T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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4066.1 | I'd still prefer a gas stove top | WRKSYS::KNIKER | Hay saved and Cork beat | Fri Dec 08 1995 15:24 | 20 |
| We have a JennAir stove with Ceran-top and convection oven though I don't
know if it's the exact same model you are considering. We bought ours about a
year and a half ago.
I'm reasonably pleased with the stove but if I had the option again I'd get one
with a gas cooktop. Even if you use an optimally sized pan (to fit properly on
the heating element) the heat transfer is nowhere near what you'd get with gas.
That said, we routinely use pots and pans that aren't matched with the heating
elements with no problems. I really like the convection oven. The Ceran-top is a
breeze to clean.
I just wish I could cook with gas again (and use my wok).
Chris
|
4066.2 | more info | PENUTS::DSULLIVAN | | Tue Dec 12 1995 09:15 | 17 |
|
I am the cook in the house. We just moved. We now have electric. I am doing
over the kitchen and did alot of reading/consumer reports etc.../
My take on your question is this. Do you cook alot? Do you have pans with
non-flat bottoms IE anything other than visions/revere ware?
I cook alot. and determined the old faithfull is better. If I trash a burner
it $12 at home depot to replace it and it just pops in. With the other model
you need to call a repair man and they are, according to my reading, expensive
to fix.
If you don't cook alot and are more concerned with looks then the Ceran is the
way to go. If you really use a stove and like to see the pans/flames flying
then gas or the old style electric IMHO is better.
- Dave
|
4066.3 | We decided no | MKOTS3::STARBRIGHT | Serenity | Mon Dec 18 1995 15:47 | 13 |
| We almost went with the ceran top, but after I found out about pan
sizing to burner sizing, the fact that you cannot use glass pots/pans
or cast iron pots/pans, we opted against it.
(You see, my sweety likes popcorn the old-fashioned way when we make
popcorn balls. You put the oil in the HUGE pot, add white popcorn and
shake like all get out until it is properly popped. (grin) No
micro-wave popcorn balls for him!)
PS: They do have some very nice pricey cleaners for the new ceran tops
though. (another grin)
Serenity
|
4066.4 | Very happy with my stovetop | CASDOC::RICHARDSON | | Sat Jan 20 1996 22:27 | 21 |
| We have a solid flat-top stove (have had it four years),
which I believe is Ceran. It's a Magic Chef. I love it.
I'm an avid and messy cook. With occasional spills, I
don't want a gas stove, as I don't want any little holes
to get clogged (I think that could get dangerous). I
always found the electric burner rings a real pain to clean.
Cleanup is not quite so easy as you might think with the
flat top, as the top gets hot and some spills can get sort
of baked on. However, it's much easier than with any
alternative stovetop. I use Fantastic to clean it. I've
never tried (or even seen for sale) any of the specialized
stovetop cleaners.
All the pots and pans need to have flat bottoms. I have a
set of cast-iron pans with flat bottoms, and they work fine.
I also have Revereware with flat bottoms.
Good luck with your decision!
Mary Alice
|
4066.5 | new gas stove is real easy to clean | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Mon Jan 22 1996 12:14 | 20 |
| Actually, a modern gas stove is pretty easy to clean. Nothing stays
over the openings in the gas jets anyhow, since the flames come out of
there. Anything that spills into a burnder goes down underneath the
jets. On my stove, if you take the grills and burner bibs off, you can
pop open the top of the stove. Most of the gas piping is inside
underneath, so all that is inside where the spills end up is just the
ends of the gas pipes and the burners themselves. So it is pretty easy
to clean up in there. My ancient stove (before it broke and I couldn't
get parts anymore and bought a modern one) had complex hard-to-clean
plumbing in there, so cleaning up was pretty messy.
I don't think I would be able to cook a lot of the things I normally
cook if I had a sold-top stove - we use the wok a lot. Even the gas
stove cannot get it hot enough for a few dishes - I'd need a wok
burner, or a big commercial stove, for that. One of my friends used to
do reasonably well cooking in a flat-bottom Mongolian-style wok on his
conventional electric stove, so maybe you could use one of those on a
solid-top stove?
/Charlotte
|
4066.6 | ceran and old pots | BULEAN::ZALESKI | | Mon Jan 22 1996 14:45 | 8 |
|
I have never used a ceran top stove. Question is when talking about
a WOK and also talking about the pots being flat, Is it possible to
cook with a wok on a stove like this? I also have an old cast iron
skillet that has a recess on the bottom for the old type electric
burners, would they also not work?
thanks/pete
|
4066.7 | but I have no first-hand experience with it (yet) | APLVEW::DEBRIAE | Ericaceaous to the extreme... | Mon Feb 05 1996 13:50 | 7 |
|
From what I understand about Ceran-tops, you won't be able to use
your over-the-coil wok with it. Nor probably the recessed-bottom
pan either...
-Erik
|