The home appliance industry would like you to believe that gas-burning stoves are not a risk to your health – and several companies that make the devices are scrambling to erase their prior acknowledgements that they are.
The home appliance industry would like you to believe that gas-burning stoves are not a risk to your health – and several companies that make the devices are scrambling to erase their prior acknowledgements that they are.
Every glass top I’ve ever used heated unevenly… so I agree with you, any decent heat source works, but modern stoves are not decent.
The fact that you call it glass top without specifying what you’re actually using tells me that you don’t know the difference between traditional electric and induction.
The fact that literally everyone else in society refers to an electric glass top as “glass top” and induction as “induction” tells me you’re being needlessly pedantic in order to feel superior to others.
Non-induction yes. Induction no.
Non-induction ones don’t count as modern stoves, they are last century’s tech.
But if you know what you are doing, the uneven heating can even be an advantage. You basically get different heat zones for free, so you can use part of the pan to brown stuff and the other side to keep things warm without burning them.
But yeah, get induction. It’s the perfect technology.
Except it doesn’t work with every pan. I love induction but some pans I love don’t work with it.
Induction stoves are the new hotness (literally and figuratively). Is that what you’ve used, or did you have the older (and much worse) type with glowing heating coils?
I thought electric stoves were all bullshit until I learned that “induction stove” was not just another term for what I was used to. But I’ve never seen one outside of fairly recent, relatively expensive renovations.
Yeah induction is a totally different and in my opinion superior technology. Unfortunately, some electric stoves can look quite similar but perform very differently, which leads to confusion.
My parents are snooty foodies who badmouthed electric stoves for decades even when I explained that gas was bad for the environment. But once I showed them my induction stove they were sold and never looked back.
The only downside is they can be a bit expensive, might require electrical work, and you may need to change out some pots and pans. But for me I found it very worth it. Cooking with gas annoys me now whenever I’m forced to.
Price is coming down a lot. A cheap induction one is well within the price range of a regular one. Sometimes even cheaper.
True. For me the main cost was the electrical wiring to bring the needed voltage to the kitchen. Which no one told me I needed until after I made the purchase. Oops.
Induction stoves are really common in the UK I first got one ~10 years ago, a quick Google shows a 4 zone induction hob in B&Q (Home Depot in the US) can be had for £89, single zone portable worktop ones are around £30. The current one in my kitchen cost £479 recon (normally ~£720) super fancy
It’s different to gas, I prefer it now. Having used the other terrible types of electric hobs/stoves and gas
Use a better search like Bing or duckduckgo next time. googol sucks and was never any good. Quit using ignorant garbage.
Induction is objectively better than every other option for anyone connected to the grid looking to buy a new kitchen stove.
Unfortunately it’s one of these things that takes five minutes to explain because everyone has tried the Slumlord Special resistive stove and the general public can’t tell the difference. Those five minutes are why induction uptake is pathetically low compared to how superior it is in literally every way.
Same deal with people who would still buy incandescent lightbulbs if they could just because they don’t understand that technology has moved on from CFLs and to them it’s all “newfangled economic bulbs that can’t light for shit”.
True but decent stainless and cast iron reduce that issue by a lot.
Hell yeah they do. I discovered this on my own.