Looking for a 6ish-qt Dutch Oven. My mother, who's a professional cook, has Le Creuset but tells me that Staub is nicer. Any opinions...
Looking for a 6ish-qt Dutch Oven. My mother, who's a professional cook, has Le Creuset but tells me that Staub is nicer. Any opinions...
laughter has no foreign accent.
Are you a good enough cook to discern?
Le creuset lasts forever... and I seriously doubt it would keep anyone from reaching their full gastronomic potential. They're both probably more than adequate.
Besides the bird goes *inside* the pot.
I think this is hilarious. It's an S vs C debate ;) I've got L.C. from my family's kitchen still going strong what's not to love? I've seen the Staub wares and they look great too. I think it comes down to what appeals to you. Great gift btw cast iron is the best.
Josh Simonds
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Vsalon Fromage De Tête
I own both. I don't think one could possibly tell the difference between one or the other in a finished dish, but in my opinion the staub is certainly more beautiful. If one was going to serve the chicken in the dish where it was roasted, I would choose the staub.
Don't pay full price for this stuff, pots and pans are simple tools and they'll get marked after their first couple of uses, so check out a factory store first if there is one around you. All of the stuff I bought was indistinguishable from 100% perfect and I saved like 60% over williams sonoma. Most effete elitist bike forum ever btw.
http://www.outletbound.com/cgi-bin/s...e=Le%20Creuset
This could easily deteriorate into another debate on which steel tubing is better. I have never heard of Staub, unless you mean Montreal Expos legend, Le Grand Orange, Rusty Staub. I have a Creuset that my mom scored at a garage sale. It is a nice chunk of iron.
How about another option?
http://www.roemertopf.de/english/
How could you possibly contemplate not taking your mother's advise, eh?
Yikes--Sorry I asked!!
No I'm not good enough to discern the differences, but I'm into lifetime pieces and enjoy cooking with my other cast iron piece. Truthfully I'd never heard of Staub before & wanted a second opinion.
The important question--Which is C and which is S... ; )
laughter has no foreign accent.
try the martha stewart line at K mart
I've got the big one that makes cassoulet for 30 - not kidding did it for my office holiday party last week. It's a manly pot. It weighs a ton, comes in a wooden crate and took two people to get from the store to the car. Store it on a lower shelf and you get to do dead lifts just to get it to the stove. Weight training and cooking.
In the oven or on the top it rocks. It makes any other big pot pale in comparison. I've got a bunch of Creusets as well, but really no comparison. I feel the same way about my Staub that Charleton Heston felt about his guns.
Spendy, but put it on the holiday wish list, you won't be sorry.
Greg
Staub rocks for most applications, especially for roasting. The lids really do prevent condensation from making its way into the dish and deliver a wonderful result. I took a small saucepan and made an omlett souffle in it just for kicks and it released and could be lifted a few inches without a problem ... cool For a gratin dish, fry pan, etc. I would take Le Creuset just on cost grounds.
What you will have to pry from my cold dead hands is the Bourgeat copper I got from my wife that she got for a steal ... oh and the old Calphalon that weighed a ton and was broiler ready ... that fry pan kicks ass
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