I misread your post at first and thought you said you hit it with the tortillas you buy. I was about to suggest you find another source for your tortillas.patandchickens said:Oh, there is another strategy you can use for "borderline" squashes that don't quite need you to pound on the knife but are still real hard to cut:
Get the knife in as well as you can by normal pushing -- again, get the *middle* of the knife blade into the squash, so the end is still exposed -- then turn the whole thing upside down and wham it carefully against the edge of the kitchen counter, hitting the spine of the far end of the knife against the counter. (It helps if you have old and dented countertops already LOL but I've never done noticeable damage). The momentum of the squash itself will help force it down further onto the blade, til the knife is about 3/4 through and then you can return it to its normal position on the cuttingboard and finish with a good final push.
Ridgerunner, I don't actually have a wooden mallet in the kitchen, I use a brick in a recycled baggie from the brand of tortillas we buy. I realize that is probably not how most people do things, but a brick in a bag really flattens the bejeebers out of a pork cutlet or whatever
Pat