T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2014.1 | | NECVAX::OBRIEN_J | at the tone...... | Wed Sep 27 1989 10:41 | 2 |
| ADD LYCUEM::CONSUMER -- Notes 514, 639, 830 contain info on stoves.
|
2014.2 | Jenn-airre | DIXIE1::WITMAN | Mickey Mouse FOREVER | Thu Sep 28 1989 11:51 | 10 |
| If I had to replace my range there's no doubt I'd get a Jenn-airre.
We had put one in the last house we remodeled and were a little
hesitant about the cost but were quickly impressed by its cleanup
capabilities (ceramic tops), convection oven, indoor grill with
interchangable skillet.
It was about 30% more than other drop-in ranges at the time but worth
it.
|
2014.3 | Stove vs. Range....pros and cons wanted. | GENRAL::KILGORE | The UT Desert Rat living in CO | Sun Jan 08 1995 12:30 | 14 |
| I'm going to try and revive this old topic. We are in the long process of
preparing to move to a new house. My requirement for the new house is the
kitchen better be my dream kitchen. I've always had an electric range but
was wondering if I would prefer a gas stove in the new house. Having natural
gas available would not be a problem. I've found gas to be responsive to
control (immediate response) where the electric burner takes forever to
cool down (and sometimes heat up).
What do you feel is the pros and cons of range vs stove? My hubby thinks
I am nuts about wanting to change to gas. I have seen ads in magazines
of combination gas/electric stove/ranges. Does anyone in here have one of
those?
Judy
|
2014.4 | Go for gas! | TAMRC::LAURENT | Hal Laurent @ COP | Sun Jan 08 1995 20:47 | 12 |
| re: .3
All I can say is that once you spend some time with gas burners you'll never
be able to go back to electric "burners" again.
On the other hand, I kind of like electric ovens. My personal ideal setup
might very well have gas stovetop with electric oven.
Actuall, my *real* ideal setup would be a six-burner commercial range with
two ovens and a separate broiler. :-)
-Hal
|
2014.5 | Whatever you're comfortable with. You need to try it out. | SUBURB::MCDONALDA | Shockwave Rider comfortably numb | Mon Jan 09 1995 04:15 | 29 |
| I have cooked with both gas and electricity. I prefer gas, to the point
where when moving house I would not consider any new house which did
not have gas. On a hob, gas gives me the degree of control not afforded
by electricity, especially for cooking with a wok.
Saying that, my oven and grill (broiler) is electric. The heat
distribution over the element of an electric grill seems more even than
I've ever obtained with a gas grill. I never was too happy about gas
ovens, not too sure why. Maybe is bacause with some gas ovens I've had
its possible to blow out the burner flames (on a very low setting) by
shutting the oven door quickly.
I've been intrigued by these halogen electric hobs, but have yet to
find anybody with anything positive to say about them, plus their
damned expensive.
At the end of the day its what you're comfortable with and what you
mainly cook.
> What do you feel is the pros and cons of range vs stove? My hubby thinks
> I am nuts about wanting to change to gas. I have seen ads in magazines
Who's the cook, you or hubby? In our household I'm the principal cook.
The kitchen is my provence. I decide on appliances and layout, with my
wife profering positive advice and sanity checking. However, my wife
is the sweets/cakes cook, so what she says here is gospel, with me
providing the sanity check.
Angus
|
2014.6 | | NOVA::FISHER | now |a|n|a|l|o|g| | Mon Jan 09 1995 06:21 | 16 |
| I am doing this as we speak, ahhh "note", a gas cooktop and a electric
double oven built in. Boy that really hits you for the bucks. We could
have done a gas stove with electric ovens for a lot less $$. Not only
are the separate units more $$, the cabinet fo rthe builtin is right
up there -- and we're not getting expensive cabinets either. Anyway
for the cab, I told the salesperson, I'd make my own but order the rest
of her layout -- for cabinets it's the easiest of the bunch to make
it's just the biggest. (The cab listed for $1083 so even with the
53% discount, it'd be $495.)
Anyway, back to type of cooking, we opted for the propane cooktop
because we like cooking with gas but I think electric ovens are
easier to regulate and besides, we just had to economize somewhere :-).
ed
|
2014.7 | | DFSAXP::JP | Telling tales of Parrotheads and Parties | Mon Jan 09 1995 07:38 | 10 |
| I've got the Jennaire range with gas cooktop and electric oven. Love it. I
wouldn't part with it.
