But when it comes to cooking with gas … what would you choose for your home? Do you use induction? Like it? Get a LARQ PureVis pitcher and start enjoying fresh, pure water today: bylarq.com/undecided1. If you liked this video, check out The Problem with Heat Pumps and Cold Weather ua-cam.com/video/H3jIRRzF6d0/v-deo.html
Yeah - I use gas, and not resistive elements due to controllability. Tried induction once, but didn't have time to really learn how to use it. It's something I would consider, but not when I'm hungry and need to cook ;)
I think you (@Matt Ferrell) are focusing your testing etc too much on boiling water - we seldom boil water with gas, but most of the time with water kettle. And this would make immediately the test(s) null and void? Although I was surprised about the emissions. So overall a two induction, two gas would still be the best, if you can turn the gas off.
Been using induction for a couple of years now and it’s amazing! It’s fast, precise and economical. The manufacturer bundled with induction cookware so everything works as expected. If I need to sear something I just use the outdoor grill.
Two more things: I'm actually surprised that these are so uncommon and also expensive. You can get these from IKEA in Germany for under 400 €. Also you don't need to worry about burnt handles from pots/pans, spill overs or cleaning pots (from the underside) anymore. Nothing burns to the surface of the stove or the pots themselves, so very time efficient to clean. Had an normal electric ceramic stove before which was a lot slower and was a lot more difficult to clean.
This. I was surprised by this $1000 number because while induction isn't cheap, it certainly isn't that much more expensive. Perhaps it's so much more expensive in the US because it's not so common yet?
@@AykevanLaethem That would be my guess as well. If barely anyone is interested in it, then there's barely anyone to sell it to. Then it doesn't make sense to build factories there for some of the manufacturers, which means that all of the wares from them would need to be imported, which further increases costs. That lessens the competition, but also makes it inefficient to depend on numbers sold for profits, so while less competition allows hiking up the prices, the need to earn more per piece forces the same. All in all, common things cost less, while rare ones cost more. It's just the way it is.
One thing to consider is that America runs on 120V/60Hz instead of Europe's 230V/50Hz, which makes a big difference in cable requirements. In general you need twice the number of amps for the same power.
@@Tedrousek The US is actually both 120V and 240V. Devices that use a lot of power generally run on 240V (ACs etc). If you want to learn more, there's a Technology Connections video about this explaining this with history and everything.
I used to swear on gas alone but nowadays I'd get induction any time. I grew up with gas, had pretty bad electrical stoves in the past but seeing my brother's induction stove in action absolutely convinced me.
Yeah it’s one of those things you really only need to try once and you immediately get it. I was skeptical too bc I had enjoyed the responsiveness of my gas stove when I moved to the US. But when my parents got the old radiant electric cooktop I had grown up with swapped out for an induction stove, it took me only one cooking session to get convinced. It’s so responsive, fast and consistent. The speed combined with the consistency is really amazing. Once you hit the sweet spot for sth to simmer, you just leave it on that setting. It’s mind bogglingly easy.
It's not just speed, energy efficiency and responsiveness. My induction cooktop also has all kinds of additional features like cookware temperature control and temperature probe for sous vide. With the probe, I can even incubate yogurt at precisely 109°F.
@@RationalSaneThinker Yeah that's super nice too. I'd mark that under consistency. Having no access to induction cooktops in my current living situation, I use an instantpot for those things, but it would be super nice to be able to just use the stove for that.
Instantpots are great too and may be more efficient due to pressure cooking - I don't know how they compare. You can get a single burner portable plug-in induction for $40-$150. I am happy enough with my cheap $40 one but it seems to have a hotter area in the middle; so a highly rated one is likely worth a little additional cost. The portability is a great feature! I don't think I will ever want a standard range again because 4 burners unnecessarily take up so much space. The efficiency of an induction stove make multiple burners unnecessary. I prep my steamed vegetables while the main dish is cooking and pop them on to steam while the main dish cools to eat. I mostly only cook in one pot, but find it natural to cook in series when I have one than one item due to the amazing efficiency or induction cooking. You can pop the portable induction burner in a drawer or cupboard when not in use - so it is handy that way as well, if you do not cook often. Happy cooking! @@xTobsecretx
I've cooked on all types of cooktops, but when I had to choose a cooktop when planning a kitchen remodel I went with induction, and I couldn't be happier. It ticks all the boxes: power, response, speed, but the unexpected benefit was the cleanup- even boil-overs (water in my area is extremely hard) easily clean up in a minute or two. I feel my chef friends prefer gas because it's all they've ever used, so they've adapted their technique to it and they're afraid changing cooktop technology will be like starting over (which it won't). However, one of my chef friends got to try my new induction during a major cook for a large party and he was blown away with not only the power and response, but the versatility with the bridge burner that links two elements with an element in between which allows you to use a rectangular griddle and head it very evenly. He's now seriously considering changing over. Is there anything I would change about it? Sure, like the standby time before the element turns off when you take the pan off the heat for a minute could be longer, but that's a minor issue. All things considered; I'm pleased with the choice I made.
I used to enjoy using gas stoves because of the responsiveness as well compared to coil electric, until I moved into a place where they put the CHEAPEST gas stove they could in. Its horrible to cook with in every way and if I owned the place I'd have replaced it the same week it had been installed. I've been using a single induction burner for the last year because even though its not great because of lacking features its no worse than the gas stove thats here and it helped cut back on waste heat during the summer.
@@scottlange2766 I have used cast on mine, I have mostly used a newer nonstick pan this last year that is made to work with induction. You'd have to look around to find prices & size, and all things can get damaged you just have to adjust to what might with those however a scratch won't really hurt the functionality of the induction stove any other that looks.
I totally agree. And clean up is not even comparable to other types of glass-top because induction ranges don't get hot the way radiant ones do. Cleanup is SO easy.
@@scottlange2766 I use cast iron and enameled cast iron on my induction range. Over time the ceramic top will get scratched if you are not careful. That is fine. It's a working surface and if it doesn't remain glossy, so what? It's still flat and so much easier to clean than any gas or coil-top range. It's a tool, and tools should be cared for but not babied.
As our house doesn't have a connection to gas to begin with, we have an induction stove. I was cooking on gas in our previous house and I can't say I've missed it. You covered pretty much everything that there is to cover. There is one tiny downside: tossing, wokking and other techniques that require you to lift you're pan you'll need to rework a bit. As lifting the pan breaks off the contact and thus effectively kills the heat source. Hasn't been an issue for me. Oh and free tip for those who are considering switching and need new pans: do yourself a favor and get rid of non stick pans. Maybe keep one for frying an egg and stuff, but we've moved to carbon steel for most other things. No chemicals and those work absolutely amazing on our induction top. Anyone who asks I fully recommend switching.
I was just wondering about non-stick pots and pans on induction stoves. Knowing there's a viable alternative helps ease switching. However, as you mentioned, pulling the pan away removes the heat source, making induction less versatile. I think that's what my hang up is, the versatility of gas burners.
@@Jasx_501 in my opinion that's only a small downside for which you get quite some plussides in return. Non-stick is fine as long as a magnet sticks to the bottom as Matt mentions. In that case there's no urgent need to get rid of them, unless you don't like the chemicals story there.
@@jaspersiegmund well I think that a lot of people have forgotten how well Seasoning a pan works for non-stick. Not only that but if something happens you can just reapply it whereas with Nonstick pans once the surface is scratched you have to throw it out.
@@Jasx_501 nonstick works completely fine with induction tops - if a magnet sticks to the base of the pan it'll work. Personally I don't like nonstick pans but there's no need to thrown them out if you like them and they're induction suitable
@@Jasx_501 I have electric stove and induction cook top(like the 60$ one in the video). Mix is the best option hands down. When i do kitchen remodeling i plan on getting 2+2 system(induction with 2 heaters and electric with 2 heaters).
I changed to induction about 2 years ago and I must say, I love it. My water starts boiling in 20-30 seconds and the sear I get on my steak is even. The one downside I didn’t consider was the need to upgrade nearly all of my pots and pans. You’ll need to ensure your pans are induction rated with good metals in order to experience induction heating as its intended. In the end, I not have a excellent Samsung stove and nice all clad pans, and I love it.
Everyone I have known in the USA who bought an induction stove had electronic problems with it after just a few years. They're expensive to repair too.
I also switched to induction probably 5 years ago...half my cooking ware was old and useless or already appropriate for induction so I had no issue in switching. My old stove had such turnable buttons to adjust heat. Biggest problem I have with my induction stove is that new electical touch menu is on top. If I drop something on it while cooking. Lets say water by opening a lid or something like that it can happen that the stove des and safty deactivation :/
I’ve been using Nu-wave induction plate for over six years and still going, Love it cooks the best steaks 🥩 ever n brings water to a boil in record time. It’s on top of the electric ⚡️ stove which I’ve only used a few times lol 😂
@@blablup1214 It probably depends on the brand and model, because when I drop liquid on my buttons noithing happens, I just wipe it off with a cloth so I can use it withough getting wet.
@@1969barnabas Iv'e had mine for 5 years and it works like a charm. It's not that expensive in Europe either. I have a Balay brand, stove top with three different pot sizes that currently costs 495 euros.
I did precisely what you suggested, bought the exact induction single "burner"unit just to try it out before investing in a new cooktop and absolutely love it! I moved from Southern California where gas is king to Arizona where the community I live in doesn't even have the option for gas. I was getting hammered on my electric bill for other reasons but ,was looking for more effective ways to lower my monthly bill. Your channel got the wheels turning so to speak, and through my little induction top, air fryer and time of day use of electricity , I've cut my bill by more than 50%! I'm recently retired, looking for ways to save and be more efficient is both interesting and cost effective! Thanks for your content, I'll be watching!
don't try it out with el-cheapo unit - yo will get burned! i had to use cheapest-smallest tabletop unit for 4 months (remodeling of 1. floor in the house, including kitchen) not good experience ..
Watch Matt's video on batteries.. LiFePO4 are great options to provide a fair amount of energy for most things. Not uber cheap.. but worthy of "getting off the grid" if you also have solar.
@@b3owu1f Can even be worth it without solar with time of use metering if the cost spread is enough and you use enough. Brian if you haven't already consider a timer for your water heater to disable it during the expensive hours. Unless you take 8 showers a day(if so I've another power saving idea for you) the tank will hold plenty of hot water to get you through the spendy time and those heating elements use gobs of power while on to heat that water. It's effectively a huge heat battery we already own, just need to add some basic smarts to it to control when it charges.
I would definitely like to clear up that a hood can significantly reduce pollutants BUT it has to be vented outside. Most builders cheap out on this and just put in recirculating hoods which are useless. The first thing on my list for a kitchen remodel was an outside vented hood with plenty of power. It's my favorite part of the remodel.
Recirculating hoods are meant to be a grease trap. They are lousy at it, but that is their excuse for existence. Definitely Run an air duct to the outdoors, and not just into your attic, Get those cooking byproducts Out of the house You still need the grease trap AND you need to keep it clean or a fire is in your future so get a Good Hood.
Recirculating hood? Never heard of it. Completely defeats the entire point and purpose of having a hood (venting the heat and steam from cooking) and I'm pretty sure that not having a hood that vents outside is a building code violation.
When the induction stoves started to gain traction in Europe (about 15 years ago), they were really expesive also here. Now you can get induction cooktops starting at €200 (although for some weird reason, appliances tend to be massively more expensive in the US than they are in Europe - everything else is often the other way around). Oh and by the way, you can get plates that act kind of as converters for example for ceramic cookware. Of course you lose some of the benefits of the induction cooktop (speed, efficiency, cool surface), but that's no worse than using a resistive cooktop to begin with, while you still get the benefits of induction with compatible cookware.
@@Luredreier that is like average hourly salary in Norway, or also the price of one cup of coffee at Oslo airport 😂 Seriously though, I think of course there wasn't economy of scale in production at first, but I think it was also about milking all the money they could, as they were considered a luxury item. I wonder if appliances in general are inexpensive in Norway 🤔 Would kind of make sense, after all, our biggest electronics chain in Finland is Gigantti, which is a part of the Norwegian Elkjøp group.
@@fintux Maybe, I don't travel abroad enough to tell. We have a reputation for high prices, but there has always been certain product categories that actually where competitive with mainland Europe here, and cheaper then Sweden. With the fall in the NOK and the high inflation in Sweden they've actually been crossing the border over here to shop for a change (usually it's us going the other way).
@@Luredreier yeah I was a bit joking there, too. I did not know of the reversal of the trade, though. I have known that earlier a lot of the people in Norway went shopping accross the borders, enough so that there have been a lot of shops right at the Norwegian border in Sweden (or that is what I've heard anyways). I guess the groceries are the thing that traditionally has been cheaper in Sweden than in Norway. Norway is still on my bucket list on places to visit, I just never have got around to do that despite of it being so close (I live in Finland).
@@fintux Yeah, now is a good time to do so. Norway has had a *relatively* low inflation by European standards while our currency is also relatively low value right now. So Norway is actually somewhat affordable for foreigners for a change. Don't expect that to last though.
We switched from gas to induction and really like it. Recently staying at my parents' place and using their gas cooktop I was amazed how slow, hot and generally awful it was in comparison. It's surprising how quickly you get used to the superior experience of induction. Induction seems kind of expensive in the US. Much cheaper in Europe.
There are very few lower priced options, one being Frigidaire. I bought one for my daughter's apartment for $1000 and convinced two friends to buy the same unit, all are happy. Additional benefit: except for your cast iron and stainless steel pots you'll be buying new higher quality pots that will be easy to clean and last decades.
I'm considering switching my gas range (which is about 12 years old) to induction. Did you have to upgrade electrical an outlet to install the induction stove?
@@DennisSchmitzthat is very interesting. the cheapest induction range I could find on the Home Depot website was 1100usd and the cheapest gas was about 500 usd
For anyone looking for a new stove, seriously consider getting one with physical knobs. The digital buttons are common with advanced features, but longevity is a concern. That and they're a bit of a pain to cook with, where you have to hit the button repeatedly to turn the temp up or down while stirring something in the pan at the same time. Physical old school knobs are so much better. That and induction can get too hot for certain pans like cast iron, so experiment on half to 3/4ths heat first before jumping into max heat. Pans can get really hot with induction.
omg i hate these touch buttons so much. the induction top at my friends place has these touch buttons on top of the cooking surface. like wtf, why? yea the cooktop doesnt get hot but the pans that are 2 cm away from the buttons do. feels like they were only added bc "looks futuristic bro" without any thought.
I have a induction field with these digital dials on the top but also knobs on the stove. The problem is that the digital ones react to water aka if you clean something up on the filed over these dials they go into error mode. I never understood why someone needs these, they are not a feature but a real pain.
Please boycott touch buttons on the stove surface! This is a senseless idea and a deal breaker for me and induction stoves. I will only get one with physical knobs. Also I usually use a non magnetic silicone insulator between the pot and the stove, I want pots with built in ceramic insulation bottoms. No need to heat up the stove or the table unecessary.
