At first glance, it is easy to assume that every part of a pair of kitchen scissors is there only for cutting. But many kitchen shears are designed as multi-purpose tools, and that small serrated section between the handles is one of the most useful features people often overlook.
The ridged or toothed area between the handles is usually there to act as a grip for cracking or holding hard, round objects. On most kitchen scissors, this feature works as a nutcracker, though it can also help grip bottle caps, twist small lids, or hold slippery items more securely. When you close the handles around something hard like a nut shell, the serrated teeth help keep it from slipping while pressure is applied.
This design makes sense in the kitchen, where one tool often needs to do more than one job. A good pair of kitchen shears can cut herbs, trim meat, open food packaging, snip twine, and sometimes even help with shellfish or nuts. Instead of reaching for a separate cracking tool, the built-in serrated grip gives the scissors an extra function without taking up more drawer space.
The placement is important too. Since this section sits close to the pivot point, it gives you more leverage than the blades do. That means you can apply stronger pressure with less effort. This is why it works better for cracking or gripping than trying to use the tips of the scissors for the same task.
Some people also use this part to hold stubborn plastic seals or twist off small caps, although its main purpose is typically cracking hard shells. It is not meant for cutting in the usual sense, even though the teeth may look sharp. Instead, it is designed to clamp down and grip.
So if you have ever wondered what that strange jagged section on your kitchen scissors is for, the answer is simple: it is a built-in gripping tool, most commonly used as a nutcracker. It is one of those small design details that turns ordinary scissors into a much more versatile kitchen tool.