Tinker Tailor
April 10th 2010 06:04
If you are lucky, you may have inherited some of those deep, round-bellied cooking pots that graced the kitchens of old. Even so, from time to time you will need to buy new cooking utensils, whether you are setting up house, buying a wedding present or replenishing your own stock of cookware.
Tips for Choosing Cookware
The pots you buy will have to last for a long while, choose carefully and make sure you select pots and pans with guarantees, so that if they are faulty they can be replaced.
# Pots should be of good quality, but not necessarily heavy; a fairly lightweight pan is suited to oven-top gas cooking.
# Pots should be well balanced, with no tendency to tip.
# Lids should fit tightly or cooking efficiency will be lowered.
# Handles should not conduct heat, and should be designed so that the pot can be comfortably and safely moved about.
# Straight-sided pans with flat bottoms that completely cover the heating unit are the most economical, as they use less fuel.
Which Material?
There will always be controversy about the best material for pots and pans. All materials have their advantages.
Aluminium is light and conducts heat well, but thin aluminium pans will quickly lose their shape, burn food and waste fuel because they do not retain heat.
Iron is durable, conducts heat well and is easy to clean. But iron pots need a breaking-in period, are heavy and will rust if they are not kept dry and greased. Heat new cast-iron cookware gradually the first time it is used to prevent warping and cracking. You should baptize a new ironware frying pan by boiling vinegar in it and then rinsing it thoroughly.
Enamelware absorbs heat rapidly but does not conduct it evenly, so food may burn before it is thoroughly cooked. Make sure the base is heavy enough so that the utensil will not warp and crack the enamel coating.
Glass, earthenware and stoneware oven dishes conduct heat slowly but evenly. They can be taken straight from the oven to the table, and are easy to clean. But sudden temperature changes may cause them to crack.
TIP: To clean burnt aluminium saucepans, rub them with rotten apples and then use a scouring powder.
Tips for Choosing Cookware
The pots you buy will have to last for a long while, choose carefully and make sure you select pots and pans with guarantees, so that if they are faulty they can be replaced.
# Pots should be of good quality, but not necessarily heavy; a fairly lightweight pan is suited to oven-top gas cooking.
# Pots should be well balanced, with no tendency to tip.
# Lids should fit tightly or cooking efficiency will be lowered.
# Handles should not conduct heat, and should be designed so that the pot can be comfortably and safely moved about.
# Straight-sided pans with flat bottoms that completely cover the heating unit are the most economical, as they use less fuel.
Which Material?
There will always be controversy about the best material for pots and pans. All materials have their advantages.
Aluminium is light and conducts heat well, but thin aluminium pans will quickly lose their shape, burn food and waste fuel because they do not retain heat.
Iron is durable, conducts heat well and is easy to clean. But iron pots need a breaking-in period, are heavy and will rust if they are not kept dry and greased. Heat new cast-iron cookware gradually the first time it is used to prevent warping and cracking. You should baptize a new ironware frying pan by boiling vinegar in it and then rinsing it thoroughly.
Enamelware absorbs heat rapidly but does not conduct it evenly, so food may burn before it is thoroughly cooked. Make sure the base is heavy enough so that the utensil will not warp and crack the enamel coating.
Glass, earthenware and stoneware oven dishes conduct heat slowly but evenly. They can be taken straight from the oven to the table, and are easy to clean. But sudden temperature changes may cause them to crack.
TIP: To clean burnt aluminium saucepans, rub them with rotten apples and then use a scouring powder.
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