Virginia Boys Kitchens makes edge-grain black walnut cutting boards that sit flat on the counter, absorb knife shock without dulling blades, and develop a natural warm patina with use. The walnut is kiln-dried to stabilize moisture and finished with food-safe mineral oil — no polyurethane coatings, no exotic hardwoods trucked in from overseas.
The 17×11 size is the everyday workhorse — big enough to break down a whole chicken, dice a full onion, and corral the scraps without spilling onto the counter. Juice channels run the perimeter to catch runoff, and the walnut grain is tight enough to resist knife scarring. Reversible so one side does prep and the other serves.
Virginia Boys Kitchens is a small American workshop that sources walnut from sustainably managed forests in the northeastern United States and mills, sands, and finishes every board in-house. The company is named for its founders — two brothers who grew up in Virginia and wanted to build a kitchen brand around domestic hardwood.