My mother-in-law just replaced her electric range with ceramic elements (not
because it was old, but because it was the worst excuse for range technology
ever invented) with a new ranger that has a halogen cook top (the kind you might
have seen on Graham Kerr'show). The halogen units are the closest I've seen to
the responsiveness of gas/propane yet.
-JP
|
2014.8 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | proud counter-culture McGovernik | Mon Jan 09 1995 10:34 | 14 |
| We have gas, and I wouldn't trade it for the world. While I am still
stuck with the horrible stove that existed when we moved in, I wouldn't
trade it for the highest tech electric on the market.
As others have said, our ideal would be a six burner/double oven set up
with sealed gas burners. However, that is in the future when we can
afford to redo the kitchen. For now, I will put up with the
apartment-sized four-burner we have. For canning, gas is really the
way to go, because of the heat control. I would hate to have to move
our double-decker pressure cooker off a burner because i couldn't get
the heat down quickly, or to risk jar leakage by letting the pressuer
off quickly to get the same result.
meg
|
2014.9 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | too few args | Mon Jan 09 1995 11:31 | 9 |
|
grew up with an electric stove in the house, and now that i've
been using gas for many years, can't imagine how my mother
stood it. gas is the only way to go, imo. you can boil a pot
of water faster on electric, but that's about the only advantage
that springs to mind.
hold out for gas!! 8^)
|
2014.10 | I agree: gas is much better | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Mon Jan 09 1995 11:59 | 11 |
| I agree with what everyone has said so far: grew up with electric, have
gas now, and would hate to go back! I have a lot more control, and I
can heat small pans much faster. If I had room for it, I'd love to
have a big commercial stove with a real wok burner, among other things
- there are stir fry dishes I can't make because I can't get the wok
hot enough. (Yeah, you can buy a separate wok burner, but I don't know
where I'd cram that in either - very small house!) If you had an
electric stove, you definitely couldn't - though some friends have good
luck with a flat-bottomed ("Mongolian") wok.
/Charlotte
|
2014.11 | More questions re: gas | GENRAL::KILGORE | The UT Desert Rat living in CO | Mon Jan 09 1995 23:42 | 16 |
| My hubby is worried about the film build up around the stove from gas. Is
that still a problem? We had propane in a mobile home for a few months
while we canned meats and veggies prior to moving to the mountains and
became hippies. ;-) And everything was covered with this sticky film that
was the pits to try and clean off. Also a concern is the gas consuming the
oxygen in the house. In motor homes and travel trailers they say to open a
vent or window prior to cooking. Does everyone vent their gas stove's
exhaust?
BTW, I am the primary cook. He cooks if I'm not around and it is something
simple. I like to keep the kitchen my domain. :-)
I still can't decide on a center island...I think I would run into it all
the time. Thanks for the responses so far.
Judy
|
2014.12 | | DFSAXP::JP | Telling tales of Parrotheads and Parties | Tue Jan 10 1995 07:22 | 7 |
| The film buildup is not gas, but grease. The best solution is an exhaust fan,
but you will still get a film in some places (notably around the exhaust fan).
I wouldn't worry about consuming all the oxygen in the house. Most houses are
leaky enough to solve that problem. On the other hand, my exhaust fan is more
powerful than my house leaks, and results in pulling air down the woodstove or
furnace flues unless I open a window a little bit in the kitchen.
|
2014.13 | So keep the kitchen clean, huh? | GENRAL::KILGORE | The UT Desert Rat living in CO | Tue Jan 10 1995 09:01 | 9 |
| >> The film buildup is not gas, but grease.
Yuk! Thanks for that info. That film was everywhere in the mobile home we
bought and we thought it had to do with the propane. Well, now we know. We
took out the stove shortly after we moved to the mountains and put in an old
wood cookstove instead so we didn't see the problem continue. Maybe the
people before us were into deep frying alot. How gross!
Judy
|
2014.14 | | DFSAXP::JP | Telling tales of Parrotheads and Parties | Tue Jan 10 1995 09:43 | 12 |
| You don't need to deep fry at all. Anytime you sautee, brown, sear, stirfry,
just about anything, you'll get airborn grease or oil vapors.