@@lizekamtombe2223 the silicone insulation between the pot and the stove reduces the efficiency of the magnetic field. The Glas ceramic top of the stove is an excellent heat insulator
@svenweihusen57 How does that work? By the non magnetosm non condictivity of silocone? I have seen no such issues when I have used one. The handy thing with induction that even if the range increases, and the magnetic field has a reach, it does not waste energy but you might get a bit less transferred. But as I said, I have not noticed any issues, rather the reverse, my induction plate overheated without it.
As a service technician with a major appliance company, I find that people really love their induction cooktops and ranges. The almost instant heat and quick cooking is almost magical! Not having to clean of burned food residue is another nice benefit. However, they can be pricey to buy and pricey to fix on some occasions. If you do happen to purchase a large setup, I would suggest a brand that has a long reputation manufacturing/servicing them. I would also suggest getting an extended warranty.
I agree. I went from gas to induction. I would never go back. There are some smart cooktops that automatically adjust the size of the induction area to match the pan or pot. It's brilliant. When I'm cooking a risotto, I have the stock simmering on a low temperature in a small saucepan next to the rice at a high temperature without any heat leaking across. The temperatures are precise with no need to turn it up a bit then turn it down a bit. The cooktop even tells me how many kWh I used so I know exactly what the energy consumption and cost was. The whole thing is controlled by touch switches and a removable magnetic knob, so when it comes to cleaning, I just remove the knob and clean a perfectly flat sheet of gorilla glass.
We went from piped gas to electric, then to induction hot plate (kitchen Reno is in the works), induction starts to heat up immediately, and cools down immediately! It’s amazing, was thinking of propane tank, but induction all the way baby! And now you now have heat diffusers that work under non-induction pots! Thanks for the tip!
Siemens offers an insurance in Europe for €8,99 euro per month. Which includes a years supply for every new year of cleaning products, costs of the service technician and the parts as well. I know because I just went from gas to induction in the Netherlands with the Siemens EX875KYW1E 80cm induction hob. I just love it! 😀
I'm poor. The gas stove is already there. I heat with gas. I dry my clothes with gas. Gas is FAR cheaper per BTU than electricity. Plus, there's literally nothing to go wrong with a gas range besides a few valves: true "KISS principle" engineering. Ain't no way I'm buying something NEW to replace something that still functions fine.
Watching from the UK. It's kind of surreal as I'm so used to this channel telling me about exciting future technology. We've probably had induction hobs here for 10 years, they're now everywhere and really cheap. I'm an Architect and can't think of anyone who has installed anything other than induction recently. I love ours, we have kids and it's great for safety.
Yep, exactly this - we swapped to an induction hob about 8 years ago. Its undeniably faster and more controllable than gas, there's far less fire risk, and I know no one likes to hear it, but when you walk into someone else's house and see the flames burning away, you just do silently judge them and think of the next generation an the climate crisis. I know not everyone can afford the panels and batteries needed to run a hob from your own power, but you can switch to a greener elec supplier. I know its a drop in the ocean compared to switching to a heat pump as the domestic heating is far, far more of the overall energy and I know heat pumps are spectacularly expensive once you consider the entire install if larger emitters are needed (I had to spend a year of evenings doing our pipework and radiators otherwise it wouldn't have been affordable), but cooking with gas, well it just LOOKs so bad, it just looks like C02 and Methane and induction hobs really aren't that much. I think if you are in the richer third of the population in a western country, you can probably cut down on a few things and afford to swap your cooker and little things do help.
We've had an induction hob for c. 20 yrs - just replaced with a newer model with the kitchen refit - the old hob was fine and has a new life via freecycle (along with most of the rest of the kitchen - even the units went to a threate group to build a set.) - We never noticed any odd noises that you mention, and generally we found it as reactive as gas to cook with - we'd never go back to gas even if it was available.
Same, we’ve had ours for about 7 years. Not much difference in price, the only issue is trying to use a wok. I would always go with induction in the future
And they don't work anywhere near as well, or as easily, as gas stoves. I'll keep my gas stove that has been working for 50 years. Have fun trading out your stoves every two decades.
I’m in the uk, and have always used gas hobs. The after an extension we moved to a Neff (German) induction hob. Hands down the best move we ever made. Quicker than gas, and a lot safer. Also surprisingly controllable. I really though it would be rubbish, but now would never go back. The only down side was the cleaning of the ceramic top. Best to wipe as soon as the spill has happened. It makes life a lot easier.
There are scrapers for ceramic stove tops that scrape off the burned in resedues without scratching the glass. After that a normal glass cleaner will do the rest.
In India induction cookers are very common. The induction cooker we have costs about Rs. 2700, which is like $32 (USD). Strange that the similar thing that costs Rs. 2700 costs about Rs. 82,000 ($1000) un USA! EDIT Also, it saves a lot of money: Fifteen KG LPG Gas cylinder here starts from Rs. 1100, that runs 45 days for us (family of two people). On the other hand, the induction cooker costs Rs. 2700. Maybe buy the best one for Rs. 5000? In the long run, you pay for 2 KW electricity per hour, or an unit of energy. Per unit costs Rs. 6.50 to 7.00. So even if you cook at highest power of 2KW (which nobody does), and you cook for two hours, it will cost you Rs. 13 to 14. That means way more saving than an LPG. Note than the 2KW power is the peak power, but in reality the inductor coil switches on and off at few kHz, so a clamp meter will show you 2 - 3 amps is being used at 250VAC 50Hz. So it saves money. Is it efficient? Kind of - as you said it only heats up the metal. Ours heat up only steels and no aluminiums for example (steel = iron and carbon). You said gas cooking is bad in USA, IDK which gas you talked about. Google says USA uses methane, which s a pretty bad choice per se. EDIT 2 You did say portable induction cookers are available in the USA for $60, which is good!
I would like to disagree. I say this because I have rented out an apartment (in India), and many tenants expect gas stoves due to the style of Indian cooking. 1. Rotis are to be cooked on an open flame and various roasted vegetables (eg began ka bharta). 2. Round bottom Woks (kadhais), it is highly versatile peice of cookware. Not exactly compatible with induction. 3. Heavy Tawas (sort of like cast-iron, but smaller), Induction stoves tend to directs transfer the heat to the food which makes it truly efficient, but if you are cooking parathas, khakras etc. The tawa truly gives the char and leopard spotting which the induction does to a lesser extent. I feel induction stoves are a compromise to the overall style of Indian cooking. I can tell which dosas have come from gas vs induction. The the induction stove makes it unnaturally homogeneous.
@@dhruvpandya4136agreed although induction stove tops are better than traditional resistive heating electric stovetops they are a compromise. Therefore I always recommend to have an induction stove top for the majority of cooking and a propane grill outside or at minimum a portable single propane burner like for camping also stored outside whenever possible.
@@Guardian_Arias good idea. there should be a hybrid set up. I have a larger kitchen. So I have my regular png connection and 4-burner stove top. And have a single hob induction, which I use for tea, soups, kheer, etc. I am having difficulty with the pressure cooker, Not able to nail down the the timing and temperature control.
Because when American say induction, is a fancy 4 burner full set and they can go to 3k Watt on average. That's the price difference . Your are comparing a portable induction to a cook set
“Gas” or “natural gas” in the USA is always methane. It is cheap, cheap, cheap here. Literally, it is a negative value at the well head, so they flare it off many times. Take a look at the cook tops in the video. These are typical, not high end, American cook tops.
After retiring we moved into an RV and did some traveling. The RV propane stove sucked. Hard to control the heat and it dried out the RV something fierce. On a whim I bought an induction hotplate, first time trying one. It worked great! It was fine with my stainless steel cookware and I fell in love! Fast heat, evenly spread with no "hot spots" Dead easy to control the heat. All my gas using friends kept saying induction "didn't heat" but I researched and realized they'd been using their aluminum or partially aluminum or copper cookware and those types really don't work with induction. Now that we're settling down from our extended RV travels I am getting a full induction cooktop in the new house. Hey I'm getting up there in years and I forget things sometimes and a stovetop that doesn't heat up unless the burner has a working cookware on it sounds like a really good safety feature to me.
Thanks - excellent rundown. We've had induction since 2012 and it has been great. Some points over the years: 1) Safety - I'm so use to Induction tops not getting hot I get worried about accidently touching a normal electric top when at other locations - Safety aspect is stellar. 2) Cheap pans use more energy. My wife bought an induction "friendly" pan which was aluminum with some degree of steel on the bottom. My "Iron Clad" pan would heat up fast on a low setting while hers would take a long time on a high setting to do the same thing. Bottom line: I got rid of the cheap pan. 3) Cooking with induction is fun and predictable and cheaper to use. 4) Got your grandma's old Iron Skillets? They work GREAT on an induction Stove. In fact they are the fastest to heat with the lowest energy. Thanks again - I'm enjoying your videos :)
A very valid episode. We changed from gas to induction more than 10 years ago and it was an amazing experience and I love it as a cooking experience. Ok I live in Europe - but we here wouldn’t consider it new - just a lot better! Up front cost is fairly high, but well worth it.
@@Triro incorrect facts. Europe now has a combination of methods of creating electricity with a strategy to be more environmentally effective. I live in Norway. More than 90% hydroelectric. Besides my comment was about the use not the environment aspects
@@Triro Europe uses a lot of gas, true, but not entirely, so yeah its not a perfect move, but it does help. If you watch the video carefully you'll see all the efficiency savings - how much energy is going into the food, well even the not-so-great power from gas power stations is far more efficient than that. So yeah, its not perfect but doing nothing is definitely worse. Sometimes you need to not concentrate on a simple little fact, but look at nuanced, wholistic calculations. Even in Europe where there is lots of gas and coal still, a full picture of the overall carbon footprint of using the gas cookers vs electric ones shows that electric ones are still very much better. Also, power cuts, really? I live in the middle of nowhere in the UK and I don't think in 20 years as an adult I remember a single powercut, yeah sure they happen to some people following storms, but its very, very rare these days. Maybe you live somewhere with a poor power connection, in which case I guess the call could go the other way.
I have been cooking with induction for about a year, and before that conventional electric. Some weeks ago I stayed at an Airbnb which had a gas stove and wow. I was surprised at how good it was heating everything BUT the food.
I've been using induction for the past few years. In general I agree that it is as good as gas for cooking, with the added ecological, economical and health benefits. However, there are two things induction currently struggles with: 1. Pan shape - Induction really only works effectively for flat-bottomed cylindrical pans. Pans such as woks often have a small surface area in contact with the cooktop which the induction is actually capable of heating. This leads to a lot of the pan remaining cold leading to uneven cooking and prohibiting certain techniques. 2. Lifting - As the induction is only effective a short distance off of the cooktop, if you lift the pan to toss food you instantly lose heat. This can make more active cooking techniques difficult or impossible without burning the food. Neither of these are deal breakers by any means, but could be worth considering depending on the style of cooking someone is most familiar with!
," with the added ecological, economical and health benefits.'" if it's electric....and i am including cars-etc...and it's source doesn't come from nuclear or hydro-pumped (air is a fluid so this includes windmills) sources it's 'fossil fuel' powered so where are those benefits? they have been displaced & NOT eliminated. also...when there isn't electricity available to use the electric stove how will you cook or heat your surroundings in an emergency situation? i am not busting your chops. i am wondering though if you have thought this through given the present socio-political environment. are there those who rely on you for their well being? things to consider.
@@jaguarracingus because all the sources are combined together into one location more advanced and efficient technologies can be implemented. Plus instead of the pollutants being more or less trapped in your home it is going into the atmosphere where they are a much smaller part of the air and will have a much smaller effect .
What about existing pans and cast iron? I was reading that induction can cause a hum because of warp, and I can't find anything regarding if my old inherited cast iron pan will work. Any advice? I did hear that you had to slowly heat the cast iron because it could crack, but thats about it.
@@joewilson3393 I have been using induction for about 6 years now. you do have to re-learn how to pre-heat pans, etc... there is so much energy released into the pans that I have warped one of them (stainless high quality pan) this was my fault though. Turning up my highest powered element to high dumps so much energy into the pan too fast for the pan to not be damaged. I rarely turn up my induction past half way now unless I have a large pot of water that I am trying to heat. As for cast iron, I could see it being damaged in the same way, and potentially cracking since the material is more brittle. Any cooktop can damage a pan though, especially if it is cranked on high and has no food in it, the pan will simply get too hot and fail, that just happens faster in an induction cooktop. The fact that induction heats the pan faster is one of the main reasons to buy induction.
These are about the only negatives I can find for using IH cookers. Even after using an IH cook-top for more than 10 years, the kid in me is still impressed by being able to put cold things so near to a boiling pot with no effect. Yeah science, biatch!
After cooking with gas for 44 years, induction cooking was even better than I had expected. Clean, fast, safe and easy to set the same intensity of heat each time. 5 for pancakes, 3 for corn beef in the pressure cooker etc
I think that's the part that's most appealing to me. Aside from how quick it works, just being able to make mental (or actual) notes of which setting works best for things, and not play the current game of "move the dial around constantly, because the coil cools down and warms up seemingly at random". Not to mention the massive range on my current stove that seemingly has 1-2 and then a massive gap for 3/4 of the dial before it goes straight to 10 for the last 1/4.
I understand but I also feel that it doesn’t account for 60% of cooking that needs residual heat for the pan or wok for stir fry situations, etc. Also, how can you heat up tortillas on the stove? For more ethnic communities that rely more on fire for their diet, I don’t find these methods appealing. Only for 20% of people who don’t have a need to cook outside of a 12” magnet. I’m sure the use case for it may be better in areas where the diet doesn’t need fire for cooking. Im sure it’s effective at heating up water but hey, you can cook an egg in the microwave!
@@Jackie-Brown I would guess for 90% of things you cook, it would suit you just fine. I believe they even have Wok ranges made for induction cooking. That aside, you can still stir fry just fine in a regular skillet, or if you want, get a portable wok burner for the times when you really want that fire. And it's not just "effective at heating up water". It's much more effective in heating up the pan itself, instead of spending energy heating the air around the pan like you will with gas. I don't really think anyone needs the fire aspect. You can heat a tortilla in a pan or under the broiler. I honestly can't think of any instance in my kitchen cooking where I wouldn't be able to make it work with the pans I have, outside of my wok. As far as residual heat goes, that's easy. Just turn the heat down to a lower setting. It's more precise than killing the heat on a conventional stove and having to constantly turn it up and back down.
I would suggest that you try induction as I have been able to do all the cooking on induction that I have done in 44 years of cooking with gas. I frequently heat tortillas. There is no difference to heating them with gas. The pan gets hot and it stays as hot as you want it to stay.
Hmmm good point. Maybe I’ll give it a try with finding a small portable burner. Here in socal, gas is still much cheaper than electricity but I feel I’ll take my annoyances on having a low carbon footprint. I enjoy Cooking with fire and I think I’ll continue to do things I enjoy.
