• distantsounds@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Its great to hear the tech is progressing. I’ve had terrible experiences with them 10+ years ago. I really wish there was a practical way to try before buying

    • cm0002@piefed.world
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      2 months ago

      I got one last year, replaced a shitty old school electric coil one.

      Similarly, I was kinda skeptical, but in my mind I reasoned it can’t be possibly worse than the shit electric one I had at the time and I’m not going to pay to have a gas line installed sooo I went with it.

      It’s the best fucking stove I’ve ever cooked on in my life. By a LONG shot.

      I can watch a pot of water boil
      Oil is up to temp faster than you can turn around and grab your meat and seasonings
      Almost-magic fast temp adjustments

      The best part? You know those black burned on crud spots(that are most prevalent on glass tops) that you have to scrape off? Non existent. Idk if its unique to Samsung, but it’s surface is fucking dead easy to clean, it never got the burned on crap after a year when I’ve had new stoves in the past develop it in a matter of weeks

      • tychosmoose@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        The easy clean is really due to how the induction coil heats the pan but not the cooktop surface. With the surface only heating indirectly it’s really not possible for stuff to burn on nearly as badly. At least when compared to a conventional radiant electric. The surface just doesn’t get as hot.

        I went from induction to a house with a gas cooktop and miss the induction a lot.

        • cm0002@piefed.world
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          2 months ago

          Ah gotcha, I wasn’t sure because my surface feels so…weird (it doesn’t feel or look like glass or ceramic) so I wasn’t sure if the “magic” was in that or just the way induction worked

          • DarkSirrush@lemmy.ca
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            2 months ago

            I actually got a silicone cover for my induction stove, that can handle cooking temps, and it means the surface stays pristine.

            Full agree though, never want another coil/glasstop stove, induction is the way to go.

    • tangeli@piefed.social
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      2 months ago

      I had a terrible experience with one just last year. Had to replace it. Went back to an electric cooktop with simmerstats just last month. We’re much happier now. Can cook again without all the burning and boiling over.

      I know an induction cooktop could be much better but the one we had couldn’t simmer anything: it could only intermittently overheat it. And occasionally it would switch to either full power (very dangerous - it was very powerful) or no power (absolutely ruins a steak when you’re trying to sear it). Technicians came multiple times and concluded ‘there’s nothing wrong’. Fortunately, after almost two years, they agreed to an ‘upgrade’.

      I expect commercial induction cooktops are much better than consumer grade but they’re too expensive.

      I wouldn’t buy another that I hadn’t tried first. I know one place that has a showroom with everything powered. Not that they would let me actually try cooking anything, but at least one can put a pot of water on and try out the controls.

      • silence7@slrpnk.netOP
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        2 months ago

        This is a far worse experience than I have had with a consumer induction cooktop. Im able to simmer, low-temperature frying, and the likes just fine