed incumbents maintain the newcomers would only derail the board from its successful direction.
The challengers — Sharon Peaslee, Kate Martin, Michelle Buetow and Marty McLaren — are trying to funnel voter frustration at underperforming schools and the district's recent financial scandal into upstart victories in the Nov. 8 general election.
The incumbents — Peter Maier, Sherry Carr, Harium Martin-Morris and Steve Sundquist — say they've learned from the $1.8 million scandal in the district's now-defunct minority-contracting program and have enacted reforms to make sure it doesn't happen again. The scandal cost former Superintendent Maria Goodloe-Johnson her job.
Sounders Celebrate Keller With A Win Over San Jose 2-1 ...
Over 64,000 fans came to CenturyLink Field on Saturday night (October 15) to honor the last regular season home game for retiring Sounders goalkeeper and local boy Kasey Keller.
Keller did his very best to make it memorable. Keller made saves with every body part and apart from a Chris Wondolowski goal for San Jose in the 24th minute, Keller was more than good enough to make up for a very flat, very sloppy Sounders team.
The Sounders defense, in particular, was not playing well at all. Wondolowski’s goal, for example, came from a perfectly placed pass by San Jose teammate Rafael Baca, which came as a result of a horrible pass by Sounders defender Jhon Kennedy Hurtado.
Keller fought back, making seven saves including a set of three in the 65th minute when San Jose pounced on a bad pass by Patrick Ianni. Keller charged forward, racing Khari Stephenson to the ball. Wondolowski snagged the loose ball and unleashed a rocket from the left side, forcing Keller to make a diving save. Simon Dawkins got the rebound but Keller rejected the follow up and Seattle finally cleared their line to relieve the pressure....
Tattoo Places | Georgetown's Cutting Board A Sushi Game-changer ...
Proof of Seattle’s embrace of sushi is in, not just in the number, but in the variety of restaurants that serve it.
In Seattle people eat sushi in traditional, old-school places (Maneki), high-end boutique’y places (Chiso), elegant neighborhood joints (Kisaku), family-friendly emporiums (I Love Sushi), buffets (Blue Fin), holes in the wall (Musashi), hipster hangouts (Umi, Ohana and Wasabi Bistro in Belltown), conveyer-belt or kaiten sushi feed lots (Genki and Blue C), eco-conscious concerns (Mashiko), and at least a few other categories I am probably forgetting.
The California roll, that original American sushi invention, is sold in QFC, Sea-Tac airport, and Safeco Field. Seattle is one of a handful of cities with a significant Japanese-American heritage, which used to be a meaningful indicator of the quality and amount of sushi served in a town. But that distinction hardly matters anymore, the food is so ubiquitous. Most of the sushi joints in New York are run by Central American, Korean, and Chinese immigrants, and also serve Thai and Korean food to draw a larger audience.
...Cutting Board seattle News
Seattle School Board races hinge on whether district needs changeThe Seattle Times - Dec 31, 1969
Peaslee has proposed drastically cutting the district's central-administration budget and establishing policies that would fully protect money for classrooms from budget cuts. Maier points out that he and the rest of the board have worked hard to
The Seattle Times - Dec 31, 1969
A planned 1000-bed prison could be on the chopping block. The state, looking to cut nearly $2 billion from the budget, has asked nearly all major state agencies to submit budget proposals reflecting 5 percent and 10 percent across-the-board cuts.
Peninsula Daily - Dec 31, 1969
The idea is to work closely with Swedish — but stay locally owned and independent — to expand medical services on the North Olympic Peninsula while cutting costs, said hospital officials. Patients will be referred to Swedish for care they can't getPubliCola - Dec 31, 1969
More Gates Foundation money keeps going to Seattle School Board incumbents. According to the latest campaign finance reports, Jeffrey and Patricia Raikes (he's the Chief Executive Officer of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and fomer president of