The problem with induction is the magnet and quality of large burner size. My moved to induction stove/oven combo which cost just over $2500. Culturally, my mom cooks a lot of Asian dishes (Indian and Chinese), and in large pans. In there budget range, only one burner supported a 12 inch pan which they later found out is not for a 12 inch base. The other burners were smaller and so useless for her to cook large dinners. In the end, we had to replace it. To go with one that matched a glass top / radiant heat with 2 large burners for induction, they would have to spend over $7,000 Cdn! So they settled on a ceramic glass top radiant heat. Of course my dad was pissed as they spent some big dollars getting good quality pans that work best with induction. After their experience, I ended up getting 6 burner gas stove as I cook with a wok a lot, which can’t be used on the other 2 choices.
A wok is literally the only use case I have found where gas is superior to induction (or any form of electric heating, for that matter). If you don't cook with a wok a LOT, induction is superior.
Just as an FYI, they do have induction stoves meant just for woks. I don't know how good they are. But yea, the size of magnet/size needed for large pans thing isn't discussed enough. Yea, you can get relatively cheap ones. But if you're cooking larger sizes, you'd need the larger magnets. And for some scientific reason, those slightly bigger magnets cost much more.
@@semilog643 Carbon steel pans (preferred by the restaurant industry) are also superior on gas. Carbon steel is poor at conducting heat and induction tends to produce a small hotspot in the middle of the pan which does not spread out very well and can even cause the pan to warp. The sides of the pan don't get hot at all on induction which is a big problem if you want to cook French omelettes (Jacques Pepin style). Honestly, induction seems to work best with nonstick cookware which people should be avoiding for other reasons. If you want to avoid gas cooktops and nonstick cookware then you get forced into a very frustrating situation!
Yup, the video didn’t address issue with Asian cooking at all. I can’t live without my wok and induction just doesn’t work with it. This is why induction didn’t take off in many Asian countries.
@@chongli297 - Somethings not adding up. Carbon steel pans are excellent conductors of heat, that's a reason why they're preferred over others. If you're getting a Hotspot that's probably because your heat is too high, so the part that gets heated heats up faster than it can dissipate it. You can't treat induction and gas stoves the same, there's a learning curve/adjustment, but that's its own issue.
Great video! As a european I switched to inductive stoves 27 years ago. I didn't regret it for a second. The cost for a good inductive stove with quiet fans is currently about 400-500 Euro for a 4 section version, from a premium brand (Siemens, Bosch, Miele, ...). You mentioned savety in your video, but I wanted to add a few issues: Kids playing unatended will not be able to start the stove/generate heat without a pot on the stove. Additionally you lock the keyboard completly to avoid anybody to start the stove. If you remove the pot from the stove and you forget to switch it of the stove will not generate heat anymore and will switch off. For elderly people that is a great advantage to add security (my stepmother almost burned the house down with her old stove). Over time I converted all my friends an family to use inductive stoves. I regulary watch your videos. Ithink that I have a similar approach to the environment: I installed solar thermal heating (20 sqm) 27 years ago and solar cells (10KW peak 11) years ago dramatically reducing my CO2 footprint and energy cost.
Here in the UK, 4 'burner' induction hobs can be had for under £200 for some of the cheaper models (pricier ones are of course available). I'll openly admit I used to be a bit of a 'gas snob'. Whilst I do still have the gas hob, I recently bought a 2 'burner' portable induction hob, and I'm totally converted. As soon as it's practicable to do so, the gas hob will be going.
I have electric. The biggest problem I see is the fact that the electric grid barely handles the needs we have now. With the addition of electric cars, electric water heaters and so on, we will be faced with going back to wood stoves because the grid will fail.
@@ABobbyDee Installing more solar panels and batteries on more homes and businesses will help take the pressure off of the grid. Generating some of your own electricity needs will literally take some load off of the grid. And more and more of those electrical appliances, batteries and EVs are getting smart enough to automatically act to help stabilize the grid, absorbing excess generation by wind and solar, and discharging when the grid needs help.
@@rayopeongo Exactly, with the solar I have at my home, all my air conditioning/heating and the majority of my household loads are supplied from my solar, only my stove is on the grid due to it's high draw being too much for my inverters, as it can use 7 to 10kw and I have 9kw of capacity on my inverters, so the grid only has to deal with my stove for 20 to 30 minutes out of a day typically while my other loads the grid doesn't even see for the majority of most days. Of course my setup doesn't feed my solar into the grid, it's all generated and stored onsite for all my needs due to net metering where I am at being miniscule, so as long as I have energy coming in from solar and sufficient capacity in my storage, the rest of my loads are disconnected from the grid and I use all my power generated. My bills are practically nothing. Eventually I'll add another large inverter that can handle the stove but seeing as the grid doesn't have to handle my heating and cooling for most days I've already removed a major stress from the grid. My ductless mini splits are very efficient.
@@andycanfixit Good for you! Unfortunately, neither my house nor property are suitable for a large solar installation, so I am primarily limited to reducing my demand for fossil fuel energy: increasing insulation, buying more efficient appliances, driving an electric car, etc.. I am also considering getting a large battery installed. It would be usable as both a backup plan, and maybe to reduce expenses. We have time of use charges here, so I could charge the battery overnight when power was cheaper and the grid not so busy, and then use the battery during the day to save some money and reduce the demand on the grid during peak hours. It always bugs me a little bit when I see a large, flat commercial roof going unused. How much energy could be generated, and how much less carbon dioxide released, if, for instance, every WalMart in the world had it's roof covered in solar panels? At noon on a bright, hot, sunny summer day, would it be enough to completely offset the power being used by the store for lights, air conditioning, refrigeration, etc.? That would remove a huge load from the grid.
@@rayopeongo When you drive past farmer's giant cow sheds and they have little or no solar on them... painful isn't it? I have a crap, east-west facing roof. We do have a big garden but council keep rejecting plans for a small ground array because the field behind us has a footpath in it and the people crossing that footpath will have their views wrecked. I suggested that I put a large wall around my property so that the 4 walkers a year who use that path wont have to look at my solar panels, but thats apparently not allowed again, apparently not being able to see my son playing in his paddling pool or my wife planting onions will be so aweful for the walkers that again, I mustn't even plant a hedge. Devon in the UK is still sadly run by very old people who know they will be dead before the climate crisis affects them.
Been using a Nuwave induction hotplate for years now. I absolutely love it, especially for very temperature sensative foods like sauces, dairy, rice, and sweets. My three favorite things about induction is precision heating, rapid temperature changes, and consistency in routine dishes. Energy efficiency is just the cherry on top. Also easy to clean cause it only heats the pan, so stuff doesn't get vulcanized onto the cooktop itself lol.
At home I got a mobile induction plate and a gas stove. The induction for me is just so inaccurate and sensitive stuff just burns in the pattern of the induction coil. That is the reason for me that I like gas more. Many also be that the induction stove is of a lower quality than the gas one.
I have used nuwave it cant keep up the temperature for f the pan. The fan isn't powerful enough it has to slow the heating down. I can design a better one
@@kmukul It's probably because it's a 110V portable appliance. Integrated cooktops should use 220V (in the US system) or 400V (3 Phases, in Europe), so they can just use more power.
Me too. It's awesome and that's after about 8 years of using it. Quick, clean, efficient, safe, no issues, no regrets. It's one infomercial I've seen in my lifetime that actually lived up to the "sizzle". Induction, if you can do it, is def the way to go.
I never thought about it not burning spilled over food to the glass. That's great! Induction is our plan once our current glass top electric stove stops working.
We've known forever that electric will boil water faster than even a 17,000 BTU gas burner, so we've recently ordered a stand-alone induction burner for things like boiling to go next to our big Thermador gas range. In an old house, the waste heat from the stove is not wasted at all in the cool season, and we basically do most of the heat-intensive cooking outside in summer anyway. My sister and brother-in-law, who have no gas service to their house, bought an induction range a little over 5 years ago (some European brand I think starts with a "B"), and they love it, although it has been pretty unreliable and very expensive to fix. The Thermador has had zero failures in 17 years.
One thing you didn't mention with induction stoves is they're even easier to clean than resistive electric ones. With a resistive stove, the ceramic surface gets very hot and any spills or grease that touches it will burn and leave hard to remove residues... Switching to an induction stove was a revelation for me. Cleaning is literally a 15s affair, seriiusly.Just wipe it with a sponge and some soap and that's it, it can even be done a couple of minutes after finishing cooking since the surface will be cool enough for that.
We just switched from gas to an Induction range , I ran a test before I switched over and with the gas range it took 6:43 to boil 1 quart of water , same kettle same amount of cold tap water the (Beko) Induction range took 1:56 I was surprised that it was that much faster. We have only had it a week but there is no problem using or understanding what you can or cannot use to cook with and we also found some induction friendly silicon cooking pads to put on the cooking surface .
@@pcatful it all just comes down to how many BTUs you were using before…. If you had a small gas cooktop, and you have a very, very large induction top, you’re going to get faster boiling. The trade-off of course is the cost, the electricity will cost you more than the gas (at least in the US). It’s also important to realize that there’s a lack of options involved here, when everything revolves around electricity the electrical company can basically charge whatever they want, and every aspect of your life is held hostage by however much they want to charge you for it.
I see. We are using a not a so great electrical (non-induction) range. We once wanted to switch to gas but our solar panels cover our electricity, and induction might be better and use less power. The power company also controls gas prices, but I believe the electrical cost will rise due to power grid problems @@Matt-yg8ub
I have had an induction range for over a year now. I love it. If one is a perfectionist when it come to cooking, make sure you get a cooktop that can be set by specific increments such as .35 etc. Mine is very similar to an electric stovetop so can’t be set to an exact temperature. Since I don’t need that feature I love mine as is and at the price I obtained. I knew I wanted an induction cooktop with a convection oven so when I saw one in IKEA’s scratch and dent section I jumped on it and got it for 40% off.
Just bought my first induction which is why I am reading up on it. I have a Power Boost button and it sizzle the pam in the skillet immediately after turning it on. That's FAST! few more steps to cooking but so far I'm thrilled about the switch.
I've had an induction oven for at least a decade already, highly recommended. However, I live in a nation (Norway) where electric been the standard for ovens for as long as I've lived (four decades), so I didn't switch from gas to induction, but from an electric cooktop to induction which made the switch easier as the electric infrastructure for it was already there. I personally also didn't need to replace any of my cookware when I made the switch. Though a few of my stew pots with double bottoms take relatively longer to heat up (still comparable to a regular electric), but since stew is better when slow cooked I didn't replace those either, instead treating it as a feature for the appropriate dishes, lol.
@@williamhicks558 I got a crock pot I'm using for bean-based stews and similar, so definitively recommended as well, but I prefer the oven for rice-based stews. :3
Most US homes don't have gas, unless they are in cold climates with gas heating or in relatively wealthy areas. Induction is thus likely to displace gas relatively quickly, but radiant electric will take longer, especially because manufacturers put a lot of effort into making their smoothtop radiant electric stoves so nice to use and so efficient while maintaining lower purchase prices.
We've had a gas stove for ever, but ever since the gas prices increased and gas providers saw this as a way to make people pay more, even when the gas prices went down, I managed to find a induction cooktop on the cheap, now I say on the cheap, but it is quite an advanced model, it was just considered broken, but I managed to fix it, our home is now gas free entirely and we're saving money while doing it.
BTU for BTU, gas costs half of what electric costs. A gas dryer costs less to operate than an electric dryer. A gas stove costs less to operate than an electric stove...
@@chrisemmert1387 And? Without doing a Greta T harangue rant the idea is to clean up the atmosphere, as in remove the fossil fuel gases. Eventually everyone everywhere will be using electricity for everything it's possible to use electricity for. Cost won't come into it. In fact you are seeing this as we type. Good luck with expecting the old normal to return ... that's pretty unlikely. Plus we don't as yet know what the "new" normal will be.
@@chrisemmert1387 A heat pump dryer uses half the energy. I can make my electricity, I can't make my own gas (well - unless I want to have a gas bottle glued to my arse). And yes, solar panels cost money but once I spend the money I've fixed the cost of a percent of my electricity.
In Australia, induction has been around for over ten years, I think,we've had ours for about 1 year. It is awesome, way more control than gas, no residual heat lag, hotter than any stove top I've ever owned. Only cost about $375 au, some are as cheap as$200,for a 4 burner ,easy to install. I tell everyone who will listen how good it is.
'I tell everyone who will listen'. I'm with you, and i'm amazed how angry and defensive some people get because, in their minds, induction = Green = global conspiracy to strip them of everything they hold most dear = induction is the Anti-Christ. Any other considerations, like those you've mentioned, get washed away by the neurosis and paranoia. All of which makes me feel like a poached egg. Go The Matildas! All the best from a cabin in a swamp in a rainforest in New Zealand.
I.ve used induction for at least 14 tears now and I never go back to gas, I moved into my last house one year ago, and it had a six burner gas stove, I tried it for a week , and it took ages just to get my potatoes to the boil so I threw it out And installed an induction 4 burner stove No open fire, The cleaning alone makes so much difference, it works way faster then gas, I don't need an air-conditioner to cool the kitchen in summer . I put a tissue under the cooking pot to keep the pot and the surface of the oven clean, if it boils over.
Induction in the US is a trendy feature that automatically adds around $1000 over other models -- or at least it feels that way, I ended up with a glass top instead of induction because of this. I know that it isn't adding cost to produce them because many other countries are selling them for a lot less and that would indicate that parts and research isn't causing the price hikes.
The induction top is also hardened glass. , but the heat is generated in the bottom of the pan that is on it, or any peace of iron for that matter And the surface doesn't get hot. . Not hotter than if you put a hot pot on any surface, that will be heated from the pot. Kind regards Hans@@jfftck
A few months ago I purchased a single element induction cooker to see what it was like. I've been so pleased with it I'm sure I'll eventually get a full-size induction top or complete range. Amazingly, even pans with short metal loop handles cook an item to completion without heating to handles to the point of needing pot holders or gloves. The heat all goes into the bottom of the pan.
Absolutely....... We have a four burner electric hob which is fine for everyday use but struggles with large pans of fluids. Bought a Tefal portable induction hob with single burner rated at 2,100 watts. Fantastic! Not noisy, fast boil, controls from 1 - 9. Boils a huge pan of water quickly and easily retains a vigorous rolling boil. Plugs into standard socket so no extra wiring required. Now there are "Plug-in" four burner induction hobs available but they're very low wattage and full power can't be used as they drop down the power load when all rings are on. A decent hob will have 2,200, 2000, 1700 and 1400 burners which will all work at the same time but needs heavy duty electrical connections at the fuse box. Most likely a 10mm wiring connection as well.
First question I'm going to ask when we record the STILL TO BE DETERMINED episode this weekend: are all the emissions attributed to gas stove while "off" true for ALL gas stoves, or only those with a pilot light?
@@spnyp33 it was already looked into and the study was ridiculous looking at completely non modern setups. Just think logically... The wealthy have money to pick any option. If it was that bad for health, it would be replaced instantly. It's not. Corporate interest groups make a huge lobbying difference. But hey, I can't complain about other people wanting to eat. The medical emergency we went to was a 7 figure payout for my family. Pharma stock options finally paid off. I'm sure other people want their payouts too. I'd loaded up on Tesla stock awhile ago too, so getting the inflation reduction act bonus was icing on the cake. The government doesn't just do things because it's nice... Someone is always making millions. All of the major political backers of this still have gas stoves lol.. And they're not poor, they can get it replaced within a week, it's only a couple tens of thousands, tops. Nothing for most people in congress.
