John Boos & Co. Cutting Boards

“A Boos Block is like an old friend—scarred, seasoned, and always ready for another meal.”
Ina Garten (The Barefoot Contessa)

A Legacy Carved in Maple

Tucked in the small town of Effingham, Illinois—where the scent of sawdust mingles with summer humidity—John Boos & Co. has been shaping the soul of American kitchens for more than 135 years. Founded in 1887, the company began humbly: a local blacksmith, Conrad Boos, needed a sturdy block to withstand the pounding of his hammer. His son, John, saw the beauty in the block’s strength and craftsmanship, and began crafting similar work surfaces for local butchers. The Boos Block was born—solid, enduring, and honest.

From those first end-grain maple slabs, Boos cutting boards became more than tools. They became heirlooms of everyday artistry, blending industrial grit with the warmth of handcrafted wood.

The Craft of Grain and Grace

Every John Boos board tells a story of patient design. The company still sources its wood from sustainably managed North American hardwood forests—maple, walnut, and cherry, each selected for strength and character. In their Effingham mill, craftsmen plane, sand, and oil each board by hand, ensuring a silky finish that deepens with age and use.

End-grain boards, known for their signature “checkerboard” pattern, are the crown jewels of the Boos line. They’re not only beautiful—they’re self-healing. Knife marks close naturally with the wood fibers, preserving the board’s integrity for decades. It's this thoughtful blend of beauty and function that has made Boos a quiet icon in kitchens both rustic and refined.

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From Farmhouse Counters to Michelin Kitchens

What began in a Midwest butcher shop now rests under the knives of the world’s best chefs. John Boos boards are a mainstay in professional kitchens and television studios alike. You’ll spot them on The Barefoot Contessa as Ina Garten chops herbs for her roast chicken; in Beat Bobby Flay as culinary contenders slice with precision; and behind Gordon Ramsay’s famously furrowed brow in Hell’s Kitchen.

Giada De Laurentiis favors Boos’s rich cherry boards, while Alton Brown praises their “perfect density and bounce.” Even America’s Test Kitchen has named them among the most durable and desirable boards available.

It’s not just celebrity cachet—Boos boards carry a feeling of permanence. They belong in spaces where food is shared, stories unfold, and hands pass down recipes across generations.

Why They Endure

In a world of disposable kitchenware, John Boos stands as a reminder of craft, care, and the quiet dignity of good materials. Every board that leaves Effingham is branded with a simple mark: Boos Block. It’s more than a name—it’s a promise of craftsmanship rooted in American soil.

Oil it well. Use it daily. Watch it deepen in color and memory. Like the best family recipes, it only gets better with time.

Fun Fact: During World War II, John Boos produced furniture and work surfaces for the U.S. military. Many of those pieces—built from the same maple used for cutting boards—are still in use today.

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