Unbending bowed non-stick pans.


I

Ian Stirling

Having several non-stick frying pans that could double as bowls when
upside down, and little to lose, I tried an experiment.

Taking a steel 1" plate, a small hammer (1" flat face) a thich towel,
and the pans.

I took the towel, placed over the pan which was laid on top of the steel.
Now, raising the hammer approximately 12", I made around 20 strikes
going from the center outwards in a spiral pattern.

I then looked to see if I'd made any difference in the approximately
1/4" bow (over 10") diameter.

I was rather surprised to find that the pan was now almost entirely flat,
with very little curve.
Repeated this on a smaller pan, with good results.

A firm surface that's harder than the frying pan is a must, I happened to
have some steel plate lying around.
A bit of granite plate, or even a flat concrete floor should do just as
well.
 
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I

Ian Stirling

Loose Cannon said:
Did all the banging loosen up any of the non-stick coating? That stuff is
supposed to be cancerous. Throw the damned non-stick pans out and get a
Nope.
The fumes from overheated teflon are nasty.
(Not AIUI carcinogenic.)
good 'Made in USA' iron frying pan. Properly seasoned, they are almost
non-stick and you don't have to worry about ingesting the chemical coating.
I see no reason to import cast iron pans from the colonies anyway.
 
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I

Ian Stirling

Loose Cannon said:
Did all the banging loosen up any of the non-stick coating? That stuff is
supposed to be cancerous. Throw the damned non-stick pans out and get a
Nope.
The fumes from overheated teflon are nasty.
(Not AIUI carcinogenic.)
good 'Made in USA' iron frying pan. Properly seasoned, they are almost
non-stick and you don't have to worry about ingesting the chemical coating.
It's a cheap fix that takes 10 seconds to do.

I see no reason to import cast iron pans from the colonies anyway. :)
 

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