As a viewer from South Africa, we simply cannot use electrical cooking tops as electricity has increased significantly in cost. Also, big one here, we only have electricity for about half a day due to our state sponsored blackouts (aka loadshedding), thus you may not have electricity to cook with when you need to. But if you have a stable electricity supply, by all means, is cooking with electricity the way to go.
I thought wind and solar farms were being built to supply electricity. Waves from the ocean also can be used to generate electricity with the newest eco friendly tech.
@@neutrino78x Only works if you are living in houses. Still quite a lot of people live in apartments. I used to live in South Africa and we moved from a house to an apartment to avoid crime. We've been hijacked/burglarized, etc on a frequent basis (couple times a year). Can't imagine a brighter beacon asking to be burglarized if not living in a house inside a trusted gated community with shiny new solar panels installed.
Induction cooking is a lot more efficient than using an element. That said, I understand the need for more than one system of cooking in your situation. You might invest in a single burner induction cooktop and use it occasionally.
During Michigan's last cold snap, AEP electric was texting warning messages advising customers to cut back on electric consumption. It was comforting to have natural gas service to keep the house from freezing and the pipes from bursting in case of an electric grid failure. Maybe Michigan should not have shut down two of our nuclear plants?
They for sure should not have. Power backup can be achieved for electricity though also if needed. However if you live where you loose power often and already use gas heat/cooking I can see how this would make one less interested in the investment. For me personally I want all electric not because its green but because unlike gas I can make my own power and be independent from the grid and its fluctuations in availability(power outages) and price. It's a bit of money to put down but with smart planning ang optimal sizing I can get to where in a few years I'll have enough solar and battery to survive without any hook up fees. Can't wait.
@@EdBruceWRX yknow they can charge batteries with the same electricity in the grid thats not used at night...no need to have child labor to strip mine for the whole system or have fans killing the birds on mass...just the child labor for the batteries... nothing says green like 3rd world slavery
The main issues in Michigan are publicly traded utilities that have very little incentive to harden their grids. We have enough electricity; we don't have good enough lines in many places. Snow storms should be a non-event here.
I switched from gas to induction 7y ago, and its indeed amazing, cannot imagine to go back to gas. Few issues to add to your excellent video: 1/ choose a model with a separate scale to set the power level for each "burner", otherwise, first choosing the burner and then choosing the power level is very annoying. This makes the cooking surface a little smaller, as 4 scales take more place, but its a great deal. 2/ making large pancakes is not easy, as the largest burner is still too concentrated on my induction stove. Might depend on the quality (price) of your stove. If you like big pans to fry food, please check if you have a model which has at least one burner with a large magnetic field 3/ cost: you mention 1000 USD in the US, thats very high, in the EU good models are available at about half that cost, lets say 500€ for a 60cm model, obviously for 90cm model it goes easily above 1500€ 4/ its fun to cook in old-style iron cast pans or de Buyer iron plate pans. As they are in iron (without a coating) they last a lifetime and are great on induction. You need to heat them up at a lower power setting to get a more even heating of the pan, not at the maximum. 5/ I have been experimenting with insulated cooking on top of an induction stove. A pot wrapped in a cotton towel at very low power setting to cook something that needs a long time works perfectly. I have not seen this recommended anywhere, it looks safe but I dont know if there could be a safety problem with this. So, I cannot recommend it. I mention it so maybe someone with expertise can look into this
For me, almost certainly the best thing about induction is that it is so easy to keep clean! In five minutes or less, my range top is sparkling clean. That means I clean it after each and every use. When I had my gas range, on the other hand, I cleaned it once - in over a year! Each burner element had 3 parts to it (some of which could and did fall down the drain) and then there were three 10 lb iron grids that were designed to damage my sink. I absolutely hated cleaning that gas range. I hated the idea of cooking all together. With my induction range, now I love cooking on it and have honed my skills greatly since installing it. Yes, it was expensive, but worth every penny! I will never not have induction. The precision it provides both in terms of instant temperature change as well as totally consistent behavior, plus the phenomenal power it has to boil lots of water quickly for pasta, and the total end to all stove-top burning incidents, makes it one of my most prized and valued possessions.
We bought a convection/induction range 9 months ago and couldn’t be happier. As stated in the video, we did have to buy new pots and pans. The speed of cooking is excellent!
Here in Denmark I can get a single-plate Induction stove from IKEA for 50 USD converted (and that's with our 25% sales tax applied). Generally fair quality Induction stoves here (4 plate stoves) cost between 300 and 500 USD converted - so with the US market and pricing in mind, there is no reason the avg Induction stove price would be any higher than 300-400 bucks in the US. Probably less. Induction is CHEAP to manufacture and use. The absolutely only reason Induction pricing may be high, is if competition and supply is extremely limited. Paying 1000 bucks for an average Induction stove seems absolutely mental to me. Since Induction is so common here and have been for a decade or more, most pots and pans are Induction certified too, probably 90% of the ones I see in stores can be used with Induction - and their price is unchanged.
@@jfolz Exactly. Even some new full ceramic counter tops with built-in induction so you can use it almost anywhere you want. I would have thought Induction was worldwide by now
Welcome to capitalism lol In the US there are a LOT of things we should be doing to move towards a better future but if that cuts into a company's profit, then it's either condemned or priced so high it seems like a useless upgrade. Electric vehicles for example or solar for homes and businesses. Businesses here cannot see that they can still make money if they just switched because they're scared and uninformed and well, honestly, most are too old to change their ways and they hire to continue that trend.
I bought an induction cooktop about a year ago, and I love it. I liked my gas cooktop, but the kitchen is now cooler and I find it to be about as sensitive as gas. There’s sometimes a mild hum or click, but nothing very noticeable and nothing as loud as the fan I always had to have running when the gas was on. I bought some very thin silicon pads from Amazon that stop the glass cooktop from getting scratched. They work really well. I made sure that the cooktop I bought has one element that is large enough to handle the biggest crockpot or casserole pot. And for those who cook with all four elements at the same time, rare for me, there is some power sharing in some models, which means you can’t get absolute full power on all four at the same time. But I can’t think of a scenario when I would need that. It has not been an issue. All in all I am very happy with it.
My Induction plate is about 90cmx55cm and I can move the pans around. The plates adapt the coils that are used to compensate my displacement. Also I can set it to have a higher „flame“ at the front and a lower one when I shove it further back. The timer that turns individual plates off when down to zero comes in also very handy. Also you can never forget to turn off the plates when you move a pan to the table, as it‘s load is not there anymore. I really like it.
Having used all three different stove types, I would go induction every single time. They heat up the fastest by a country mile, seem least affected by the thickness of the pan used (e.g. a frying pan vs a metal casserole), and heat the surrounding area up least. Some other commenters have mentioned issues with ring size or pan shape; the induction hob I used (my parents' Miele hob, before they moved) was huge, and even had a double-ring in the middle that could accomodate a full sized oven tray, so they are avaiable (at least here in England).
I had an induction stove in my house about 15 years ago. It worked fine and id happily use it for most tasks but I still prefer gas through and through. I can use my wok on it, I always have a source of flame in my house, it works when the power is out etc. If they had a half induction half gas range that would be ideal for my needs.
I miss the induction cooktop/range we had in our last house. It was so fast and so much less waste heat warming up our kitchen. Our “new” house had a propane stovetop, but electric oven. We have a single electric induction “burner” for a lot of everyday things. Also, having a water boiler helps speed a lot of things up! Alec’s videos are the best! 😸 sorry Matt! 🙈😅😸
My range has 2 induction hobs and 4 gas hobs. I find myself often leaning to the induction hobs especially if boiling liquids or slow simmer. Love the speed of response you get. If I ever change ranges I think I’ll go with full induction.
I cant afford electricity anymore....or charcoal. I cook primarily over burning wood at the moment. I understand why many island nations eat so much raw seafood. Thanks for all the insight. Things I never thought of.
Gas ist deffently the loudest. Also you dont need as much cleaning wich is good for the environment. As a chef and restaurant owner, I only want Induction. Faster, more precise and easier to clean. Im sure it also uses less energy for the same result.
Been using Induction for over 7 years, love it. I first used an induction cook top in Europe, then when I moved back to Canada there was no debate, bought one (a GE model) and I was lucky it was on sale at the time.
We just built an energy efficient (well sealed and insulated) house, which precluded punching holes in the walls for kitchen extractor and bathroom fans, instead relying on an HRV system. So for similar reasons to yourself we chose to go with induction (we inherited a 6 burner gas stove in our previous house) and have been loving it. As you note it's an adjustment to switch from seeing a flame to gauge the temp to pressing a number, but it really doesn't take long. And yes it's quick, instant temp changes and SO easy to clean ;-) Hopefully the cost will continue to reduce to allow more people to enjoy the benefits.
It is worth mentioning that in the United States, there is a tax rebate on upgrading from a gas stove to an electric or induction. You could get a new induction stove for just as much or cheaper than a gas stove. You may have to upgrade your electric if you are in an older house, but there is also a tax rebate for that as well. (Most induction stoves require a 40-50 amp circuit)
We switched to an induction range 13 years ago, it has a 4 burner induction cooktop and a convection oven. Absolutely love this unit, the speed of the induction cooktop is stunning, I’m a tea drinker and the speed to boil water is amazing. I couldn’t imagine ever switching back. Cheers
My wife and I were on the fence about our next stove, so we got a induction hotplate (single "burner" stove) to try it out. It was $125 for a model recommended by Wire Cutter, and this was enough to convince us to go with induction for our next stove. The feature we like most? Stupidly simple cleanup vs our gas stove. With our plan to also move to heat pumps for both heating and hot water, this means we'll cut gas completely -- and that will eliminate a baseline monthly utility fee that is in addition to the cost of the gas itself.
@@jameskniskern2261 Your mentioning of timers reminds me of a story back in college. A friend put a pot of water on the electric (non-induction) stove to boil so he could make mac'n'cheese. Then he went over to play video games and completely forgot about it for literally 2+ hours. The water all boiled off and the pot melted onto the stove. It was a miracle there wasn't a fire. Given no one got hurt, it made for a great story at his wedding.
@@dosadoodle - LOL! I was boiling water on an electric stove while in college, fell asleep, and set off the fire alarm to the apartment complex! Oh, the memories!
We replaced our gas cooktop with two $69 induction burners. They have the full timer, temperature, and power settings you mentioned. Indeed, it's like going from analog to digital. One very nice thing is we can cook with a temperature below the smoke point of whatever oil we are using. I have found that the cookware size problem is actually on the other end: A very small sauce pan doesn't couple well with the electromagnetic coil, so the burner flags it as an error just like turning it on with no cookware present. These actually look like small induction cooktops, with a very easy to clean glass surface. The other nice thing is we can put one or both in the drawer below the countertop, when we want less cooktop and more workspace. We are now fully electric, having replaced our oven with a countertop convection oven, our water heater with a tiny electric flash water heater, our clothes dryer with an electric unit, and our propane-powered furnace with small electric heaters that only heat the rooms we occupy. Expensive? No, because our solar panels always give us a net-metered electric bill of zero dollars each year. And even better, we no longer have to pay rent on a propane tank. Update: Still working great 8 months later. There is just the two of us, and we find we hardly ever need both induction burners running at once. We use the extra counter space all the time for food prep, and leave the second burner in the drawer. That's a terrific benefit over the large range we had there before. We installed a storage cabinet below that counter because the burners are under three inches tall.
Thanks for mentioning the cracking issue, this is especially an issue for apartments, where replacing that glass can be very expensive. I’d add that cleaning a glass top stove requires extra care. Harsh cleansers can cause scratching that can require replacing the glass at the same high cost to a tenant.
That is the same issue I had with them. They are hard to keep clean and have to use a stove top cleaner to get them clean. Unless anyone has any other tips. I found that I used the stove less because I knew it look dirty after.
I love induction cooking. Gas cooking heated up the kitchen so much that the AC was very undersized. Besides, I kept the kitchen window open whenever I used the gas cooker to offset the use of running the range hood vent on high to reduce indoor air pollution. When I switched over to induction cooking, in 2015, I noticed I could cook a full meal without heating up the kitchen as much. I still use the vent, but on a lower RPM and the window in the kitchen is open but a crack to equalize the indoor air pressure. Induction was an easy switch, as I was already using cast iron, porcelain coated carbon steel or stainless steel cookware. The few aluminum pans I had already sported a nifty induction base. In addition, I have more control over the cooking temperature and can even cook "low and slow" with more precision, for healthier meals. Finally, I noticed the electric oven heats faster, produces no fumes, and doesn't heat the surrounding air nearly as much. It's a win-win.
I switched to induction 10 or so years ago. There were a few growing pains learning how to cook as far as cooking times go... I.E. the silly things heat up faster than I had thought. I had no problems with cookware as the majority of my pots and pans are cast iron. Cooking with gas does have a better feedback mechanism than induction as you can see and feel the heat but once you go induction you will not miss the sweat, open flames, and open windows in the summer.
Many induction cooktop have temperature sensors that will feel the heat for you. For example, I can tell it to heat my pan to 340°F. I can even use the temperature probe for sous vide of incubating yogurt.
I was able to experience all three. My home had a natural gas cooktop and I absolutely loved it. The kitchen area opened up to a larger room and I never felt any issues do to exhaust or fumes and I loved the instantaneous control over my cooking. We recently purchased a second home (future retirement home) and this home had an electric glass cooktop. OMG. I could not cook on tis thing. It was incredibly slow to heat up and cool down. I found that I used anything other than the cooktop for cooking because it was so bad. Well we just sold our main home (gas cooktop) and moved permanently to our retirement home. I immediately knew I could not live with the electric so I bought an induction cooktop. I absolutely love it! I never imagined how fast you could boil water nor how quickly and precisely you could control the heat. It is crazy how responsive it is. Yes it was more expensive but given that we use this every single day this was something my wife and i agreed was worth every penny. I was able to get a small rebate from my power company so this helped offset some of the cost. Having used all three there is no competition, induction beats the pants off the others bar none.
I've cooked with all three methods discussed in this video for an extended period of time. There is a learning curve to all three if you've never cooked with them before. Cooktops with resistive heating elements in my opinion tend to be the worst by far. That is then followed by gas, with induction tending to give the best and easiest cooking environment. Even with all negative health and efficiently considerations put aside, induction is the most pleasant to cook with. Induction has all the benefits of gas with none of the negatives. Plus anecdotally I think it might be more easy and quick to adjust temperatures compared to gas. (because it only heats the pan/pot so the only residual heat is transferred from the pan/pot to the cooking surface rather than the other way around which is why I think it seems to be even quicker than gas) The only downside like mentioned by Matt is cost. Though, if you cook from home a good amount of the benefits might out way the costs especially if it will push you to cook more at home than going out. One final point, I am a decent home cook but the induction cook top makes it so much easier to correct mistakes as far as cooking temperature so I'd say it's also the best option to beginner home cooks.
