… the pans are likely not “nontoxic” some independent testing and research suggests. Nor are they even “ceramic” – at least not in the way the public broadly thinks of ceramics. Now, regulators are investigating some of the pan sellers’ claims.

  • @peregrin5@lemm.ee
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    84 days ago

    Yeah I would get one if they didn’t cost a million dollars and I didn’t already have too many pans.

      • @peregrin5@lemm.ee
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        4 days ago

        Cast iron and stainless steel also basically never wear out. My cast iron pan is over 100 years old.

          • @peregrin5@lemm.ee
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            4 days ago

            Yeah you don’t season stainless steel. You have to heat it up enough to make use of the Leidenfrost effect if you want true non-stickability. It just depends on how you use it.

            Cast iron is better in the way it gets it’s non-stickability from its seasoning. Which is why I use it more often than my stainless steel if that’s important in what I’m cooking.

            Totally would love a carbon steel btw. I know they’re like a blessed child between a cast iron and a stainless steel. Plz send me one for free por favor.

            • @anomnom@sh.itjust.works
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              03 days ago

              You can’t cook with the Leidenfrost effect though… no heat will conduct into the food!

              The point of oils or melted fat when cooking is partially to increase the conduction of heat into the food.

              • @Madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                33 days ago

                Im assuming the leidenfrost effect is when you drop water onto the hot pan, and the little watter bubbles just roll around on the surface of the pan, no? That’s how I tell the pan is hot enough to be non stick anyway.

                I’ve uh, the food still cooks my friend.

                • @anomnom@sh.itjust.works
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                  13 days ago

                  Ahhh checking to see if it’s hot enough for the leidenfrost effect is very different that what I was imagining cooking with it would be.

                  The reason the droplet dances around and doesn’t immediately evaporate is because the layer of steam separates (insulates) the droplet from the pan. The effect can also be used to protect a wetted hand from molten lead.

                  A hot pan will still cook things, but a hot pan with thin layer of oil will cook most things even faster. That’s why grilled cheeses cook much better with fat than dry.

                  • @Madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                    23 days ago

                    Science Bitch Yes

                    Once its ripping hot, a spash of oil goes on and then say, your chicken. What kind of psychopath cooks things dry?

    • idunnololz
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      4 days ago

      They sell for super cheap at Asian grocery stores. I got one for like $35 CAD.

      Edit: Oh actually although cheap, the ones you find at asian stores will mostly be woks which dont work well unless you have a gas stove so keep that in mind.

        • idunnololz
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          23 days ago

          The issue is that they are curved so only a small part of it would make contact with the stove. There are special induction + wok combos where the induction surface is also curved but most people will not have that.