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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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I am asking this at the request of the main cook in the house. We have
a glass cooktop electric stove. Everything seems to work well with it but she has a lot of problems with simmering. She is unable to get any of the burners to a low enough heat to accomplish this. She would like to know if anyone else has had this problem and how they solved it Thanks for any and all help. |
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![]() mike wrote: > I am asking this at the request of the main cook in the house. We have > a glass cooktop electric stove. Everything seems to work well with it > but she has a lot of problems with simmering. She is unable to get any > of the burners to a low enough heat to accomplish this. She would like > to know if anyone else has had this problem and how they solved it > Thanks for any and all help. Sounds like a job for some kind of flame tamer or heat diffuser. Here's one for $2.75. http://www.hearmore.com/store/prodvi...er/Simmer_Ring |
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![]() aem wrote: > mike wrote: > > I am asking this at the request of the main cook in the house. We have > > a glass cooktop electric stove. Everything seems to work well with it > > but she has a lot of problems with simmering. She is unable to get any > > of the burners to a low enough heat to accomplish this. She would like > > to know if anyone else has had this problem and how they solved it > > Thanks for any and all help. > > Sounds like a job for some kind of flame tamer or heat diffuser. > Here's one for $2.75. > http://www.hearmore.com/store/prodvi...er/Simmer_Ring That's a diffuser for a gas burner. For an electric element there's a thin wire spacer to lift the pot about 3/32" above the element. But I don't think they make anything similar for a smooth top... perhaps call the manufacturer to ask if there's an electronic adjustment that can be made. Sheldon |
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![]() "aem" > wrote in message oups.com... > > mike wrote: >> I am asking this at the request of the main cook in the house. We have >> a glass cooktop electric stove. Everything seems to work well with it >> but she has a lot of problems with simmering. She is unable to get any >> of the burners to a low enough heat to accomplish this. She would like >> to know if anyone else has had this problem and how they solved it >> Thanks for any and all help. > > Sounds like a job for some kind of flame tamer or heat diffuser. > Here's one for $2.75. > http://www.hearmore.com/store/prodvi...er/Simmer_Ring BTW they are a staple at BIG LOTS for $1.00 IIRC. Dimitri |
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![]() Sheldon wrote: > That's a diffuser for a gas burner. For an electric element there's a > thin wire spacer to lift the pot about 3/32" above the element. But I > don't think they make anything similar for a smooth top... perhaps call > the manufacturer to ask if there's an electronic adjustment that can be > made. > True, but it's also usable on an electric burner. Whether it would work on a flat glasstop depends on the design--whether it would lie flat or the handle would make it sit at an angle. Can't hurt to take a look at one.... I once cut and bent a wire coat hanger into a diamond shape to sit between an electric burner and my rice pot. It more or less worked, until I found a 'real' one at the store. -aem |
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On 17 Nov 2005 14:46:11 -0800, "mike" > wrote:
>I am asking this at the request of the main cook in the house. Tell him to put the pot half on the element. Works wonders. |
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"mike" > wrote in message
oups.com... >I am asking this at the request of the main cook in the house. We have > a glass cooktop electric stove. Everything seems to work well with it > but she has a lot of problems with simmering. She is unable to get any > of the burners to a low enough heat to accomplish this. She would like > to know if anyone else has had this problem and how they solved it > Thanks for any and all help. > We have a glass cooktop and it simmers beautifully. It is not a problem with glass cooktops in general, it is a problem with your cooktop. Try a heat diffuser - a metal disk that goes between the burner and the pot. -- Peter Aitken |
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![]() On 17 Nov 2005, mike wrote: > I am asking this at the request of the main cook in the house. We have > a glass cooktop electric stove. Everything seems to work well with it > but she has a lot of problems with simmering. She is unable to get any > of the burners to a low enough heat to accomplish this. She would like > to know if anyone else has had this problem and how they solved it > Thanks for any and all help. > > I've cooked with electric most of my life. Gas flame is easier to control, but I don't have any problem. Some things to consider: Add more liquid to the pot Use heavier pots and pans Have the stove checked for a problem Good luck, Elaine, too |
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On Thu 17 Nov 2005 09:02:39p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Elaine
Parrish? > > On 17 Nov 2005, mike wrote: > >> I am asking this at the request of the main cook in the house. We have >> a glass cooktop electric stove. Everything seems to work well with it >> but she has a lot of problems with simmering. She is unable to get any >> of the burners to a low enough heat to accomplish this. She would like >> to know if anyone else has had this problem and how they solved it >> Thanks for any and all help. >> >> > I've cooked with electric most of my life. Gas flame is easier to > control, but I don't have any problem. > > Some things to consider: > > Add more liquid to the pot > > Use heavier pots and pans > > Have the stove checked for a problem > > Good luck, > > Elaine, too Another idea, when you're cooking at minimal temperature, is putting a larger pot on a smaller burner. The wattage on the smaller burner is lower and should allow a perfect simmer. This works on both coil-top and smoothtop ranges. Never do this except on very low heat. At low heat it is perfectly safe, but on higher heat it can damage the burner. -- Wayne Boatwright *¿* _____________________________________________ A chicken in every pot is a *LOT* of chicken! |
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