1. Cooking is better with gas for many people not because of speed, but intuitive control (which you mentioned) and consistency. It allows you to lift the pan while still keeping it to flame to get specific results, especially on the edge of the pan if you need to tilt it (like home cooks will often do). This might sound like a mild benefit, but to cooks it is huge. 2. If I routed my exhaust from my car into the cabin of the vehicle, that would also be a problem. I ended up researching the statistics for the whole “gas stove scare”, and found it was primarily (if not entirely) homes with either no exhaust for their stoves, or an improperly sized exhaust (which you alluded to with insufficient exhaust being an issue). These are often much older homes whose kitchens are also much smaller in size. If a properly installed exhaust were installed, then this would entirely resolve the issue and concern. Induction stoves are amazing, but you frame them as being inherently better. They aren’t better. They are different. I would agree that probably more than half the population would be even better off with one over your typical electric stove top or even gas, but to suggest that everyone who doesn’t is “behind” is absurd. That’s framing. I would never go induction, because we actually cook like chefs in our home. Induction would be a negative for us. I think this video had an unintended bias. If any stove needs to go, it’s an electric glass top or coil. It should be induction or gas. I hope you make a video about cooking pans with coatings. Now that’s a scary topic.
Not to mention, most comments who said positive about induction lived in Europe or US which cook on flat cook ware. But in Asian, most people used wok which has shape like halved ball because usually Asian cook in big amount and it doesn't fit on induction. That's why Asian still used gas.....
The reason you have to lift the pan using gas is because gas doesn't allow you to precisely control the heat. You have to actually lift the pan off the heat LOL.
@@sappyjohnson, I think you misunderstand. You’re not lifting the pan off of the flame entirely. The point is to change the focus of heat to the edge of the pan by giving it a tilt or mild lift while still maintaining contact with the flame. This is important for certain things like basting or concentrating/reducing. You simply cannot do this on an induction stovetop, and would instead have to use a free hand to adjust the temperature. If you’re using flame, wood or gas, you don’t have to do any adjustments and can maintain your attention on your utensil/instrument and pan handle. Again, it’s a more intuitive way of cooking. The act of lifting or tilting is in fact precision control on the user’s end.
@@Civenash I hear you. But I think a lot of it is learned habits. I bet you spent most of your time cooking on a gas stove. Generally, if I want to cook with flames, I cook outdoors
I've been using induction cook tops for about a decade, but I first remember hearing them back in the early 80s. Induction is better than gas in every way. I would not consider resistance or halogen electric, only induction. Some thing that could have been given more emphasis are, the risk of fire is almost non-existent from grease spatter or spills, The pot handle, lid, utensils, and even the upper pot stay muck cooler so little risk of burn, due to the low temp of the glass clean up is far (extremely far) easier than typical resistance electric glass tops. You showed a dollar next to a pot, I typically demonstrate by boiling water with tissue paper between the pot and the glass and in a short time when the water is boiling, remove the pot and pick up the perfect unsinged tissue with bare hands. The reaction is like to a magic trick My wife was a die hard gas fan, but just a few weeks with a quality induction cook top and she will never go back. At first she complained that induction was too fast, but she got used to it. On portable induction cook tops, I've given away many. I've found them for a low as $30, but I would not take one with less than 1800 watt. There are 1300 watt and 1500 watt, but the price different isn't noticeable, but the lower wattage will be slower. Good luck on convincing people to change. Gas is like a religion. The facts don't matter and people will stick with whatever they want to believe regardless how obvious it is that induction is better in every way.
I’ve invited friends over to try out induction when they were upgrading their kitchens. Even die hard gas fans can’t argue with ‘just come over and see for yourself’. Every single one goes for induction once they’ve had a chance to try it out themselves. Experience is the best salesman.
The problem with induction and hot plate is that when the power is out, you're screwed. With a gas stove i can easily cook during a power outage. Plus induction only works on flat pans/pots which is annoying for the types of food I cook
Also there is still the big issue of cost Ferrell said the cost of stove is 400? That's is top of thr line quality where I'm from you can easily get a decent one for 150$ and as low as 89.99 which is still very much functional if you take good care of it So it is about 10x the cost of gas also gas is cheap where I live compared to electricity in some areas I don't deny that if I get the opportunity to use it I would like it hell I even co sider getting one for myself if we only consider the benefit but it is not cost effective for me and it is unreasonable to expect ppl to change so ppl use gas stoves is not religious is out of the current need
@@wahahabuh I get the point about the pan shape. I have a heavy cast iron wok with a slightly flatted base that works ok and can get very hot but it won’t compare with the restaurant wok burners. Do you get a lot of power outages where you live? I’d base my decision on how I cook 99.9% of the time. To be honest if the power goes out I’m more concerned about not having WiFi connection, I can always grab a sandwich 😁
@@kevinsantos5050 yes it’s true that cost is an important factor for many people. If you can afford the upgrade it’s twice as efficient so the cost per kW or thermal unit will be less divergent but probably still more expensive. The costs have come down a great deal on the units as the technology develops and saturates the market. We cooked over fires once upon a time and gas will go the same way at some point.
We have an induction stove and love it. We have a tip to protect the glass surface. This has not been indorced by the manufacturer, nevertheless it's been working well for us. We had a BBQ Grill mat (or oven mat) that we cut into circles the size of our pots and place one between the pot and the cooking surface. We cut a small hole in the center to help position them quicker. Hope this is helpful! Thanks for your show - regular viewer!
Same here, but we use an induction silicon mat. We bought ours online. Think it was called bake o glide and and can be cut, with scissors, to the size of your hob. Love my induction stove.
I set up a small kitchen for myself and ended up with a portable induction stove top I really didn’t understand what it was prior to buying it. After two years of using it and one upgrade later, I love it. The upgrade allowed me to remove the pan without the stove immediately turning itself off. While I don’t remove the utensil from the stove often having to reset it each time made me a little nutty. It takes a minute to adjust to it but I grew up with an electric stove and adjusted to gas depending on what was available in the house I had moved to so this was just another adjustment. I found it fairly easy. Hope more people will give it a try to protect their family and our mother the earth. 😊
I grew up and currently live in, NE Indiana. Through the years, the heat has gone out a few times. While waiting for repair, I used the stove/oven to heat the house. Even filled the tub with hot water and, used a fan to blow the hot, humid air throughout the place. Definitely not as efficient as other methods and has several negatives, needing to be solved. Even so, my current home has electricity AND gas available to it. If my home only ran on electricity and it went out, I'd be dead in the water. I lived in Seattle WA for a few years and used an electric stove, as well as an induction stove. Since 2021 (via a Google search) about 68% of all homes in the State of Washington are electric. This number only continues to rise. As someone who only possesses basic cooking skills, I very much preferred a gas stove.
I've used gas, elec and induction at different times. I must admit I've always preferred gas for it's sheer simplicity, but I remember liking induction too. Most of my cookware's compatible with induction, the exceptions being my roasting tins and a single non-stick pan while I need to replace anyway - no big deal.
My wife does most of the cooking, and she asked me to replace the ceramic cooktop with a gas version. She really enjoys it, and I have to say I find it much easier to use as a part-time cook that has to experiment with the setting to get it right. It’s on an island with a massive exhaust fan that sends everything outside. I appreciate the advice about leaking while off. I have a gas detector and will go back and check it when off. When I installed the cooktop, I just tested the feed lines - not the burners.
That exhaust to the outside is also a huge energy loss by itself. It's pulling hot air from inside your house and pushing it outside. Most efficient houses use filters now instead. Make sure your wife never gets to try an induction stove, it's faster than gas with just as much control and when she sees how easy it is to clean she'll regret you guys switching to gas :p
Owned a Thermador Hybrid cook top for the last 15 years. 2 hot plates are induction and the other two hot plates are standard flat tops, so it gives the option of using alloy cookware 👍 It’s been awesome and keeps on trucking 🎈Only thing we had to do was run a heavier gauge wire from the panel and upgrade breaker to 40 amp.
Induction cools faster so we don't get burned when we touch the surface, cooks faster as it heats only the pot or the pan, and in my country, it is freaking cheap, like only US$100 for a decent model. That's why I am an induction cooker user now.
The rental house I was in 8 years ago had a 4-burner induction stovetop. I had never seen one until then, didn't really understand it, but my landlord explained that after I got used to it I would never go back to gas. He was right about that. When I bought my trailer I couldn't afford a full-on stove but the $100 single burner indu I bought to augment the existing glass top electric fits in perfectly. I'll never go back.
We have been using an induction hob for about 6 years now and would never go back, we bought an old house at the end of last year and the first thing I did was swap out the gas hob for an induction hob. For a or so when we first moved into the house when we had to use the gas hob and it really brought it home to me how much better cooking on induction is.
@@kingwillbisthebest Not sure where you get that cooking on gas is cheaper, it certainly isn't where I live, even if it was cheaper to cook on gas, cooking on induction is much nicer and the hob is easier to clean. Most importantly I am not filling my home with nasty particles and adding to the CO2 being pumped in the environment.
I am immensely impressed by the efficiency of an induction stove. Everything Matt says about them is right, and they are easy to clean. The only disadvantage is that the glass is breakable (as I know to my cost).
Induction is also easiest to clean, since the "burners" don't actually heat up much (some heat transfers backwards from the cooking vessel obviously) but nothing ever burns to the cooktop. You can always just wipe up after a spill. I recommend thicker cookware to cook food more evenly. But this is the same recommendation I'd give for gas or radiant electric. Treat yourself to a nice Fissler frying pan with the money you save on fuel.
I grew up cooking on a gas stove however, I've switched to induction in my new house and love it. One thing to note specifically about compatible pans and pots, even if they do work with induction, it's so effective at heating that your pans can warp over time.
Two things to keep in mind, step up the heat in stages since the pan will react so fast. But a major issue is coil size compared to pan. You don't want to go more then a inch bigger to avoid warping. Most cheap induction coils are only 6 inches and don't heat a larger pan well around edges. Bigger coils jump in price a lot so you'll likely only get one on a average priced unit
@@adrianwilson7536 yeah, I renovated my kitchen and went on the expensive side for all the appliances. While I have an extra large coil in the center, the other four coils are generously sized and also capable of combining for a cast iron griddle surface.
Glad to see you are headed toward induction in your new home Matt. We've been using two large commercial CookTek induction hobs for the last 10 years and couldn't be happier. They are super powerful and easy to clean. I've seen some "but what abouts" in the comments below so here are some answers from someone who knows: Power outages - We rarely have these, so its not really an issue, but induction works just fine running off my home battery :). Heat loss in the pan when you lift it - I consider this a good thing for control while cooking, but if you don't like it, use cast iron to retain heat longer (this is true for any stove type) Woks don't workon induction - I get this a lot, and then I ask that person if they own a wok and they all say 'no.' If you need a wok, they make adapters and even specialized induction hobs for woks if you're really into it. Induciton is just better, stop the stupidity...
Induction is great. I wonder why it is not used everywhere. Easy cleaning, fast temperature changes, even faster than gas, no 'smoke' in house, energy efficient. We use Bosh 8 series, and it is great.
Yep and it's also very cheap and has easy installation. Heats the pan quickly and efficiently. I did enjoy gas previously and still like the charm of open fire cooking, but for everyday practical use I could never go back to traditional electric or gas stoves. It's a wonder why Induction doesn't hold majority on all global markets yet.
Induction is more responsive than people think. Especially when it's on 240v. Before we bought my wife's grandmother's house and renovated it, only one gas burner worked (and poorly at that), so we used a 110v portable induction stove, which was pretty good, but slow. Induction has no residual heat like induction. Really, the only downside I have with induction is being unable to char peppers or flambe. But that's what I have a little culinary torch for.
Honestly one of the main issues with gas, is if maintained improperly they quickly lose some of their effectiveness, or even cut out entirely and you have to perform a repair. With Induction you literally just wipe the surface clean and that's it. It's so hassle free.
@@Real_MisterSir Definitely! Induction is so easy to clean, also because stuff doesn't get burned on the cooktop either. So it may make a mess, but a quick wipe with a cloth while cooking and it's clean again.
I live in Chile, and when figuring out the kitchen renovation, induction was already my go to. I got a bosh 4000-Watt (here outlets use 210v) induction stove and I love it. It's the best decision I ever made, fast, clean and safe. I have small children and replacing the oven and the stove with electric I eliminated the risk of having a kid playing with the knobs creating a gas leak.
the words 'lack of maintenance as a cause' were apparently omitted. a properly sealed gas feed and maintained gas stove will not emit anything when off. common sense at work which is something that's lacking in commiefornia at this point in time as evidenced by the 'study'.
@@jfolz benzene is a liquid at room Temp and pressure. It boils at 80 degrees C. Sounds like bull. If there was benzene it would have been in parts per billion. Because the natural gas lines are pressurized. Propane gas cylinders are pressurized to 10 atmospheres. If you increase pressure you decrease evaporation.
It sounds like pure scare mongering to me. There is not enough left over benzene in any gas supply. The longer it travels over pipe lines, even less of it remains to leak in homes. I can understand leaking methane, propane, carbon dioxide or even water vapour .. but benzene... Give me a break
@@kbee225 ur comment is so confusing. obviously it would be measured in parts per million thats how u measure the concentration of any substance in the air...
I switched to induction in a cheap way. This was 7 years ago when induction was not as popular as it is today but I could see the potential. I bought a portable induction cooktop, basically an induction hotplate. I never use more than one burner at a time so what I did was I removed the resistance coil from my traditional coil stove and mounted the induction hotplate to the stove. After some wiring I have a stove with one induction and 3 resistance cooking surfaces. I can't remember the last time I used the other three. It will boil a pot of water in about 13-15 min. No hot spots, perfect pancakes and grilled cheese. 7 years since I mounted it and it still works perfectly as the day I did my back alley instillation.
we had electric as long as i can think and i was always cooking water in a water cooker while a small amount would heat up on the stove. so i would transfer the boiling water to the pot while it heated. since we changed a year ago to induction, i don't have to do that anymore. it has been a great experience so far and the switch was very easy for us. i would not like to cook with gas simply for the reason of fire or explosion.
I have & had electric & gas appliances my entire life. I run half & half today (1 gas stove, 1 electric stove; 1 gas dryer, 1 electric dryer.) I only ever had a fire 🔥 from a failed heating element in my electric stove. The electric starting element in my gas oven failed, but the oven merely stopped cooking / automatically shut off. My neighbor’s house across the street half burned down, due to an electric stove fire 🔥 My neighbor’s house behind mine burned completely to the ground. It seems counter intuitive, but electricity ⚡️ is a lot more dangerous than gas.
@@nazeradom - it is a really good question… most people don’t take the full fuel cycle into consideration: 1. burn 🔥 fuel at power plant -> power line electric ⚡️ losses -> convert to heat in home 🏡 2. Burn 🔥 gas ⛽️ to create heat in home 🏡 There are a lot of losses in option 1, few take the losses into consideration. Same with cars over a lifetime: - average US Hybrid: 6.3k lbs of CO2 - West Virginia EV: 9,146 pounds of CO2 Electricity ⚡️ efficiency depends on what & where your power is coming from (ie fuel source & how far away the generation station is.)
