rotrax
Well-Known Member
Not dogmatic sorry, just a personal opinion, cooking is a matter of "personal taste" isn't it?
There are some facts though:
You cannot make a coffee with small moka machine, or heat a milk pan with a small diameter as the induction will not recognize it (or vitroceramic will heat the whole room).
Once they (electricity/induction) are switched off, the wide contact surface remains hot and continues cooking for a lot longer, one has to move the pan to some other place. Turn off the gas and the heat is totally gone.
You cannot use a proper wok (hemispherical, not the flattened ones) on induction or electricity. With a flat bottomed wok when one waves it it in the air to stir the food, then put it back over the hob, then stir again in the air and so on, there is always the risk of crazing/damaging the cooking surface. For the perfectionist, one cannot make the "flame" inside the wok, the one giving that distinctive charcoal taste. Agree that regular home gas burners are too small for big woks, I find them ok for small ones up to 2-3 persons.
Simmering a big flat pan with a tiny thickness of liquid to be kept at low temperature, induction working in pulses it splashes the liquid all around. Ok I had induction a few years ago maybe modern models have improved.
I find it impossible to grill vegetables like eggplants (i.e. that take a long time to cook) because after 15-20ish minutes the grill pan over induction or electricity will cause overheating, all the system goes into protection and switches itself off. Meat or gambas are ok they have a much shorter cooking time. Likewise if I have to grill say sausages or ribs during a long period (say a lot of guests and normal size pans) I must use my gas burner, or the setting on the electric must be too low to avoid overheat protection.
Anyway, the recent tendency in regulations seems to go towards all electric so I am obliged to have vitroceramic and induction at home, I just added a portable gas burner for some specific tasks; when I am back on the boat it will (happily) only be gas, each one its personal liking![]()
Now you are qualifying your short dogmatic statement with a page of 'yes but's'.
IMHO, from personal and direct experience cooking with electricity is fine. I dont recognise the problems you state, they are not an issue for us.
Electric cooking is all we have at home. And half of what we use on the boat.
You will note YOU are the one mentioning induction.
We dont use it, our heat is very controlable and with no issues.