If you use an exhaust fan they will stay concentrated around the stove.
Otherwise, it drifts all around the house.
Due to lack of storage, I keep a couple of trays on top of the cabinets above
our stove. These are always coated with a film, and it takes lots more than 1
run thru the dish washer to get this film off, too! Lately, I've taken to
storing them in a bag and recycling the bag periodically. The cabinets are
easier to keep clean. We use regular treatments of Murphy's Oil Soap, which
prevents the film from adhering.
|
2014.15 | Another vote for gas | DONVAN::FARINA | | Tue Jan 10 1995 17:28 | 10 |
| You probably don't need much more encouragement, but like so many
others, I grew up with electric and now have a gas stove/oven. I would
not go back to electric. And frankly, I don't have any problems with
the gas oven, either, although many comments I'd read here made me very
nervous before I used it for the first time. Maybe I'm just lucky with
this particular oven (it seems small to me, but works great). It's an
older stove, so I know it's not because it's a new model.
Susan
|
2014.16 | The whole gas range was a good move. | IMTDEV::BRUNO | | Tue Jan 10 1995 18:39 | 10 |
| RE: <<< Note 2014.15 by DONVAN::FARINA >>>
>>And frankly, I don't have any problems with the gas oven, either,
>>...
>>Maybe I'm just lucky with this particular oven
Mark me down as another lucky person. My gas oven is great, and
it IS a new model.
Greg
|
2014.17 | | GEMGRP::gemnt3.zko.dec.com::Winalski | Careful with that AXP, Eugene | Tue Jan 10 1995 19:17 | 12 |
| Regarding ventilation when a gas stove is in use:
In my experience, a gas stove doesn't require any special ventilation
requirements. The only caveat I've ever heard in this regard is that
you should never use a gas range as a substitute for a proper heating
system to heat your house. You run the risk of carbon monoxide
poisoning if you do. This isn't a problem when using a gas stove for
cooking because when cooking, you don't leave all the burners on full
blast for long periods of time as is the case when you're using the
stove to heat the house.
--PSW
|
2014.18 | Why not a gas oven? | HOTLNE::CORMIER | | Wed Jan 11 1995 11:36 | 8 |
| Why don't people like gas ovens? I've had gas stove and oven for 11
years, and I love it. I, too, went from electric to gas, and aside
from the initial few months where I BURNED everything, I would not go
back to electric. What is the "con" for a gas oven?
BTW, my stove/oven is well over 35 years old (avacado green, no less!),
has a heater with it. Mine is vented into the chimney. Never had a
problem or repair on ANY of the components.
Sarah
|
2014.19 | | WRKSYS::ROTH | Geometry is the real life! | Wed Jan 11 1995 17:02 | 18 |
| My uderstanding is that the heat may be more uniform in
electric ovens.
However, my mom had a self-cleaining gas oven which was very
well insulated (a Sears, but manufactured by Roper, still a good
brand I believe) and had a very uniform temperature. It also had
this wonderful big burner that could be turned down to barely a
simmer, impossible on a electric range.
Perhaps not as fine as an expensive yuppie model like a Viking,
(which are unbelievably uniform - and unbelievably expensive)
but very good. The self cleaning feature may have had something
to do with this.
In any case, you should always calibrate an oven by measuring
when you set it up.
- Jim
|
2014.20 | just use an oven thermometer | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Jan 12 1995 12:06 | 11 |
| I don't pay too much attention to the oven's temperature as indicated
on its control anyhow - I check the oven thermometer instead. I think
the control setting is a little bit low. It doesn't matter a whole lot
for most of the sorts of things I bake anyhow. If the casserole is
supposed to bake at 350 and the rolls that go with it at 400, they are
both going to get done at 375 anyhow. My gas oven has no problem with
uneven heating unless you stuff in so many baking sheets that the air
can't circulate around them (it heats, of course, from the bottom). It
needs an inch or so of clearance all the way around whatever is inside.
/Charlotte
|
2014.21 | gas more 'in' & ceremonious, but new electrics cleaner | APLVEW::DEBRIAE | | Thu Jan 12 1995 12:23 | 49 |
|
OK, I guess I'm a renegade here. I have a dirty secret to confess - I indeed
cook on an electric stovetop. Sigh.