Thanks for telling us about the magnet test. The cookware I invested in a couple of years ago, which I hope will last my lifetime, passed. I'll most likely install induction if I ever need to replace my electric stove, which came with my house, and I honestly find it easy enough to use, after decades of using gas.
Cooked on every type of furnace, last 6 years on induction, never gone use anything else, if I would move to a new house with a new 50K kitchen including gas stove, I would still rip it out, and get induction instead, the speed and ease of cleaning, is unbeatable.
I have spoken to several householders and also builders about this issue here in the UK. The point that comes up every time is that the power that an induction hob uses is extremely high although as you say, brief and every one of the properties that have had induction hobs installed in have had to have 3 phase electric installed as well. This extra cost and higher daily charge needs to be taken into account as well. I am on bottled gas for the hob only along with solar, air source and batteries for everything else. Also a woodburner which I season all my wood (all hard wood) for a minimum of 2 years. Soot in virtually zero.
You can plug loads of induction hobs into a normal 3 pin socket. Most combined hobs with ovens just get wired into the 32amp cooker circuit unless they are rated higher, then a separate 32 amp circuit could be installed- but you’d be pretty stupid to buy it in the first place!
maybe it is a pommie thing but here in australia most houses have no 3 phases and have absolutely no problem with induction cook tops. the problem is not the inductions cook top, it is the electrician that is super rigid.
No 3-phase in my house (1920s but with many extensions and upgrades over the years) and my 5-ring induction hob is just fine on a 32A dedicated circuit. I have multiple oven circuits and a 32A car charger circuit too and it's no problem. Same applies to my mother-in-law's nearly new flat: very high spec, modern electrics with multiple ovens, electric underfloor heating, induction hob and definitely no 3-phase.
As a UK electrician you do not need 3 phase for an induction hob , many are available to run on 13A supply . They are very efficient compared to other hob types.
@@waynecartwright-js8twin us, my induction cooktop is on 15 amp circuit at 120v. That is just over half what you get. It just means it uses the total capacity of that circuit.
I live in a cold region, so for most of the year inneficies in gas simply heat the house. So i'm not in a rush to change until i see a viable tech. So far, induction cooking that i've tries has been incredibly frustrating, randomly turning off if the pot is not in exactly the right position etc. I look forward to exploring magnetic cooking.😊
Honestly, up until now I believed that induction stoves required expensive proprietary cookware, while that's been cleared up I was still surprised at the base price of an induction cooktop. Its definitely something that's been glazed over by those suggesting them as a perfect alternative to gas. It is nice to know that a simple magnet could be used to identify pots and pans that would work with one though, and the price should come down with time.
Near the end of this segment, he mentioned getting a single burner plug-in induction cooktop for around $60. That’s what we did and it worked out great! Ours was a gift, but only would have cost about $100 if we’d bought it ourselves. We put it next to our ceramic top electric stove, and now use it about 85% of the time. We eat “mini course meals” instead of older style conventional“dinner plate - dining room” formality. There are only 3 of us, so we take turns using the induction cooktop, the air fryer, toaster oven, or microwave so we seldom need more than one burner at a time anymore.
I would assume the prices of induction stoves (in the USA) should come down ONCE there is a critical mass of them installed. But, if this takes 3 years or 3 decades, who knows... induction stoves are not exactly new technology. When living in the USA, I found it really odd just how rare they were there even in newly build premium apartments. Like, here in the UK, a basic induction cooktop from IKEA (in the standard European size, so 60 cm / ~24 inches and four “burners”) starts at 215 pounds ($260) and in a randomly chosen Western European country the same model is even cheaper at about 230 euros ($245), both prices inclusive of the local sales taxes (which are for both countries much higher than anywhere in the USA). The IKEA in USA only had bigger models, with one extra burner, but the price is like $830 already before sales tax... given that the extra burner cannot possibly cost more than a quarter of the price of the cooktop, that is still like thrice the price for the cheapest model. (To be honest, the model sold in the USA was a bit more advanced than the entry-level models here. But, do you always really need the automatic adjustments for the size of your pots. And, it is not like such flexible models, or even the way more advanced fully flexible zoning models, would be that expensive on this side of the pond. And, it is not even like one would not connect a cooktop in the USA to the between phases with 2 × 120 V = 240 V ... so the internals would not really need to change all that much, just the 50 Hz to 60 Hz mains adaptation.)
I was very suprised at that price; here in the UK I recently installed a new induction cooktop and it cost me £280. Are prices really so high in America? The one I bought has 1 huge ring for things like a flat bottomed wok and two normal sized rings, since I rarely use more than 3 at once anyway and need to be able to cook using huge pans.
Matt might be including the cost of paying a certified electrician to install a dedicated cable connection for the electric hob. If you are replacing a gas hob a suitable electricity supply might not be present, especially with the lower voltage the standard US sockets use meaning they aren't suitable for the purpose.
I'm always happy to see this being talked about! I love my cheap 1 burner portable induction plate despite its weird noises. I am very clumsy, so I rolled laughing when that was mentioned. 😂 I really appreciate mention of the different forms of ventilation, very helpful!
I love, love, love my new induction stove. I previously worked with a gas range for nearly 20 years but was forced into an electric cook top after our move. After a ton of research while upgrading the new kitchen I went all in on a huge induction cooktop and cannot imagine going back. It's fast, responsive and so easy to clean. Meals come out better than ever with less time and effort. I'll never go back.
I am quite curious if those who install a 4 burners cook top feel it was worth the expense/space for 4 burners - or if you would recommend two burners as being more than sufficient considering the efficient/faster cooking time. For about $100 you can get a decent single portable induction burner! I just want people to be aware that for many, a quality single portable induction burner may actually be all they need. Induction is so efficient I usually prefer to cook in series (ie make the main dish - then steam a vegetable). This is particularly important for those with limited kitchen space, limited budgets, or preference for flexible use (a portable cook top can be used anywhere you have an outlet and even stored away when not in use). I completely eliminated my range and used a single induction burner plus convection/microwave oven to regularly cook for up to 12 kids and an adult! I had a two burner portable induction, but rarely used it so I put it in storage. I would recommend a quality single burner for the counter top with a cheap spare single burner in storage for occasional use, unless you have unusual needs. You might want a 2 burner if you have it installed or tend to have lots of pots on the stove at once. The only complaint I have with my $40 burner is the center approx. 6-7 inches diameter heated more than the edges of the pan - I think this is corrected in the better models likely in the $100 range.
@@amyw1850 I wondered the same thing for quite a while. I got by for a few years using just a single-hob induction hotplate. No oven, either. I was satisfied with that and the idea of a four-hob cooktop seemed excessive. But I bought one anyway. So glad I did. First, the controlability is far better on the proper cooktop, especially at low temperatures. Second, the large surface gives a space to set hot item out of the oven. Third, it did not take long for me to get used to having 3 and even 4 pots and pans going simultaneously - it makes meal prep more fun. I designed my kitchen to have a lot of horizontal prep/cook/serve space on the island with sink/ dirty dish lay-down space and dishwasher on the other side of the aisle. The flow from refrigerator to prep to cook to serve to washing is key. If you have the space, I recommend that the proper cooktop is worth the investment. A 30" unit is plenty big for me.
A few months ago I bought a countertop induction "burner" (fun fact, at about 6 min, the induction burner in the video is the one I bought!). I'm not sure what to call it, but I'll go with burner. Single heating unit, bought on Amazon for about $80. This thing is amazing. I did a couple of tests for my curiosity. Running it at max power, it consumes about 1000-1200 watts. It brought 3 cups of water to a rolling boil in 2 minutes (the installed electric stovetop took 8 min on max -- and I did not have a way to measure its watts consumption but I know it is much higher from a little research). It's as responsive and fast as gas. The low wattage use was a surprise to me; I expected it to be higher. I absolutely love it. There is no question that induction cooktops are a GREAT choice, especially if your house is on solar/battery power, but even for regular grid power. Fast. Efficient. Responsive. Compact (store in a cabinet when not in use). What's not to love? The ONLY downside I encountered (that I knew before I bought it) was I needed to buy new pans. That is only because the pots and pans I had were aluminum (which is crap, and I knew it was crap). So I had to buy "better" pans. They are NOT special. They are NOT specially made for induction. All it requires is that the bulk of the pan material be ferromagnetic (i.e. iron or steel). Whoopty doo. Still regular old inexpensive pots and pans that work great.
A single induction burner can be a good way to experiment with induction to see if it works for you and confirm if your pans are compatible. One advantage of gas is emergency heat and able to cook during a power failure, which are more frequent in rural areas than urban areas
Hi I'm from a rural place, and 1,800 RPM water cooled diesel generators are King for power outages, and some people prefer spark ignition propane or gasoline ones. I myself prefer diesel and propane, the propane for the Winter for easier starting and no air conditioning needed.
When I moved into my current house, I was confused about why my cooktop wouldn't work. It turned out it was inductive and that all of my cookware was incompatible. I was pretty cheesed off about that. I had no choice but to donate all my pots and pans and buy new ones for the inductive cooktop. I was off to a bad start, but I got used to it. Eventually I started to see a lot of positives. It really is fast and efficient - almost as responsive as gas, easier to clean, no harmful vapours. If I ever decide to replace my cooktop, I'll go inductive again. I think a big part of the low uptake is just that nobody introduces us to it properly.
“Low uptake” Is cost & safety & availability. - It is freekin expensive - only had a fire in my house from a failed electric stove - it is nice to have warm food when the power is out during the winter ❄️ time
@@DavidHalko When the power goes out, use your BBQ. Cooking with gas outdoors reduces the health issues. Here in Canada, a lot of people BBQ year round, even when the power is on.
Having to buy new pots is also an upside (unless you're poor): most induction ready pots are high quality and will make you happy for a long time. Plus here's your chance to buy pots you can stack!
My wife and I are both professional chefs. Electric stoves just can’t compete with the flavor of an actual flame. They have their benefits when you are baking or boiling things, but broiling and cooking on flame just can’t be replaced when it comes to flavor
I love my induction countertop cooker; it's 22 old years and it's still my main cooking device! BTW a "Deffuser plate" will allow ANY cookweatr to be used; with only a slight effeciancy loss!
I first experienced induction cooking about 15 years ago in a vacation rental in France. Several years ago I changed my resistance burner stove to an induction stove and would never go back. It was more expensive on initial purchase for sure, but lower electric cost and greatly reduced heating of the kitchen. Besides the instant response like gas, it also heats the pan very evenly with no hot spots which makes cooking easier and with better results. Induction also is much faster on initial warmup. Most induction stoves have a “turbo” mode for initial heating that provides about 10% more energy than the hi setting. Also, since the cooktop isn’t heated, except by the cookware, cleanup is always just a wipe with a dishcloth.
My biggest issue with induction (when doing a kitchen upgrade) was the lack of options for wok cooking. There are some induction cooktops with a wok element, but the indentation isn't deep enough and it prevents proper stirring wich is usually done by both mixing with a spoon and moving the wok.
That’s my biggest gripe with my induction cooktop too! My fix is doing it outside on the wok-suitable gas burner that came as part of my BBQ Quite handy if you’re grilling meat and making a veggie stir-fry on the side! Having induction doesn’t mean you have to cook everything on it! Besides, you don’t have the hot, polluted greasy air inside your house!
@Proper Gander thanks both of you because that was my concern and the possible answer I came up with too. I've also realized I haven't even used my wok for a while, must he time for a stir fry 😀
My roommate and I were given an induction hot plate, but had never used it. Out of curiosity last year, we set it up on top of our glass top stove. Fast forward - we now use it for 95% of our cooking. Definitely a fan now!
But when it comes to cooking with gas … what would you choose for your home? Do you use induction? Like it? Get a LARQ PureVis pitcher and start enjoying fresh, pure water today: bylarq.com/undecided1.
If you liked this video, check out The Problem with Heat Pumps and Cold Weather ua-cam.com/video/H3jIRRzF6d0/v-deo.html
3 billion people around the world cook with charcoal fires... PREACH BROTHER PREACH
Yeah - I use gas, and not resistive elements due to controllability. Tried induction once, but didn't have time to really learn how to use it. It's something I would consider, but not when I'm hungry and need to cook ;)
@@alfeersum lol pay your carbon tax lol
I think you (@Matt Ferrell) are focusing your testing etc too much on boiling water - we seldom boil water with gas, but most of the time with water kettle. And this would make immediately the test(s) null and void? Although I was surprised about the emissions. So overall a two induction, two gas would still be the best, if you can turn the gas off.
Been using induction for a couple of years now and it’s amazing! It’s fast, precise and economical. The manufacturer bundled with induction cookware so everything works as expected. If I need to sear something I just use the outdoor grill.
Thanks for not gaslighting this issue.
Im gonna BONK YOU ON THE HEAD for making me laugh
good pun!
I found this whole topic electrifying
It's all hot air to me
To quote Glenn Frey "the heat is on".
Two more things: I'm actually surprised that these are so uncommon and also expensive. You can get these from IKEA in Germany for under 400 €. Also you don't need to worry about burnt handles from pots/pans, spill overs or cleaning pots (from the underside) anymore. Nothing burns to the surface of the stove or the pots themselves, so very time efficient to clean.
Had an normal electric ceramic stove before which was a lot slower and was a lot more difficult to clean.
This. I was surprised by this $1000 number because while induction isn't cheap, it certainly isn't that much more expensive.
Perhaps it's so much more expensive in the US because it's not so common yet?
@@AykevanLaethem That would be my guess as well. If barely anyone is interested in it, then there's barely anyone to sell it to. Then it doesn't make sense to build factories there for some of the manufacturers, which means that all of the wares from them would need to be imported, which further increases costs. That lessens the competition, but also makes it inefficient to depend on numbers sold for profits, so while less competition allows hiking up the prices, the need to earn more per piece forces the same.
All in all, common things cost less, while rare ones cost more. It's just the way it is.
I got one in Serbia for 40e (only 1 plate)
One thing to consider is that America runs on 120V/60Hz instead of Europe's 230V/50Hz, which makes a big difference in cable requirements. In general you need twice the number of amps for the same power.
@@Tedrousek The US is actually both 120V and 240V. Devices that use a lot of power generally run on 240V (ACs etc).
If you want to learn more, there's a Technology Connections video about this explaining this with history and everything.
I used to swear on gas alone but nowadays I'd get induction any time.
I grew up with gas, had pretty bad electrical stoves in the past but seeing my brother's induction stove in action absolutely convinced me.
Yeah it’s one of those things you really only need to try once and you immediately get it. I was skeptical too bc I had enjoyed the responsiveness of my gas stove when I moved to the US. But when my parents got the old radiant electric cooktop I had grown up with swapped out for an induction stove, it took me only one cooking session to get convinced.
It’s so responsive, fast and consistent. The speed combined with the consistency is really amazing. Once you hit the sweet spot for sth to simmer, you just leave it on that setting. It’s mind bogglingly easy.
