Josh Simonds
www.nixfrixshun.com
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www.bicycle-coach.com
Vsalon Fromage De Tęte
An f350 for all Lodge employees!
I got all my saucepans passed on from chefs as they upgrade. I have Demeyere Apollo (you can stick these in the dishwasher and they come out shiny) and some All-Clad copper core and stainless. All are very nice. You really won't tell much difference when it comes to saucepans as long as you don't use them as frypans. Emphasis on medium heat. Add fat after the saucepan is somewhat hot. Heat expands the alloy and pours open up to absorb fat which creates a slick surface. "hot pan cold oil, no stick"!
But switching to fry pans, I have De Buyer carbon steel. These frypans have been in constant use for the last 3 years without washing. They've developed a surface similar to what they cook on in diners. I can sling hashes with ease. Sunny side eggs are no problem at all. Steaks always have a nice lightly chard caramelized surface. Use copious amounts of fat, whether it is an oil, butter, lard, or my current favorite tallow.
I finally made a decision and purchased some saucepans tonight. I purchased a 1 1/2 quart and a 3 1/2 quart all clad stainless steel sauce pans and a Le Creuset stock pot. I've also decided the Lodge cast iron skillets are pretty awesome, so I'm purchasing a second one to use in the kitchen. Thank you everyone for all of the help and advice!
I assume this is kosher; if not, somebody delete this, please.
[i'll permit it, but hey let's don't make retail links a big habit yo, wp]
Amazon has some really good deals on Cuisinart at the moment.
And here are blackers' favorites - Scanpan - at 72% off.
Last edited by WadePatton; 04-03-2013 at 01:05 PM.
All-clad MC2 here. all the way.
Nick Crumpton
crumptoncycles.com
"Tradition is a guide, not a jailer" —Justin Robinson
"Mastery before Creativity"—Nicholas Crumpton 2021
I know I can rely on you guys.
I've got an 11yr old stainless All-Clad 1.5qt saucepan with a handle that's loose. Not sure if it's a steel around the rivets that's wearing or the rivets themselves. Is anyone familiar with a reliable way to fix it? The thing gets used daily, often twice, and is handwashed every time. Or should I just pony up $100 for a single 1.5qt saucepan?
Where do you even buy these things now? I got this set at Dillards, I think. Back when malls were fun.
-Dustin
if it's all clad i'd start by checking with them as they may fix it for you for free.
Yep, did that on Wednesday, and haven't yet heard back.
-Dustin
Personally, direct from All-Clad and almost exclusively seconds or items with damaged packaging. They do sales via a website and email invitation a few times a year.
I suspect that it can be drilled out and a new rivet installed, but not sure what their warranty policy is regarding replace or repair.
I have the same pan, given to me well used several years ago when my best friend moved back to Australia and didn't want to take 100 pounds worth of quality cookware. Mine also gets a helluva lot of use.
I'll bet I could fix it with JB Weld if it came to that.
Did you try the repair centers?
https://www.all-clad.com/repairs
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
Welp. Pie in my face. It wasn't All-Clad, it was Calphalon.
However, it worked in All-Clad's favor. As I was digging around the Repair Centers page, I clicked on promotions and ended up just ordering an Essentials 13pc set for $300. I don't much care for non-stick, but wifey loves it. so....it's a win-win, I suppose.
-Dustin
If you don't save the Calphalon treat yourself to an All-Clad replacement. I'm sort of sad you bought a bunch of new pieces, but they're non-stick. But happy wife, happy life. That I get. Don't remember how I signed up for the factory seconds sale emails, but I dug around and I think this will do it if you're interested.
I favor my All Clad Master Chef (which I am not); SS interior, thick aluminum exterior saucepans, saucier and stock pots. The heat transfer juice/squeeze ratio per dollar is hard to beat though they may not offer that line anymore; mine are ~25 years old.
For skillets I'll second that it's awfully hard to beat seasoned CI. Alas, I have only a couple of medium size skillets in enameled CI which are very nice but plain old seasoned CI just works better.
My pasta/former wort boiler is a cheap, thin SS thing which heats quickly bc it doesn't consume lots of energy itself (to heat a bunch of metal in the form of a heavy vessel....'cause it's thin); it's perfect for things that are cooked in boiling water, pasta, 'taters, cabbage, whatever. Wish I'da kept one or two of my parent's Revere Ware sauce pans for smaller "water boiling" tasks like steaming veggies, rather than having to heat water in a sauce pan with a lot more metal mass. They're poor for saucepanney stuff (though a diffuser plate improves things and a lot of good meals have come out of them), but great for boiling water.
We use gas.
Thanks Dustin. This will be a huge upgrade from what I am currently using. Sale price makes this a no brained for me.
Mike
Mike Noble
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