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Cooking Equipment (rec.food.equipment) Discussion of food-related equipment. Includes items used in food preparation and storage, including major and minor appliances, gadgets and utensils, infrastructure, and food- and recipe-related software. |
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Hi
I have a GE profile slide-in electric range with glass ceramic cooktop and I've been too chicken to buy a Dutch Oven for fear of scratching or cracking it. An acquaintance mistakenly put a non-flat roasting pan on her stovetop and it resulted in having to have the entire stovetop replaced. I know that dutch ovens are flat, but are there issues to take into consideration? Like enamel maybe? I can't find any good documentation on the relative safety of dutch ovens from their manufacturers and this has me worried. A "Safe for use" sticker would really help me out... ![]() thanks in advance, felinity |
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On May 28, 12:35 pm, Felinity > wrote:
> Hi > > I have a GE profile slide-in electric range with glass ceramic cooktop > and I've been too chicken to buy a Dutch Oven for fear of scratching > or cracking it. An acquaintance mistakenly put a non-flat roasting pan > on her stovetop and it resulted in having to have the entire stovetop > replaced. I know that dutch ovens are flat, but are there issues to > take into consideration? Like enamel maybe? > > I can't find any good documentation on the relative safety of dutch > ovens from their manufacturers and this has me worried. A "Safe for > use" sticker would really help me out... ![]() > > thanks in advance, > > felinity Hello, Felinity, You ask about the relative safety of dutch ovens -- do you mean the relative safety of the stove top when you put the dutch oven onto it -- I will answer assuming that is what you mean :-) Or do you mean the relative safety of an enameled pot vs. cast iron? Not sure. I purchased at Amazon, Mario Batali's dutch oven, which has a flat bottom and is enameled. http://tinyurl.com/23wjnj I made goulash which called for browning the meat at med-high heat (I did in 2 batches), then a lot more cooking on top of the stove. I believe it cooked for 2 hours total in the oven. When I took the pot out, I placed it on top of the largest burner. Someone on this group, I believe, reminded me that these burners are meant to take the heat, so that is where I place all my hot pots. IOW, if I want to move a hot pan to somewhere else in order to get it off burner for a moment, or if it is finished cooking, I will place it within a ring on another burner. If as in the case of my stove that has a 12" burner and I want to place the hot pan somewhere off the burner, I will place it on a stainless steel table. I have a couple of stones and a couple of hard wood boards also as a choice to place a hot pot on. Recently Larry told me about a hotpad that is 11-1/2" square to put hot things on, which I bought, but I haven't tried it for a 12" pot, and probably won't. Beware if you are tempted to buy the Batali pot, it is probably the heaviest pot for it's size I've ever had -- and I've owned Le Creuset. I bought this pot to make the NYT bread in a pot, which calls for high heat. It performed well, very well, indeed, because the high temperature did leave my bread burnt and the bottom of the pan burnt, which came out almost immediately. Dee |
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On May 28, 12:54 pm, Dee Dee > wrote:
> On May 28, 12:35 pm, Felinity > wrote: > > > > > > > Hi > > > I have a GE profile slide-in electric range with glass ceramic cooktop > > and I've been too chicken to buy a Dutch Oven for fear of scratching > > or cracking it. An acquaintance mistakenly put a non-flat roasting pan > > on her stovetop and it resulted in having to have the entire stovetop > > replaced. I know that dutch ovens are flat, but are there issues to > > take into consideration? Like enamel maybe? > > > I can't find any good documentation on the relative safety of dutch > > ovens from their manufacturers and this has me worried. A "Safe for > > use" sticker would really help me out... ![]() > > > thanks in advance, > > > felinity > > Hello, Felinity, > > You ask about the relative safety of dutch ovens -- do you mean the > relative safety of the stove top when you put the dutch oven onto it > -- I will answer assuming that is what you mean :-) Or do you mean > the relative safety of an enameled pot vs. cast iron? Not sure. > > I purchased at Amazon, Mario Batali's dutch oven, which has a flat > bottom and is enameled. > > http://tinyurl.com/23wjnj > > I made goulash which called for browning the meat at med-high heat (I > did in 2 batches), then a lot more cooking on top of the stove. I > believe it cooked for 2 hours total in the oven. When I took the pot > out, I placed it on top of the largest burner. Someone on this group, > I believe, reminded me that these burners are meant to take the heat, > so that is where I place all my hot pots. > > IOW, if I want to move a hot pan to somewhere else in order to get it > off burner for a moment, or if it is finished cooking, I will place it > within a ring on another burner. > > If as in the case of my stove that has a 12" burner and I want to > place the hot pan somewhere off the burner, I will place it on a > stainless steel table. I have a couple of stones and a couple of > hard wood boards