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How to Find the Best Cookware for You

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What cookware do you want? What’s the best set of pots for you?

The answer depends on how and what you cook.

For instance, I bought a set of Carote cookware a few years ago. It’s non-stick, and I do love that part. It’s also lightweight and easy to pick up. Lastly, it’s fairly inexpensive. However, the handles are not oven-proof. So, no searing a roast and popping it in the oven to braise for several hours.

Carote Cookware

A slightly better choice for me would have been T-Fal cookware. Oven-safe up to 400 degrees Fahrenheit, but the lids are only safe up to 350 degrees. They are also slightly more expensive.

T Fal Cookware

If your cooking is mostly on the stove top, this would be a good set for you.

But I need cookware that can go from the range to the oven. It leaves me with 2 choices:

Honestly, I have some of both. Here’s the best and worst about both types.

Advantages and Disadvantages of Stainless Steel Cookware

Advantages

Disadvantages

Cuisinart is a favorite of mine: good quality, well-made, and built to last forever.

Cuisinart Stainless Steel

Advantages and Disadvantages of Cast Iron Cookware

Advantages

Disadvantages

Top U.S. cast iron cookware makers include Lodge, Smithey, Field Company, Stargazer, and Lancaster—each known for durable, high-performance skillets, Dutch ovens, and specialty pans. These brands are manufactured in states like Tennessee, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, and Illinois, so all are made in America.

Lodge cast iron cookware

My chicken fryer deep cast-iron pan lives on my stove top. I use it constantly, for frying bacon, to searing meat.

Although I am showing sets of cookware, it’s easy to buy individual pieces of stainless steel or cast iron to get only the pieces you need. Purchasing piece by piece is usually more costly than buying a pre-packaged set. I have found I use some pieces more frequently than I would have thought possible.

I can’t finish this article about cookware without mentioning enameled cast iron. I have some of this too. Although I love the beautiful colors, it is as heavy as plain black cast iron and is prone to enamel chipping and discoloration. Le Crueset is the most famous brand from France, but many other companies produce enameled cast-iron pots at much lower prices. I don’t use it now nearly as much as my plain black cast iron.

Since I also bake a lot of sourdough bread, I have paid attention to others’ posts about enameled cast-iron cookware exploding when ice is added to generate steam while baking sourdough boules in cast-iron Dutch ovens. If I bake boules at all (mostly I bake loaves – easier to slice!), It’s in my plain black cast-iron pan.

You may not need 3 kinds of cookware like me. I have accumulated the different types – Carote, stainless steel and cast-iron – over my lifetime of nearly 70 years. I do find I have my go-tos for certain recipes, which keep me comfortable cooking the food the way we want it. My suggestion is buy a piece or two of each and see what works best for your household. We’re all different, and what works for me may not be the best for you.

So tell me, what have you found to be best?

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