non stick pan
camillerauch
Posts: 8
Does anyone have a certain non stick pan brand they would like to recommend to me? Looking to use less oil when cooking . . . Pleassseeee and thank you
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I like to take super glue in the store and dump it on all the pans. Whichever one doesn't stick is the one I get0
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Yes the one I have is great- where are you in the world? I am in the UK so don't know if they would do outside Europe- I think it's a German brand. I dry fry everything in this:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B005473FMO?psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=oh_aui_detailpage_o02_s00
P.s. Don't get Tefal - mine lasted about 2 months.0 -
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i just bought a tefal stir fry pan n love it ..0
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most start to stick after a while. Whatever pan you do get prolong the life by not using highest heat setting. They are not really meant for that.
Costco has a decent line called Woll0 -
most start to stick after a while. Whatever pan you do get prolong the life by not using highest heat setting. They are not really meant for that.
Costco has a decent line called Woll
Yes you make a good point to keep it on a medium heat- also don't ever use metal spoons on it- and clean with a soft cloth no metal washing brushes!
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And never put them in the dishwasher!0
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i do not use non-stick pans. the only ones i use are iron. they are great + add iron to the foods you cook.0
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I got one at Bed Bath and Beyond for about $10 and it's great. If it wears out, I'll just replace it.0
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Used tefal for years and stick them in the dishwasher. Would recommend0
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La5Vega5Girl wrote: »i do not use non-stick pans. the only ones i use are iron. they are great + add iron to the foods you cook.
My dad cooked on a well seasoned iron skillet when I was a child. I feel like food always tasted better with an iron skillet. I could not care less now..so much work. In the ways of non-stick pans....I've used Revere non-stick and it worked okay until someone (probably me ) used a fork on it.0 -
I only use a well seasoned cast iron pan. Nothing sticks to it.0
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dragonmaster69 wrote: »La5Vega5Girl wrote: »i do not use non-stick pans. the only ones i use are iron. they are great + add iron to the foods you cook.
My dad cooked on a well seasoned iron skillet when I was a child. I feel like food always tasted better with an iron skillet. I could not care less now..so much work. In the ways of non-stick pans....I've used Revere non-stick and it worked okay until someone (probably me ) used a fork on it.
they are so easy to clean. use a food scraper to get off the larger things that might have been stuck, then apply regular salt liberally. use a paper towel with a bit of water and everything will wash away easily. dry on high heat on the stove, then grease with a bit of olive oil after it is cooled. i use mine every day.
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Bumpity doo. Anything new?
Had a Bialetti Aeternum frying pan, but for some reason (despite being careful) it took a crap. Scrambled eggs were fine one day and a nightmare the next. Just got a T Fal for eggs, so we'll see how that goes. I also have some cast irons that have a bit of potential if I gave them a little love. For me, that would be ideal.0 -
The green pan is awesome. You need almost no oil.0
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La5Vega5Girl wrote: »i do not use non-stick pans. the only ones i use are iron. they are great + add iron to the foods you cook.
I love cast iron. However, I haven't found I can cook scrambled eggs or Asian stir fry in them without using more oil than I'd like to use. You?
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I got some sort of cheap green pan at Walmart but it stopped being non stick after a few months. I'd bought it locally so I could take it back.
In America's Test Kitchen stir fry recipes, they use a 12" T-Fal Pro. ATK rates non-stick skillets here: http://www.americastestkitchen.com/equipment_reviews/1259-nonstick-skillets and the 12" T-Fal Pro is their winner. On Amazon, some reviewers complained that it domed in the middle, so I bought it on sale at Kohl's so it would be easy to return if I had that problem, which I didn't.
12" is too big for one serving of eggs, despite all the veggies I add to mine, so I bought a 10" pan a few months ago, this time from Amazon. I love them!
I normally add a tablespoon of oil when I make popcorn on the stove and am wondering how much less I could use in a T-Fal pot. I bought some microwave popcorn recently and it just isn't as good as stove top. Maybe it's the cooking method; maybe it's that T of oil.
I still have three cast iron pans, one of them a Griswold from my grandfather, and use them for foods that don't require a lot of oil, like whole cuts of meat.0 -
I love my stone pans
nothing sticks to them, no oil at all, super easy to clean0
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