Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
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Just don't make the mistake I did and buy Gotham cookware; you don't always get what you pay for! I bought an entire set about 3 years ago and not only did they warp (and I don't put cold water on hot pans!) but the supposedly non-stick surfaces revert to sticking after about a year's use. I returned a couple of pans during the first year, then just gave up and am replacing the lot of them.
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Thanks for all of the responses. After I posted this question I did a search on YouTube, and one video was made by a man who sells stoves in an appliance store. He said don't worry about cast iron, and proceeded to put a cast iron pan on the smooth glass top of a brand new showroom unit, and with force, drag the cast iron all over the top. He said it looked like it scratched the glass, but in fact it was the bottom of the pan coming off on the top of the stove which he cleaned off easily. Gave me the willies watching him do that though.
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Sets: The Best Cookware Set for 2020 | Reviews by Wirecutter Non-stick: Best Nonstick Pan 2020 | Reviews by Wirecutter |
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I too prefer gas but have electric. You will learn to cook on electric. You state your pans are warped. That is not gas or electric, they were poor quality pans. Probably not worth the effort and it seems like you wish to start you new home with new pots, but, you can put a warped pot on a flat surface and play auto body repair to again flatten it out. Our electric stove and I think any of the ones with what you describe as a flat top have a step-less heat control knob. At say medium setting unlike gas where you turn down the flame and thus the heat, it is on at full high and then turns off and then back on again. I suppose it averages as half. It however is far more likely to burn your food. If,you are used to olive oil, beware it is a low heat oil and thus, far more likely to burn on an electric stove. You can buy a disc to put under a pan to better distribute the heat and prevent burning. I have cut the bottom out of old fry pans for the same purpose. I've never done it but you can use a cast iron fry pan under a pot. You will heat up your kitchen and risk burning yourself as it does not fit under the pot very well. There will surely be posts, my pot is better than your pot. I prefer stainless with a thick copper or aluminum bottom. I would avoid unknown cheap stuff from China. Not all stainless steel is truly stainless. I avoid aluminum pans rumor is it is not good health-wise. I avoid non-stick pans. Is the coating good for you? Remember when Teflon was and now it is not-it never was but we all bought it. Brand names? I still have and occasionally use a Presto pressure caner. It was my grandmother's the company supplied instructions were printed in 1945. It still works fine and you can still buy parts for it. |
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We do too. Ours are close to 50 years old. I'm not sure they are still made the same. Thickness of the metal etc.
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Cast iron? I have a friend who regularly uses it. Instructions in plainspeak, don't clean it gets better as more char piles up. The stove heat I'm sure kills the germs but.......... |
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I have All Clad and cook mostly on an induction stove top, located next to the installed Samsung gas range. I wanted cookware that would work on electric smooth, gas, and induction because we RV'd and used a variety of cooking sources. Keep pots and pans flat on the bottom for smooth surface electric and magnetic on the bottom for induction and you should be fine much of the time.
Induction is very fast, clean, and more easily controlled than gas, so my gas stove sits until I need a broiler or oven. The surface gas burners are rarely used because they get dirty fast and are a pain to clean. We had a burner cover made to increase our work surfaces - that's how often it is used. The gas range may be useful after a hurricane. |