It's not just speed, energy efficiency and responsiveness. My induction cooktop also has all kinds of additional features like cookware temperature control and temperature probe for sous vide. With the probe, I can even incubate yogurt at precisely 109°F.
@@RationalSaneThinker Yeah that's super nice too. I'd mark that under consistency. Having no access to induction cooktops in my current living situation, I use an instantpot for those things, but it would be super nice to be able to just use the stove for that.
Instantpots are great too and may be more efficient due to pressure cooking - I don't know how they compare.
You can get a single burner portable plug-in induction for $40-$150. I am happy enough with my cheap $40 one but it seems to have a hotter area in the middle; so a highly rated one is likely worth a little additional cost.
The portability is a great feature! I don't think I will ever want a standard range again because 4 burners unnecessarily take up so much space.
The efficiency of an induction stove make multiple burners unnecessary. I prep my steamed vegetables while the main dish is cooking and pop them on to steam while the main dish cools to eat. I mostly only cook in one pot, but find it natural to cook in series when I have one than one item due to the amazing efficiency or induction cooking.
You can pop the portable induction burner in a drawer or cupboard when not in use - so it is handy that way as well, if you do not cook often.
Happy cooking!
@@xTobsecretx
I've cooked on all types of cooktops, but when I had to choose a cooktop when planning a kitchen remodel I went with induction, and I couldn't be happier. It ticks all the boxes: power, response, speed, but the unexpected benefit was the cleanup- even boil-overs (water in my area is extremely hard) easily clean up in a minute or two. I feel my chef friends prefer gas because it's all they've ever used, so they've adapted their technique to it and they're afraid changing cooktop technology will be like starting over (which it won't). However, one of my chef friends got to try my new induction during a major cook for a large party and he was blown away with not only the power and response, but the versatility with the bridge burner that links two elements with an element in between which allows you to use a rectangular griddle and head it very evenly. He's now seriously considering changing over. Is there anything I would change about it? Sure, like the standby time before the element turns off when you take the pan off the heat for a minute could be longer, but that's a minor issue. All things considered; I'm pleased with the choice I made.
I used to enjoy using gas stoves because of the responsiveness as well compared to coil electric, until I moved into a place where they put the CHEAPEST gas stove they could in. Its horrible to cook with in every way and if I owned the place I'd have replaced it the same week it had been installed. I've been using a single induction burner for the last year because even though its not great because of lacking features its no worse than the gas stove thats here and it helped cut back on waste heat during the summer.
do you use cast iron on your cooktop? They scratch so easy so I am told. what about magnet size and pan size for large pans need to buy $$$ cooktop
@@scottlange2766 I have used cast on mine, I have mostly used a newer nonstick pan this last year that is made to work with induction. You'd have to look around to find prices & size, and all things can get damaged you just have to adjust to what might with those however a scratch won't really hurt the functionality of the induction stove any other that looks.
I totally agree. And clean up is not even comparable to other types of glass-top because induction ranges don't get hot the way radiant ones do. Cleanup is SO easy.
@@scottlange2766 I use cast iron and enameled cast iron on my induction range. Over time the ceramic top will get scratched if you are not careful. That is fine. It's a working surface and if it doesn't remain glossy, so what? It's still flat and so much easier to clean than any gas or coil-top range. It's a tool, and tools should be cared for but not babied.
As our house doesn't have a connection to gas to begin with, we have an induction stove. I was cooking on gas in our previous house and I can't say I've missed it. You covered pretty much everything that there is to cover. There is one tiny downside: tossing, wokking and other techniques that require you to lift you're pan you'll need to rework a bit. As lifting the pan breaks off the contact and thus effectively kills the heat source. Hasn't been an issue for me. Oh and free tip for those who are considering switching and need new pans: do yourself a favor and get rid of non stick pans. Maybe keep one for frying an egg and stuff, but we've moved to carbon steel for most other things. No chemicals and those work absolutely amazing on our induction top. Anyone who asks I fully recommend switching.
I was just wondering about non-stick pots and pans on induction stoves. Knowing there's a viable alternative helps ease switching. However, as you mentioned, pulling the pan away removes the heat source, making induction less versatile. I think that's what my hang up is, the versatility of gas burners.
@@Jasx_501 in my opinion that's only a small downside for which you get quite some plussides in return. Non-stick is fine as long as a magnet sticks to the bottom as Matt mentions. In that case there's no urgent need to get rid of them, unless you don't like the chemicals story there.
@@jaspersiegmund well I think that a lot of people have forgotten how well Seasoning a pan works for non-stick. Not only that but if something happens you can just reapply it whereas with Nonstick pans once the surface is scratched you have to throw it out.
@@Jasx_501 nonstick works completely fine with induction tops - if a magnet sticks to the base of the pan it'll work. Personally I don't like nonstick pans but there's no need to thrown them out if you like them and they're induction suitable
@@Jasx_501 I have electric stove and induction cook top(like the 60$ one in the video). Mix is the best option hands down. When i do kitchen remodeling i plan on getting 2+2 system(induction with 2 heaters and electric with 2 heaters).
I changed to induction about 2 years ago and I must say, I love it. My water starts boiling in 20-30 seconds and the sear I get on my steak is even. The one downside I didn’t consider was the need to upgrade nearly all of my pots and pans. You’ll need to ensure your pans are induction rated with good metals in order to experience induction heating as its intended. In the end, I not have a excellent Samsung stove and nice all clad pans, and I love it.
Everyone I have known in the USA who bought an induction stove had electronic problems with it after just a few years. They're expensive to repair too.
I also switched to induction probably 5 years ago...half my cooking ware was old and useless or already appropriate for induction so I had no issue in switching.
My old stove had such turnable buttons to adjust heat.
Biggest problem I have with my induction stove is that new electical touch menu is on top.
If I drop something on it while cooking.
Lets say water by opening a lid or something like that it can happen that the stove des and safty deactivation :/
I’ve been using Nu-wave induction plate for over six years and still going,
Love it cooks the best steaks 🥩 ever n brings water to a boil in record time.
It’s on top of the electric ⚡️ stove which I’ve only used a few times lol 😂
@@blablup1214 It probably depends on the brand and model, because when I drop liquid on my buttons noithing happens, I just wipe it off with a cloth so I can use it withough getting wet.
@@1969barnabas Iv'e had mine for 5 years and it works like a charm. It's not that expensive in Europe either. I have a Balay brand, stove top with three different pot sizes that currently costs 495 euros.
I did precisely what you suggested, bought the exact induction single "burner"unit just to try it out before investing in a new cooktop and absolutely love it! I moved from Southern California where gas is king to Arizona where the community I live in doesn't even have the option for gas. I was getting hammered on my electric bill for other reasons but ,was looking for more effective ways to lower my monthly bill. Your channel got the wheels turning so to speak, and through my little induction top, air fryer and time of day use of electricity , I've cut my bill by more than 50%! I'm recently retired, looking for ways to save and be more efficient is both interesting and cost effective! Thanks for your content, I'll be watching!
don't try it out with el-cheapo unit - yo will get burned!
i had to use cheapest-smallest tabletop unit for 4 months (remodeling of 1. floor in the house, including kitchen)
not good experience ..
Watch Matt's video on batteries.. LiFePO4 are great options to provide a fair amount of energy for most things. Not uber cheap.. but worthy of "getting off the grid" if you also have solar.
@@b3owu1f Can even be worth it without solar with time of use metering if the cost spread is enough and you use enough.
Brian if you haven't already consider a timer for your water heater to disable it during the expensive hours. Unless you take 8 showers a day(if so I've another power saving idea for you) the tank will hold plenty of hot water to get you through the spendy time and those heating elements use gobs of power while on to heat that water. It's effectively a huge heat battery we already own, just need to add some basic smarts to it to control when it charges.
@@b3owu1f check out DIY solar with Will Prowse
I would definitely like to clear up that a hood can significantly reduce pollutants BUT it has to be vented outside. Most builders cheap out on this and just put in recirculating hoods which are useless. The first thing on my list for a kitchen remodel was an outside vented hood with plenty of power. It's my favorite part of the remodel.
Recirculating hoods are meant to be a grease trap. They are lousy at it, but that is their excuse for existence. Definitely Run an air duct to the outdoors, and not just into your attic, Get those cooking byproducts Out of the house You still need the grease trap AND you need to keep it clean or a fire is in your future so get a Good Hood.
Recirculating hood? Never heard of it. Completely defeats the entire point and purpose of having a hood (venting the heat and steam from cooking) and I'm pretty sure that not having a hood that vents outside is a building code violation.
@@kliajesal4592 Recirculating hoods are actually quite common, particularly in apartments/ condos.
Actual exhaust hoods are required by code for kitchens with gas powered stoves.
@@rcpmac Good thing the U.S. is a first-world country that enforces its building codes. /s
When the induction stoves started to gain traction in Europe (about 15 years ago), they were really expesive also here. Now you can get induction cooktops starting at €200 (although for some weird reason, appliances tend to be massively more expensive in the US than they are in Europe - everything else is often the other way around). Oh and by the way, you can get plates that act kind of as converters for example for ceramic cookware. Of course you lose some of the benefits of the induction cooktop (speed, efficiency, cool surface), but that's no worse than using a resistive cooktop to begin with, while you still get the benefits of induction with compatible cookware.
I saw a induction stove with two plates for just 1 500 NOK here in Norway some months ago.
@@Luredreier that is like average hourly salary in Norway, or also the price of one cup of coffee at Oslo airport 😂 Seriously though, I think of course there wasn't economy of scale in production at first, but I think it was also about milking all the money they could, as they were considered a luxury item. I wonder if appliances in general are inexpensive in Norway 🤔 Would kind of make sense, after all, our biggest electronics chain in Finland is Gigantti, which is a part of the Norwegian Elkjøp group.
@@fintux Maybe, I don't travel abroad enough to tell.
We have a reputation for high prices, but there has always been certain product categories that actually where competitive with mainland Europe here, and cheaper then Sweden.
With the fall in the NOK and the high inflation in Sweden they've actually been crossing the border over here to shop for a change (usually it's us going the other way).
@@Luredreier yeah I was a bit joking there, too. I did not know of the reversal of the trade, though. I have known that earlier a lot of the people in Norway went shopping accross the borders, enough so that there have been a lot of shops right at the Norwegian border in Sweden (or that is what I've heard anyways). I guess the groceries are the thing that traditionally has been cheaper in Sweden than in Norway. Norway is still on my bucket list on places to visit, I just never have got around to do that despite of it being so close (I live in Finland).
@@fintux Yeah, now is a good time to do so.
Norway has had a *relatively* low inflation by European standards while our currency is also relatively low value right now.
So Norway is actually somewhat affordable for foreigners for a change.
Don't expect that to last though.
We switched from gas to induction and really like it. Recently staying at my parents' place and using their gas cooktop I was amazed how slow, hot and generally awful it was in comparison. It's surprising how quickly you get used to the superior experience of induction. Induction seems kind of expensive in the US. Much cheaper in Europe.
There are very few lower priced options, one being Frigidaire. I bought one for my daughter's apartment for $1000 and convinced two friends to buy the same unit, all are happy. Additional benefit: except for your cast iron and stainless steel pots you'll be buying new higher quality pots that will be easy to clean and last decades.
I'm considering switching my gas range (which is about 12 years old) to induction. Did you have to upgrade electrical an outlet to install the induction stove?
Probably just a matter of time before they get cheaper!
Starting at 200 Euro in Germany. Another reason why everyone is using it nowadays.
@@DennisSchmitzthat is very interesting. the cheapest induction range I could find on the Home Depot website was 1100usd and the cheapest gas was about 500 usd
For anyone looking for a new stove, seriously consider getting one with physical knobs. The digital buttons are common with advanced features, but longevity is a concern. That and they're a bit of a pain to cook with, where you have to hit the button repeatedly to turn the temp up or down while stirring something in the pan at the same time. Physical old school knobs are so much better.
That and induction can get too hot for certain pans like cast iron, so experiment on half to 3/4ths heat first before jumping into max heat. Pans can get really hot with induction.
omg i hate these touch buttons so much. the induction top at my friends place has these touch buttons on top of the cooking surface. like wtf, why? yea the cooktop doesnt get hot but the pans that are 2 cm away from the buttons do. feels like they were only added bc "looks futuristic bro" without any thought.
I have a induction field with these digital dials on the top but also knobs on the stove. The problem is that the digital ones react to water aka if you clean something up on the filed over these dials they go into error mode.
I never understood why someone needs these, they are not a feature but a real pain.
Please boycott touch buttons on the stove surface!
This is a senseless idea and a deal breaker for me and induction stoves. I will only get one with physical knobs.
Also I usually use a non magnetic silicone insulator between the pot and the stove, I want pots with built in ceramic insulation bottoms. No need to heat up the stove or the table unecessary.
@@lizekamtombe2223 the silicone insulation between the pot and the stove reduces the efficiency of the magnetic field. The Glas ceramic top of the stove is an excellent heat insulator
@svenweihusen57 How does that work? By the non magnetosm non condictivity of silocone? I have seen no such issues when I have used one.
The handy thing with induction that even if the range increases, and the magnetic field has a reach, it does not waste energy but you might get a bit less transferred. But as I said, I have not noticed any issues, rather the reverse, my induction plate overheated without it.
As a service technician with a major appliance company, I find that people really love their induction cooktops and ranges. The almost instant heat and quick cooking is almost magical! Not having to clean of burned food residue is another nice benefit. However, they can be pricey to buy and pricey to fix on some occasions. If you do happen to purchase a large setup, I would suggest a brand that has a long reputation manufacturing/servicing them. I would also suggest getting an extended warranty.
I agree. I went from gas to induction. I would never go back.
There are some smart cooktops that automatically adjust the size of the induction area to match the pan or pot. It's brilliant. When I'm cooking a risotto, I have the stock simmering on a low temperature in a small saucepan next to the rice at a high temperature without any heat leaking across. The temperatures are precise with no need to turn it up a bit then turn it down a bit. The cooktop even tells me how many kWh I used so I know exactly what the energy consumption and cost was. The whole thing is controlled by touch switches and a removable magnetic knob, so when it comes to cleaning, I just remove the knob and clean a perfectly flat sheet of gorilla glass.
We went from piped gas to electric, then to induction hot plate (kitchen Reno is in the works), induction starts to heat up immediately, and cools down immediately! It’s amazing, was thinking of propane tank, but induction all the way baby! And now you now have heat diffusers that work under non-induction pots! Thanks for the tip!
Siemens offers an insurance in Europe for €8,99 euro per month. Which includes a years supply for every new year of cleaning products, costs of the service technician and the parts as well.
I know because I just went from gas to induction in the Netherlands with the Siemens EX875KYW1E 80cm induction hob. I just love it! 😀
I'm poor. The gas stove is already there. I heat with gas. I dry my clothes with gas. Gas is FAR cheaper per BTU than electricity. Plus, there's literally nothing to go wrong with a gas range besides a few valves: true "KISS principle" engineering.
Ain't no way I'm buying something NEW to replace something that still functions fine.
What could possibly go wrong with magnets ?
