bhakti

(replying to udonchy :udon:)

@ionchy it can mess up the pan shape and durability long term bc of the sudden temperature change (I had to look up whether it was bad after i put a hot pan in the sink so dw)

udonchy :udon:

(replying to bhakti)

@bhaktishh I've integrated this into my belief system and I've decided to keep doing it anyway

bhakti

(replying to udonchy :udon:)

@ionchy oh yeah I 100% knew this at some point which is why I knew it was bad in some way and had to look up exactly why but I haven’t stopped. I don’t own the summer pans so it’s not my problem

I Can't Believe It's Not Zero!

(replying to bhakti)

@bhaktishh @ionchy Nothing will get me to stop doing this with my cast iron pans. If I have to replace a $20 skillet every 20 years or something, I'll live with that.

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Saagar Jha

(replying to I Can't Believe It's Not Zero!)
@steve @bhaktishh @ionchy This mindset has made my life a lot better. Although I guess environmentally it’s kind of worse
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bhakti

(replying to Saagar Jha)

@saagar @steve @ionchy life is about the little things (pan go sizzle)


I Can't Believe It's Not Zero!

(replying to Saagar Jha)

@saagar @bhaktishh @ionchy I'm not even sure that it's much worse environmentally. Most of our pans are a decade+ old, and the few that I've gotten rid of because I wanted something else were still totally usable and went to a thrift store.


bhakti

(replying to I Can't Believe It's Not Zero!)

@steve @ionchy ok this made me feel better because I fully thought I was going to get yelled at by real adults for not caring about the longevity of my low quality target bought vessels

I Can't Believe It's Not Zero!

(replying to bhakti)

@bhaktishh @ionchy We've been using most of our pans for 10+ years now and aside from hand washing them instead of putting them in a dishwasher, I really don't even try to protect them at all. It's fine. People are dumb about this stuff.

Pierce Darragh

(replying to I Can't Believe It's Not Zero!)

@steve @bhaktishh @ionchy should be fine with cast iron because they're so thick; it's more an issue with very thin/cheap stainless steel or anything enameled/coated.

with thick materials like cast iron, the likelihood of water warping it is... low, to say the least.

the issue with enamels/coatings is that they can expand or shrink at a different rate relative to the material they enshroud, which can cause premature wear.

Pierce Darragh

(replying to Pierce Darragh)

@steve @bhaktishh @ionchy I only use enameled cast iron and 3-ply stainless steel for most things. I keep a couple non-stick pans mostly for eggs, but they're such babies in comparison. no metal utensils, can't immediately douse them in water, the rivets get gunk trapped in them... sigh. so they are only used sparingly.

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I Can't Believe It's Not Zero!

(replying to Pierce Darragh)

@pdarragh @bhaktishh @ionchy This is probably why I own no non-stick stuff.

Pierce Darragh

(replying to I Can't Believe It's Not Zero!)

@steve @bhaktishh @ionchy I'm headed that direction but I eat eggs pretty regularly and I don't wanna deal with the weight and heat-time for an enameled pan and I've not yet gotten good at scrambled eggs or omelettes in stainless steel. one day...!

I Can't Believe It's Not Zero!

(replying to Pierce Darragh)

@pdarragh @bhaktishh @ionchy FWIW, I do all our eggs in a small (7-8") cast iron (non-enameled). Induction stove helps with this, as it heats up in like 20 seconds, but I used the same on gas.

Pierce Darragh

(replying to Pierce Darragh)

@steve @bhaktishh @ionchy and of course I have a couple regular cast iron things too. great for Shakshuka, pizza, and baking loaves of bread!