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Is Induction Cooking Ready to Go Mainstream?

13 pointsby bigwillabout 15 years ago

9 comments

dedwardabout 15 years ago
Finally something I can comment on, as I like to cook, and I upgraded to induction about a year ago.<p>Upside: It's like cooking with gas, without the risk of fire. It looks slick. If you get a good and powerful model, the install footprint is small and cooking on it is very reproducable... (setting 7 on burner 3 with this pan is always the same). You can also get maintain lower temperatures than you can with other stovetops, negating the need in some cases for a double-boiler and making it easy to keep food warm - there are a plethora of other technical coolies too - like how as soon as I lift up the pan to dump the pasta, the power to the element shuts of. It's more efficient. The cat can walk on it and even though he hits the buttons, he can't turn it on - elements are reactive, they won't activate if they don't sense enough ferrous material above them.<p>Downside: It's ceramic. Don't drop stuff on it. Downside: It's ceramic, if you like to sautee stuff by lifting up the pan and/or sliding the pan around, it will just scratch up your cooktop.<p>A professional restaurant, for this reason, would probably benefit from both gas and induction at the same time.
VolatileVoidabout 15 years ago
Do not confuse "induction cooking" with "cooking by induction." The latter often goes something like, "well, you cooked dinner <i>last</i> night..."
stckabout 15 years ago
I didn't realise they still make non-induction stoves. I haven't heard that anyone that I know of has bought an old-tech electric cooktop in the past five years. But this is scandinavia, so I guess it's like living in the future.
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JulianMorrisonabout 15 years ago
It's all fun and games until somebody sticks their hand in the field while wearing a steel watch.
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fharsabout 15 years ago
I'd like to nomminate the article for the "stupid metaphor of the year" award, though. I mean, why would I want to by a stove that only allows me to cook meels tested and approved by as well as procured through the stove manufactuer? Or what is the character sequence "iPad of the kitchen" meant to signify?
ErrantXabout 15 years ago
Ugh, I hate induction for cooking. We have one at home (UK) and it is a pain - you have to be on the ball <i>all</i> the time when making a meal.<p>I prefer gas or standard electric hobs personally; more fine grained control and actually a little more predictable in my experience.
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RyanMcGrealabout 15 years ago
Can you use cast iron on an induction stovetop?
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rimantasabout 15 years ago
Have been using for 1.5 years and never thought about it as some future technology…
hackermomabout 15 years ago
Interesting fact: induction heater plates are pretty much standard here today in Sweden when buying a new kitchen - you just won't find any kitchen appliance reseller in the country featuring the normal conductive hot plate stove as the major presence in their full kitchen kits. Conductive hot plate stoves are still the standard presence in normal rental apartments, though.