Cherry kitchen mallet

Last week we got invited to a last-minute birthday party the night before. I wanted to turn something on the late that night anyway, so I decided to make a kitchen mallet for a gift. Sometime to crush ice, make cutlets, smash cucumbers, crack peppercorns, etc.

I turned it out of a cherry limb that fell out of the tree in our yard earlier this year.

Unfortunately no in-progress photos, but here is what I did:

  1. Cut a section of the cherry limb to length
  2. Chuck it with the spur drive and rough it out. It was off-balance so a bit precarious at the beginning. Thankfully it was still pretty green, so it was easy to rough with a roughing gouge.
  3. Once round, I removed most of the waste material around the handle first
  4. Shaped the head of the mallet and the handle transition with a large gouge
  5. Shaped the handles with a medium gouge
  6. Sanded (80 / 120 / 220 / 400)
  7. Cut the grooves with a skew, then burned them in with guitar string
  8. Buffed with 0000 steel wool
  9. Cut off the lathe with a parting tool
  10. Coated with Tried and True original
  11. Buffed with 0000 steel wool again

I expected it to crack because it was turned green and it still had the pith in it. That is part of the charm as it ages and you use it. I heated some beeswax/oil blend and poured it in there to seal it up a bit. If it becomes unusable I’ll make them another one.

I’ve made a couple other mallets in this style before. I’ll probably make more in the future. I like this style and they are fun and easy to turn!

Making kitchen tools from a log – Chuck Grimmett
cagrimmett.com
Turning a Carving Mallet – Chuck Grimmett
cagrimmett.com



Comments and Webmentions

3 responses to “Cherry kitchen mallet”

  1. kevin higgins
    kevin higgins

    have you thought about epoxy to stabilize the crack? not sure how it would work if the wood is still drying.

    1. I thought about it, and might do it in the future, but didn’t have enough time to let this one cure and refinish it.

  2. The past couple years I’ve written this post at the end of December as kind of a year-end recap. This year I thought I’d change…

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