We are getting a new stove soon, and look to be settling on a Jenn-Air
convection oven with a newer electric halogen stovetop. I've never used a
residential home gas stovetop so I don't know what I'm missing,
partially on purpose. I have a tremendous distaste for the propane tanks
required outside homes for gas cooking, I think they're the biggest eyesore
possible on a house. "This Old House" buried the propane tank last week -
the tank cost: $900! That's probably equal to the cost of lifetime's supply
of cooking propane!
I haven't had any problems cooking on electric stovetops. The only benefit
to gas is a faster reaction time reducing heat by turning down the gas knob.
True, but I reproduce the same behavior on an electric top by simply lifting
the frying pan off the element, either a little or a lot, depending on the
amount of heat reduction I want. Instant reaction. I have no problems with
this method.
This came from my innate cooking preference for cooking with only two exact
cooktop settings - Off and High. (This might be a cultural trait. My
mother, grandmother, and aunts all cook this way). You either stir _very_
fast or lift the pan often to compensate. You cook fast! None of this having
patience waiting around for a pan set on medium... :-)
I used professional gas stoves as a part-time cook at a restaurant during
high school years. Gas worked well there but I got the same results as I get
now with electrics (the only benefit that their model offered was being able
to handle the heavy commercial abuse of slamming huge pots on it without
having heating surfaces to worry about - I'm a little more careful with my
own pans). I haven't pined away for gas cooktops. Maybe I don't know what
I'm missing (though recent cooking on gas campstoves isn't sublime), but I've
had good results and times on electrics so far. Match that up with the
promise of easy cleanup from the newer halogen tops, and I think you have a
winning combination with it for in-home use. Even without the fact that I'm
often using heavier pans (La Creuset, etc) which have an inherently high heat
'capacitance' anyway, requiring some attention toward looking ahead at what heat
the pans will need in a few minutes from now anyway, negating the potential
gas advantage when the pans are too heavy to lift.
I can't imagine gas being that much of an ah-hah experience over electric,
but what do I know. Right now gas is for camping, halogens/electrics are for
home. Works for me...
-Erik
|
2014.22 | | KOOLIT::FARINA | | Thu Jan 12 1995 12:28 | 11 |
| I have only been using this gas stove since March, when I moved into my
house, but it is no "dirtier" than any electric I've ever used. And I
don't have to worry about the electric elements going on the gas stove
- just the igniter! ;-)
If I had to have propane tanks, I probably wouldn't have a gas stove.
I have natural gas for my stove, furnace, and hot water. Propane tanks
would not only be an eye-sore, they'd make me very nervous.
To the noter with the avocado stove: mine's harvest gold! ;-)
|
2014.23 | | GRANPA::JBOBB | Janet Bobb dtn:339-5755 | Thu Jan 12 1995 12:30 | 11 |
|
Not quite on the subject but a reference to an avocado green stove made
me think of it...
on a repeat of a tv show (Grace under Fire) this week, one of main
characters, Wade, is trying to repair an old mustard colored
stove/oven for Grace, to save her money. When asked to "please give me
some good news about this stove!" his response is ..." they don't make
it in this color any more!"
Now - back to the regularly scheduled program....
|
2014.24 | | BIGQ::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Thu Jan 12 1995 15:25 | 10 |
|
I started in 1969 with an AQUA gas stove with no features, went to
a brown gas stove with self-cleanning oven later, and now have an
almond gas stove with self-cleanning oven. I have to set the oven
door in the lock position so it's not continuous clean. I have
always preferred a gas stove and oven.
justme....jacqui
|
2014.25 | | RT128::KENAH | Do we have any peanut butter? | Thu Feb 23 1995 14:03 | 7 |
| My ideal kitchen would have gas burners (for their excellent heat
setting control) and electric ovens (for their more uniform heat).
The very thing that I like in a gas burner, the fact that it heats and
cools quickly, is not something I want in an oven. Conversely, the way
electric ovens work (heat more evenly, cool more slowly) is not what I
want in a burner.
|
2014.26 | Smooth Tops | AKOCOA::SALLET | | Tue Feb 28 1995 15:53 | 6 |
| We are looking at a smooth-top electric stove - I guess it's Halogen???
