You’ve seen it: the jagged, serrated notch between the handles of your kitchen scissors. Most people assume it’s decorative—or worse, a manufacturing flaw. But this "goofy notch" is actually a brilliant multi-tool designed to solve common kitchen frustrations. Let’s unlock its secrets—safely and effectively.
🔍 What It Is (And Why It Exists)
- Official name: Grip notch, jar opener, or bone cracker
- Location: Where the handles curve inward, near the pivot screw
- Design: Interlocking ridges that create a non-slip grip when scissors are partially closed
- Purpose: Leverage + traction for stubborn tasks—no extra gadgets needed
💡 Key insight: This feature turns your scissors into a 3-in-1 tool: cutter, gripper, and cracker.
🛠️ Top 5 Practical Uses (With Pro Tips)
1. Open Stubborn Jars & Bottles
- How: Place lid in notch; twist scissors while holding jar steady
- Why it works: Ridges grip smooth metal/plastic; lever action reduces hand strain
- Pro tip: Works best on small lids (pasta sauce, baby food, spice jars)—not large pickle jars
2. Crack Nuts (No Nutcracker Needed)
- Best for: Walnuts, pecans, hazelnuts
- How: Place nut in notch; apply firm, even pressure until shell cracks
- Critical: Don’t crush—rotate nut to crack evenly without pulverizing the kernel
3. Break Poultry Bones
- Only with heavy-duty poultry shears!
- How: Grip chicken wing/thigh bone in notch; snap with controlled pressure
- Safety: Never use lightweight scissors—risk of blade damage or injury
