Yoshida Hamono is located in Saga Prefecture, a very rural area of Kyushu Island. Like many rural blacksmiths, they specialize in making agricultural tools such as sickles and hoes, but they are known nationally for their incredible kitchen knives. The first generation of the Yoshida family was, like many, a blacksmith. After World War II, they decided to open a small workshop to produce knives and other steel tools, and in 1971, they expanded to large-scale production to meet a growing demand from all over Japan. They invested early on in modern machinery that made large-scale production possible, which is one of the reasons why they are able to coat their own steel, rather than buying it pre-laminated.
Because Saga is not a large knife production center and there are not many other craftsmen, they built a facility that could handle the entire knife making process from start to finish, whereas most knife makers outsource their steel rolling and sharpening.
When HAP 40 first became available, Osamu Yoshida quickly bought the steel and tried it out. He was amazed at how incredibly sharp the steel could become and how long it would hold its edge, so he began making kitchen knives using this super steel. Although it is a difficult steel to handle, he feels a great sense of accomplishment when he forges with it compared to other steels.
In addition to laminating their own steel, they also treat their knives with sub-zero heat to purify the steel, which allows the knife to work better and sharpen better. This is done after quenching, treating the knives with liquid nitrogen to remove excess retained impurities that have not been converted to martensite. This prevents the knife from bending over time by "stabilizing" its structure. While this is scientific mumbo jumbo for most, it is a big deal in the knife making world.
The secret of this knife lies in its hard core made of a somewhat exotic Hitachi HAP-40 steel, which falls into the category of modern, technologically advanced steels. HAP-40 is thin enough to sharpen very well, and knives made from it retain their edge 3-5 times longer than traditional knives.
The HAP-40 Gyuto 210mm format positions this knife squarely in the conversation around dedicated chef's knives — and for those weighing a gyuto against a santoku, the difference becomes clear quickly. Where a santoku excels at precision vegetable work, the gyuto's longer, swept blade handles proteins and longer pull-cuts with authority. Paired with HAP-40's extraordinary edge retention, this Japanese chef knife in powder steel delivers a performance standard that makes the comparison almost unfair.