Anyways, I'd like to know peoples opinions on the smoothtops. Some
people in other files say they hate them but admitted they had older
models. I'm looking for people's comments who have newer ones. We
have only looked thus far at the Magic Chef and Whirlpool models. They
certainly seem like they'd be easier to keep clean.
|
2014.27 | smooth tops look good... | NEMAIL::FISHER | | Mon Mar 06 1995 13:30 | 12 |
| I have a smooth top Maytag about 3 years old. They come in a couple of
varieties...Halogen and other. Other is what I have and it basically
works like a regular electric cooktop. I did not have the choice of
halogen at the time, well I did, buit it cost as much as the cooktop
and oven I bought. Anyway, they are easier to clean once you get
the system down and use the special cooktop cream cleaner and you can
scrape burned stuff off with a single edge razor. I'd rather have
gas and a Viking at that, but cost was a concern at the time. The
black surface when shined properly set in in tile looks good and
cooks like any other electric.
Saul
|
2014.28 | Combo gas/elect. stove ? | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Thu Oct 19 1995 16:19 | 21 |
| Cross posted in HOME_WORK:
Perhaps I was dreaming at the time, but I could have sworn that I
saw a combination gas/electric stove. What I was looking for was a gas
oven and 2 of the 4 burners to be gas, while the other two are
electric.
The reason being is that it makes no difference to my wife in
baking, broiling, or boiling if it is gas or electric, but she prefers
the control and heat dispersion of an electric burner for certain
things, like making omlets, for example. I like the gas because it
can be used if power goes out and it's cheaper to operate than
electric.
Does such a beast exist, or was it a figment of my imagination ?
If it does exist, any leads or ballpark costs would be appreciated.
I guess if one doesn't exist I could just get a gas stove and install
an electric stove top somewhere ?
Ray
|
2014.29 | I've had one | KERNEL::LEYLANDS | Indecision: key to flexibility | Fri Oct 20 1995 08:02 | 8 |
| Ray
This may be different over there (I'm in the UK) but I've had a cooker
which had an electric oven and the burners were gas (one unit not a
separate oven and hob). Not sure if you could have a combo on the hob
though?!?!
Sharon
|
2014.30 | Get a gas stove and install the electric "real soon now" | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Tue Jan 09 1996 22:06 | 9 |
| .28:
� the control and heat dispersion of an electric burner for certain
� things...
I like the "control" and heat dispersion of hibachis and bonfires, but
I don't let them in my kitchen either.
Dick
|
2014.31 | Propane is too dangerous for me... | SUPER::MACKONIS | "I are a writer!" | Wed Jan 10 1996 15:30 | 19 |
| I would like to hear more from folks who have the halogen cooktops. I
have not spoken to anyone who ever had one.
I have cooked with gas for about 20 years and really like it.
Unfortunately, I would never buy another gas stove unless it was piped
in - NO MORE PROPANE for me. I live out in the country where my only
choice is propane. I have on the average of 1 gas leak per year. I even
heated with propane one winter and had more trouble with frozen lines.
If it gets too cold condensation in the lines freeze, what a pain. I
think it is dangerous. My hats off to those you who have had good luck,
but I have replaced more propane tanks and lines in those 20 years than
I care to think about. I just took out my gas Hot water heater and
replaced it with electric (I know...) and this summer, the gas range
goes - this means the ugly propane tank goes and all my fears of gas
which by far outweigh the benefits of cooking with gas.
Now back to the discussion of stoves - anyone out there with the
halogen tops?
|
2014.32 | | STAR::MWOLINSKI | uCoder sans Frontieres | Thu Jan 11 1996 08:48 | 20 |
|
Rep. .31
>>>Propane is too dangerous for me...
I have used propane for over twenty years and have had none of
the problems you describe.
>>>Now back to the discussion of stoves - anyone out there with the
halogen tops?
I don't have one but my friends who have them either love them or
hate them. There seems to be no middle ground. The small amount of
cooking I have done them has left me in the hate them camp. I didn't
like the heat control and dispersion but I did like the cleanup.
-mike
|
2014.33 | What a GAS | CRONIC::SULLIVAN | | Thu Jan 11 1996 11:23 | 9 |
|
Nothing outweighs cooking with gas.
Ever see any of the chefs in the shows using an electric or god
forbid a halogen burner?--->
Gas is what the pros use...
