Anonymous wrote:My steel all-clad became non-stick after I used it for a few months.
Anonymous wrote:It's cast iron skillets for me all the way.
Anonymous wrote:It's cast iron skillets for me all the way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nonstick is not for high heat - if you are browning or searing something, you need a different pan. I love my nonstick pan for eggs, but I cook them on low. It washes up fine.
I think that in general, people cook with too much heat. IMO the obsession with cooking over gas (vs electric) is mostly because people cook too hot.
Is there a way to achieve the Maillard reaction with lower heat? I have never been able to get that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nonstick is not for high heat - if you are browning or searing something, you need a different pan. I love my nonstick pan for eggs, but I cook them on low. It washes up fine.
I think that in general, people cook with too much heat. IMO the obsession with cooking over gas (vs electric) is mostly because people cook too hot.
Is there a way to achieve the Maillard reaction with lower heat? I have never been able to get that.
No - are you browning your eggs? That's unusual.
Chinese food demands high heat. No better way to achieve the flavor otherwise.
Ok, but then you don't want a nonstick. As I said at the outset, if you are browning something you need a different pan. Stop ruining your nonstick over high heat and then complaining that nonstick doesn't work.
You seemed to have a hang up over people who obsess with cooking too hot, and I pointed out there was reason for it. But I see what you're doing. Have a nice day bud.
Anonymous wrote:I love my green pans (nonstick). Clean up is a breeze. I also do as a nother poster and poir hot soapy water in as soon as I’m done cooking and it literally wipes clean after.
I have never mastered the art of cast iron. Food always sticks to mine, it never “releases.” I know you all will say it isn’t properly seasoned, and it probably isn’t. But I posted on here several years ago asking how to reseason a cast iron pan, and got so many conflicting answers - some posters said that in my attempts at reseasoning, I baked the pan too hot, some said not hot enough, some said I used too much oil, some said I didn’t use enough, some said I baked it too long, some said not long enough, and so on. Regardless, I tried many of the methods and adjustments that posters named, and none made my cast iron work smoothly/cleanly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nonstick is not for high heat - if you are browning or searing something, you need a different pan. I love my nonstick pan for eggs, but I cook them on low. It washes up fine.
I think that in general, people cook with too much heat. IMO the obsession with cooking over gas (vs electric) is mostly because people cook too hot.
Is there a way to achieve the Maillard reaction with lower heat? I have never been able to get that.
No - are you browning your eggs? That's unusual.
Chinese food demands high heat. No better way to achieve the flavor otherwise.
Ok, but then you don't want a nonstick. As I said at the outset, if you are browning something you need a different pan. Stop ruining your nonstick over high heat and then complaining that nonstick doesn't work.