Maintaining your aluminum, copper and stainless steel cookware is necessary to increase to lifetime of your pots and pans. Check out these tips to learn the quick and proper way to care for your cookware.
July 27, 2015
Maintaining your aluminum, copper and stainless steel cookware is necessary to increase to lifetime of your pots and pans. Check out these tips to learn the quick and proper way to care for your cookware.
Second only to copper as a heat conductor, aluminum alloy is an excellent choice for both stovetop cooking and baking.
Copper cookware is very expensive, very handsome and very good at conducting heat. Professional chefs like using it because it heats and cools rapidly and evenly.
Copper cookware is not hard to care for, but it does need frequent polishing to keep it looking good.
An excellent conductor of heat, rolled steel is a good material for cookware that is used over high heat, such as woks and crepe pans.
To make cookware that has the highest heat conductivity, the easiest cleaning and the greatest durability, manufacturers have started fusing several metals — copper, aluminum and steel, for example — in a single pot.
Maintaining your aluminum, copper and stainless steel cookware doesn't have to be a overwhelming chore. Keep these tips in mind and clean your pots and pans the right way to help them last longer!
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