- Dave
|
2014.34 | | VAXCPU::michaud | Jeff Michaud - ObjectBroker | Thu Jan 11 1996 19:52 | 9 |
| > Ever see any of the chefs in the shows using an electric or god
> forbid a halogen burner?--->
>
> Gas is what the pros use...
But you are jumping to a conclusion as to "why" they use it.
While it's likely that's the main reason, another potential
reason is "cost" ..... (know how much it would cost to run
that many burners all day long on electricity :-)
|
2014.35 | | ONLYME::MACKONIS | "I are a writer!" | Fri Jan 12 1996 13:15 | 6 |
| Let's also take a look at where these cooking shows are being filmed. It is one
thing to say Chef X has gas in his home, on a tv set, they are more likey to
have a portable propane tank hooked up to the countertop ranges for
"portability"- sets don't stay put til the next week. they are disassembled and
moved so another show can use the space.
|
2014.36 | | TP011::KENAH | Do we have any peanut butter? | Fri Jan 12 1996 13:35 | 16 |
| >Let's also take a look at where these cooking shows are being filmed. It is one
>thing to say Chef X has gas in his home, on a tv set, they are more likey to
>have a portable propane tank hooked up to the countertop ranges for
>"portability"- sets don't stay put til the next week. they are disassembled and
>moved so another show can use the space.
No they're not. I worked in television for eleven years, and sets
for weekly shows were permanant. They were NOT disassembled every
week; real estate (the floor space these sets took up) was MUCH cheaper
than labor (the manpower needed to assemble/disassemble the sets --
stage hands are NOT cheap labor.)
As for cost -- in an industry where ingredients can get extremely
expensive, the cost savings of gas vs. electricity is negligible.
Pros use gas because they prefer it, for scores of reasons already
documented in this conference.
|
2014.37 | Cooking with gas. | BULEAN::ZALESKI | | Fri Jan 12 1996 15:38 | 11 |
| A friend of mine is a chef in NY city at the Plaza. He said the reason
that all the rest. use gas is cost but also because of the heat. Gas
is hotter, it responds faster when you turn it up and down, if you
want to flame the dish, it is harder to get electric to flame unless
you use a match, in his words "God forbid". Another reason is history,
they have always used gas. Another reason he mentioned was that it is
cleaner burning. things get spilled and with electricity you could get
shocked. With gas it falls under the flame and get cleaned up later.
He mentioned other reasons but I can't remember now.
later
|
2014.38 | | VAXCPU::michaud | Julia Child | Fri Jan 12 1996 20:12 | 13 |
| .36> expensive, the cost savings of gas vs. electricity is negligible.
You don't live in NH, do you? :-)
.36> Pros use gas because they prefer it, for scores of reasons already
.36> documented in this conference.
Oh yea, this conference is the best resource to find out why the
pros use gas. Digital is loaded with lots of ex-pro-chefs reading
and writing in this notesfile :-)
FWIW, a "gas vs. electric" cook-top discussion is also relatively
recent in either the Home-Work or Cosumers conference.
|
2014.39 | Slowly I turned... | CRONIC::SULLIVAN | | Mon Jan 15 1996 16:58 | 14 |
|
Wow,
Are't we a bit testy this week. I simply stating a fact about gas. I
do relaize the gentlemen that started the wanted info on electric. I
believe I contributed the best I could. However, you are in the cooks
file. You would be surprised how many of us have cooked
professionally at one time or another. This need not matter...
because we are all cooks in this conference.
When the tuff get going the tuff crank up the GAS.
- Dave
|
2014.40 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Mon Jan 15 1996 17:41 | 5 |
|
.39 agreed. it doesn't take a brain surgeon to know why using
a gas stove is preferable. nor does it take a professional
cook. all one has to do is try both. control is the name
of the game.
|
2014.41 | Bad day? | BULEAN::ZALESKI | | Tue Jan 16 1996 10:36 | 4 |
| Sounds like .38 has a little case of agida (sp?), that is upset stomach
in Italian from too much electric cooking. :-)
pete
|
2014.42 | Next stove will be gas | BASEX::WERNETTE | | Wed Jan 17 1996 09:53 | 6 |
| I thought the points made about cooking with gas were excellent.
I have an electric stove now and I do have to accomodate the
slow response in both heating and lower the heat by using more
than one burner for some of my recipes.