also as a choice to place a hot pot on. > > Recently Larry told me about a hotpad that is 11-1/2" square to put > hot things on, which I bought, but I haven't tried it for a 12" pot, > and probably won't. > > Beware if you are tempted to buy the Batali pot, it is probably the > heaviest pot for it's size I've ever had -- and I've owned Le Creuset. > > I bought this pot to make the NYT bread in a pot, which calls for high > heat. It performed well, very well, indeed, because the high > temperature did leave my bread burnt and the bottom of the pan burnt, > which came out almost immediately. > > Dee- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - Hi Actually, I meant which type of dutch oven is safe to use on a ceramic cooktop? Some say safe for stovetop but that doesn't mean safe for ceramic cooktop. sorry for the confusion, felinity |
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![]() > Hi > > I have a GE profile slide-in electric range with glass ceramic cooktop > and I've been too chicken to buy a Dutch Oven for fear of scratching > or cracking it. An acquaintance mistakenly put a non-flat roasting pan > on her stovetop and it resulted in having to have the entire stovetop > replaced. I know that dutch ovens are flat, but are there issues to > take into consideration? Like enamel maybe? > > I can't find any good documentation on the relative safety of dutch > ovens from their manufacturers and this has me worried. A "Safe for > use" sticker would really help me out... ![]() > > thanks in advance, > > felinity > I used to own a glass ceramic cooktop and I also used a Dutch oven. I wouldn't see any type of problem unless you accidentally dropped a very heavy Dutch oven on the cooktop. When I still lived in the house with the glass ceramic cooktop (now currently live where we have natural gas) I used an 8 qt. Dutch oven regularly with no problem. |
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Felinity wrote:
> Hi > > I have a GE profile slide-in electric range with glass ceramic cooktop > and I've been too chicken to buy a Dutch Oven for fear of scratching > or cracking it. An acquaintance mistakenly put a non-flat roasting pan > on her stovetop and it resulted in having to have the entire stovetop > replaced. I know that dutch ovens are flat, but are there issues to > take into consideration? Like enamel maybe? > > I can't find any good documentation on the relative safety of dutch > ovens from their manufacturers and this has me worried. A "Safe for > use" sticker would really help me out... ![]() > > thanks in advance, > > felinity I have a glass smoothtop range. I frequently use a Cuisinart Dutch oven on it with no problems. The pot is an older model - the cast iron on the bottom is not enameled. I also use 10" and 12" cast iron frying pans with no problem. Yes, you need to use flat pans but I don't know why your friend had such bad luck. The secret is to avoid pushing/scratching/dragging the utensil across the surface, or banging or dropping it by mistake. Try as best you can to match the size of the pot base to the burner you're using, for efficiency's sake. And if you use that famous chef's trick, don't shake the pan back and forth, back and forth on the burner. Unless you plan to abuse that range, you can relax and enjoy how easy it is to clean! Dora |
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On 28 May 2007 09:35:20 -0700, Felinity > wrote:
>.... I know that dutch ovens are flat, but are there issues to >take into consideration? Like enamel maybe? Enamel is good, becuase it generally indicates a flat, smooth bottom. Dutch ovens, along with general cast iron pots and pans, are no problem as long as their bottoms are smooth and flat. My Le Creuset Dutch oven and my older Griswold cast iron pans are my weapons of choice on this, my second glass-topped GE Profile stove. So don't worry about it, as long as they don't have rough, pebbled bottoms which can scratch your cooktop. -- Larry |
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Felinity > wrote:
> I have a GE profile slide-in electric range with glass ceramic cooktop > and I've been too chicken to buy a Dutch Oven for fear of scratching > or cracking it. An acquaintance mistakenly put a non-flat roasting pan > on her stovetop and it resulted in having to have the entire stovetop > replaced. I know that dutch ovens are flat, but are there issues to > take into consideration? Like enamel maybe? How old, and what type of ceramic top did your friend have? I only ask because I inherited a glass smoothtop when I bought my current house. It was already installed and I just figured I'd use and abuse it until it broke. We have used pans larger than the burner sections, smaller than the burner sections, not flat on the bottom, cast iron, you name it, and 13 or 14 years later that top still works and looks fine. Who is making all these delicate smoothtops that can't take some normal cooking? I know the old Corning smoothtops that looked like Corningware had problems with cracking, but they haven't made that type in years. > I can't find any good documentation on the relative safety of dutch > ovens from their manufacturers and this has me worried. A "Safe for > use" sticker would really help me out... ![]() "Safe" in what way? As far as I can tell it's really not that easy to damage the new generation of smoothtops. Bill Ranck Blacksburg, Va. |
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