Terry
|
2014.43 | | VAXCPU::michaud | Jeff Michaud - ObjectBroker | Thu Jan 18 1996 19:25 | 23 |
| > Sounds like .38 has a little case of agida (sp?), that is upset stomach
> in Italian from too much electric cooking. :-)
Me thinks you and the other noter who thought I was testy didn't
see the liberal use of :-) in my note. And if anyone commenting
had bothered to read my original note (.34), I even said it's the
most likely reason they use gas, all I was saying is that the logic
used to arrive at that conclusion is flawed and I offered another
possible "hypothosis" for why the pros use gas (which BTW, note .37
validates).
FWIW, I have used both gas and electric. Both have their advantages
and disadvantages. One of the big problems with electric is that
there is a much wider range or quality than in gas stoves, so those
using lower quality electric stoves will have a bad taste (pun :-)
left in their mouth when it comes to electric.
Here's a hint, count the number of loops the coil makes. The low
quality stoves have few loops and lots of open space between the
loops. This gives them very little surface area, and hence less
energy output (and hence will take alot longer to boil water, etc).
The cheaper electric stoves also usually only have one 8" burner
and the other three are 6".
|
2014.44 | | VAXCPU::michaud | Jeff Michaud - ObjectBroker | Thu Jan 18 1996 19:40 | 16 |
| > You would be surprised how many of us have cooked
> professionally at one time or another.
I sure would be surprised as I certainly wouldn't be expecting
even one (1) ex-professional chef to be noting in this conference.
A switch from pro chef to working for a computer company appears
on the surface to be a major career change. I wouldn't be surprised
that there are a number of ex-"cooks" in here (some being cooks
in the military) however.
Or was the noter who said "that's what the pros use" was anyone
who "cooked" for a living? If so, then my mistake, I had taken
"pros" in this context to mean "professional chefs".
In either case, as I indicated, it's irrelevant to the nit (and
I admit it's a nit :-) I originally commented on.
|
2014.45 | Policy question | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Thu Jan 18 1996 22:47 | 2 |
| Is panning allowed in this conference?
|
2014.46 | | STAR::MWOLINSKI | uCoder sans Frontieres | Fri Jan 19 1996 08:35 | 13 |
|
Rep .45 Jack
>>>Is panning allowed in this conference?
Speaking with my moderator's hat on, yes but only with copper pans
bought at Dehillern in Paris in person. ;-)
-mike
|
2014.47 | I love my halogen/radiant cooktop | GENRAL::KILGORE | The UT Desert Rat living in CO | Fri Jan 19 1996 10:04 | 16 |
| I have a combination radiant/halogen ceran cooktop. I was the outstanding
home economics student in my senior year in high school. I've been married
to the same person for 24+ years who loves my cooking. I've never cooked
professionally but I've cooked on many surfaces including gas, electric stove
with the coils, woodstove and now the radiant/halogen cooktop. I prefer the
cooktop.
What I have found with the halogen burners is instant on and instant off.
The radiant burners are instant on and slow to cool off like a regular
electric coil. I love having the ability to expand my countertop on top of
the cooktop and have found it to be a breeze cleanup and have not had a
problem with scratching. I don't cook `gourmet' meals, no flames or anything
like that, but my hubby and our friends that have eaten in our home think
they are eating gourmet meals. ;-)
Judy
|
2014.48 | | lspace.zko.dec.com::winalski | PLIT happens... | Fri Jan 19 1996 17:36 | 6 |
| Official moderator's policy is that we respect that viewpoints on
subjects like gas stoves vs. electric stoves differ, and we don't get
into religious wars about it. See the verbiage about this sort of
thing in one of the replies to note 1.
--PSW, COOKS host moderator
|
2014.49 | Gas me! | CRONIC::SULLIVAN | | Wed Jan 24 1996 13:59 | 17 |
|
The truth bareth---
I recently moved and the newly inhabited abode had an electric stove
of the coil type. I AM the cook I have ALWAYS cooked with gas. I said
to my better half I would give the electric a try. Yick, I always seem
to turn on the wrong burner(coil) and can never get it set to the temp
I want. Forget the trying to get the flames flying with the sautee'.
There is gas to the house. After 30 days with the electric IT OUTTA HERE!
The plumbers will be here next week to get MY GAS back. I also need
stove recommendations. Anyone got info on good gas stoves for the 90's.
MODS --> If you want to move this to a new note kool...
- Dave
|