Watching from the UK. It's kind of surreal as I'm so used to this channel telling me about exciting future technology. We've probably had induction hobs here for 10 years, they're now everywhere and really cheap. I'm an Architect and can't think of anyone who has installed anything other than induction recently. I love ours, we have kids and it's great for safety.
Yep, exactly this - we swapped to an induction hob about 8 years ago. Its undeniably faster and more controllable than gas, there's far less fire risk, and I know no one likes to hear it, but when you walk into someone else's house and see the flames burning away, you just do silently judge them and think of the next generation an the climate crisis. I know not everyone can afford the panels and batteries needed to run a hob from your own power, but you can switch to a greener elec supplier. I know its a drop in the ocean compared to switching to a heat pump as the domestic heating is far, far more of the overall energy and I know heat pumps are spectacularly expensive once you consider the entire install if larger emitters are needed (I had to spend a year of evenings doing our pipework and radiators otherwise it wouldn't have been affordable), but cooking with gas, well it just LOOKs so bad, it just looks like C02 and Methane and induction hobs really aren't that much. I think if you are in the richer third of the population in a western country, you can probably cut down on a few things and afford to swap your cooker and little things do help.
We've had an induction hob for c. 20 yrs - just replaced with a newer model with the kitchen refit - the old hob was fine and has a new life via freecycle (along with most of the rest of the kitchen - even the units went to a threate group to build a set.) - We never noticed any odd noises that you mention, and generally we found it as reactive as gas to cook with - we'd never go back to gas even if it was available.
But then most American kitchen and laundry equipment looks like its stuck in the 1950s
Same, we’ve had ours for about 7 years. Not much difference in price, the only issue is trying to use a wok. I would always go with induction in the future
And they don't work anywhere near as well, or as easily, as gas stoves. I'll keep my gas stove that has been working for 50 years. Have fun trading out your stoves every two decades.
I’m in the uk, and have always used gas hobs. The after an extension we moved to a Neff (German) induction hob. Hands down the best move we ever made. Quicker than gas, and a lot safer. Also surprisingly controllable. I really though it would be rubbish, but now would never go back. The only down side was the cleaning of the ceramic top. Best to wipe as soon as the spill has happened. It makes life a lot easier.
I use baking soda to clean the ceramic top. It works very well.
I had induction 10 yrs ago , gas is objectively better
There are scrapers for ceramic stove tops that scrape off the burned in resedues without scratching the glass. After that a normal glass cleaner will do the rest.
@@VonEveric
I've cooked with everything exept an old oven that's heating with wood/coal.
Induction is objectively better.
@carstekoch I've personally owned houses with electric , induction and gas cooktops. Gas is way better
In India induction cookers are very common. The induction cooker we have costs about Rs. 2700, which is like $32 (USD). Strange that the similar thing that costs Rs. 2700 costs about Rs. 82,000 ($1000) un USA!
EDIT
Also, it saves a lot of money:
Fifteen KG LPG Gas cylinder here starts from Rs. 1100, that runs 45 days for us (family of two people). On the other hand, the induction cooker costs Rs. 2700. Maybe buy the best one for Rs. 5000? In the long run, you pay for 2 KW electricity per hour, or an unit of energy. Per unit costs Rs. 6.50 to 7.00.
So even if you cook at highest power of 2KW (which nobody does), and you cook for two hours, it will cost you Rs. 13 to 14. That means way more saving than an LPG. Note than the 2KW power is the peak power, but in reality the inductor coil switches on and off at few kHz, so a clamp meter will show you 2 - 3 amps is being used at 250VAC 50Hz.
So it saves money.
Is it efficient? Kind of - as you said it only heats up the metal. Ours heat up only steels and no aluminiums for example (steel = iron and carbon). You said gas cooking is bad in USA, IDK which gas you talked about. Google says USA uses methane, which s a pretty bad choice per se.
EDIT 2
You did say portable induction cookers are available in the USA for $60, which is good!
I would like to disagree. I say this because I have rented out an apartment (in India), and many tenants expect gas stoves due to the style of Indian cooking.
1. Rotis are to be cooked on an open flame and various roasted vegetables (eg began ka bharta).
2. Round bottom Woks (kadhais), it is highly versatile peice of cookware. Not exactly compatible with induction.
3. Heavy Tawas (sort of like cast-iron, but smaller), Induction stoves tend to directs transfer the heat to the food which makes it truly efficient, but if you are cooking parathas, khakras etc. The tawa truly gives the char and leopard spotting which the induction does to a lesser extent.
I feel induction stoves are a compromise to the overall style of Indian cooking. I can tell which dosas have come from gas vs induction. The the induction stove makes it unnaturally homogeneous.
@@dhruvpandya4136agreed although induction stove tops are better than traditional resistive heating electric stovetops they are a compromise. Therefore I always recommend to have an induction stove top for the majority of cooking and a propane grill outside or at minimum a portable single propane burner like for camping also stored outside whenever possible.
@@Guardian_Arias good idea. there should be a hybrid set up. I have a larger kitchen. So I have my regular png connection and 4-burner stove top. And have a single hob induction, which I use for tea, soups, kheer, etc. I am having difficulty with the pressure cooker, Not able to nail down the the timing and temperature control.
Because when American say induction, is a fancy 4 burner full set and they can go to 3k Watt on average. That's the price difference . Your are comparing a portable induction to a cook set
“Gas” or “natural gas” in the USA is always methane. It is cheap, cheap, cheap here. Literally, it is a negative value at the well head, so they flare it off many times. Take a look at the cook tops in the video. These are typical, not high end, American cook tops.
After retiring we moved into an RV and did some traveling. The RV propane stove sucked. Hard to control the heat and it dried out the RV something fierce. On a whim I bought an induction hotplate, first time trying one.
It worked great! It was fine with my stainless steel cookware and I fell in love! Fast heat, evenly spread with no "hot spots" Dead easy to control the heat. All my gas using friends kept saying induction "didn't heat" but I researched and realized they'd been using their aluminum or partially aluminum or copper cookware and those types really don't work with induction.
Now that we're settling down from our extended RV travels I am getting a full induction cooktop in the new house. Hey I'm getting up there in years and I forget things sometimes and a stovetop that doesn't heat up unless the burner has a working cookware on it sounds like a really good safety feature to me.
Thanks - excellent rundown. We've had induction since 2012 and it has been great. Some points over the years:
1) Safety - I'm so use to Induction tops not getting hot I get worried about accidently touching a normal electric top when at other locations - Safety aspect is stellar.
2) Cheap pans use more energy. My wife bought an induction "friendly" pan which was aluminum with some degree of steel on the bottom. My "Iron Clad" pan would heat up fast on a low setting while hers would take a long time on a high setting to do the same thing. Bottom line: I got rid of the cheap pan.
3) Cooking with induction is fun and predictable and cheaper to use.
4) Got your grandma's old Iron Skillets? They work GREAT on an induction Stove. In fact they are the fastest to heat with the lowest energy.
Thanks again - I'm enjoying your videos :)
I had a morning cough for years when I was a line cook. I always thought it was the smoke from the food but never thought it could be the gas fumes
A very valid episode. We changed from gas to induction more than 10 years ago and it was an amazing experience and I love it as a cooking experience. Ok I live in Europe - but we here wouldn’t consider it new - just a lot better! Up front cost is fairly high, but well worth it.
Europe uses gas for electricity so doing that did absolutely nothing but screw yourself over if power goes out. Congrats
@@Triro incorrect facts. Europe now has a combination of methods of creating electricity with a strategy to be more environmentally effective. I live in Norway. More than 90% hydroelectric. Besides my comment was about the use not the environment aspects
@@milesbuckhurst504 Talking about majority of europe not just norway. Doesn't help that y'all shutting your nuclear plants either.
people don't even need to "change".
just buy $50 tabletop IH stove.
@@Triro Europe uses a lot of gas, true, but not entirely, so yeah its not a perfect move, but it does help. If you watch the video carefully you'll see all the efficiency savings - how much energy is going into the food, well even the not-so-great power from gas power stations is far more efficient than that. So yeah, its not perfect but doing nothing is definitely worse. Sometimes you need to not concentrate on a simple little fact, but look at nuanced, wholistic calculations. Even in Europe where there is lots of gas and coal still, a full picture of the overall carbon footprint of using the gas cookers vs electric ones shows that electric ones are still very much better. Also, power cuts, really? I live in the middle of nowhere in the UK and I don't think in 20 years as an adult I remember a single powercut, yeah sure they happen to some people following storms, but its very, very rare these days. Maybe you live somewhere with a poor power connection, in which case I guess the call could go the other way.
I have been cooking with induction for about a year, and before that conventional electric. Some weeks ago I stayed at an Airbnb which had a gas stove and wow. I was surprised at how good it was heating everything BUT the food.
I've been using induction for the past few years. In general I agree that it is as good as gas for cooking, with the added ecological, economical and health benefits. However, there are two things induction currently struggles with:
1. Pan shape - Induction really only works effectively for flat-bottomed cylindrical pans. Pans such as woks often have a small surface area in contact with the cooktop which the induction is actually capable of heating. This leads to a lot of the pan remaining cold leading to uneven cooking and prohibiting certain techniques.
2. Lifting - As the induction is only effective a short distance off of the cooktop, if you lift the pan to toss food you instantly lose heat. This can make more active cooking techniques difficult or impossible without burning the food.
Neither of these are deal breakers by any means, but could be worth considering depending on the style of cooking someone is most familiar with!
," with the added ecological, economical and health benefits.'"
if it's electric....and i am including cars-etc...and it's source doesn't come from nuclear or hydro-pumped (air is a fluid so this includes windmills) sources it's 'fossil fuel' powered so where are those benefits? they have been displaced & NOT eliminated. also...when there isn't electricity available to use the electric stove how will you cook or heat your surroundings in an emergency situation? i am not busting your chops. i am wondering though if you have thought this through given the present socio-political environment. are there those who rely on you for their well being? things to consider.
@@jaguarracingus because all the sources are combined together into one location more advanced and efficient technologies can be implemented. Plus instead of the pollutants being more or less trapped in your home it is going into the atmosphere where they are a much smaller part of the air and will have a much smaller effect .
What about existing pans and cast iron? I was reading that induction can cause a hum because of warp, and I can't find anything regarding if my old inherited cast iron pan will work. Any advice? I did hear that you had to slowly heat the cast iron because it could crack, but thats about it.
@@joewilson3393 I have been using induction for about 6 years now. you do have to re-learn how to pre-heat pans, etc... there is so much energy released into the pans that I have warped one of them (stainless high quality pan) this was my fault though. Turning up my highest powered element to high dumps so much energy into the pan too fast for the pan to not be damaged. I rarely turn up my induction past half way now unless I have a large pot of water that I am trying to heat. As for cast iron, I could see it being damaged in the same way, and potentially cracking since the material is more brittle. Any cooktop can damage a pan though, especially if it is cranked on high and has no food in it, the pan will simply get too hot and fail, that just happens faster in an induction cooktop. The fact that induction heats the pan faster is one of the main reasons to buy induction.
These are about the only negatives I can find for using IH cookers. Even after using an IH cook-top for more than 10 years, the kid in me is still impressed by being able to put cold things so near to a boiling pot with no effect. Yeah science, biatch!
After cooking with gas for 44 years, induction cooking was even better than I had expected. Clean, fast, safe and easy to set the same intensity of heat each time. 5 for pancakes, 3 for corn beef in the pressure cooker etc
I think that's the part that's most appealing to me. Aside from how quick it works, just being able to make mental (or actual) notes of which setting works best for things, and not play the current game of "move the dial around constantly, because the coil cools down and warms up seemingly at random". Not to mention the massive range on my current stove that seemingly has 1-2 and then a massive gap for 3/4 of the dial before it goes straight to 10 for the last 1/4.
I understand but I also feel that it doesn’t account for 60% of cooking that needs residual heat for the pan or wok for stir fry situations, etc. Also, how can you heat up tortillas on the stove? For more ethnic communities that rely more on fire for their diet, I don’t find these methods appealing. Only for 20% of people who don’t have a need to cook outside of a 12” magnet. I’m sure the use case for it may be better in areas where the diet doesn’t need fire for cooking. Im sure it’s effective at heating up water but hey, you can cook an egg in the microwave!
@@Jackie-Brown I would guess for 90% of things you cook, it would suit you just fine. I believe they even have Wok ranges made for induction cooking. That aside, you can still stir fry just fine in a regular skillet, or if you want, get a portable wok burner for the times when you really want that fire.
And it's not just "effective at heating up water". It's much more effective in heating up the pan itself, instead of spending energy heating the air around the pan like you will with gas.
I don't really think anyone needs the fire aspect. You can heat a tortilla in a pan or under the broiler. I honestly can't think of any instance in my kitchen cooking where I wouldn't be able to make it work with the pans I have, outside of my wok.
As far as residual heat goes, that's easy. Just turn the heat down to a lower setting. It's more precise than killing the heat on a conventional stove and having to constantly turn it up and back down.
I would suggest that you try induction as I have been able to do all the cooking on induction that I have done in 44 years of cooking with gas. I frequently heat tortillas. There is no difference to heating them with gas. The pan gets hot and it stays as hot as you want it to stay.
Hmmm good point. Maybe I’ll give it a try with finding a small portable burner. Here in socal, gas is still much cheaper than electricity but I feel I’ll take my annoyances on having a low carbon footprint. I enjoy Cooking with fire and I think I’ll continue to do things I enjoy.
I would write a long paragraph about the use of a property sized fume hood, but I'd just be venting.
The problem with induction is the magnet and quality of large burner size. My moved to induction stove/oven combo which cost just over $2500. Culturally, my mom cooks a lot of Asian dishes (Indian and Chinese), and in large pans. In there budget range, only one burner supported a 12 inch pan which they later found out is not for a 12 inch base. The other burners were smaller and so useless for her to cook large dinners. In the end, we had to replace it. To go with one that matched a glass top / radiant heat with 2 large burners for induction, they would have to spend over $7,000 Cdn! So they settled on a ceramic glass top radiant heat. Of course my dad was pissed as they spent some big dollars getting good quality pans that work best with induction. After their experience, I ended up getting 6 burner gas stove as I cook with a wok a lot, which can’t be used on the other 2 choices.
A wok is literally the only use case I have found where gas is superior to induction (or any form of electric heating, for that matter). If you don't cook with a wok a LOT, induction is superior.
Just as an FYI, they do have induction stoves meant just for woks. I don't know how good they are.
But yea, the size of magnet/size needed for large pans thing isn't discussed enough. Yea, you can get relatively cheap ones. But if you're cooking larger sizes, you'd need the larger magnets. And for some scientific reason, those slightly bigger magnets cost much more.
@@semilog643 Carbon steel pans (preferred by the restaurant industry) are also superior on gas. Carbon steel is poor at conducting heat and induction tends to produce a small hotspot in the middle of the pan which does not spread out very well and can even cause the pan to warp. The sides of the pan don't get hot at all on induction which is a big problem if you want to cook French omelettes (Jacques Pepin style). Honestly, induction seems to work best with nonstick cookware which people should be avoiding for other reasons. If you want to avoid gas cooktops and nonstick cookware then you get forced into a very frustrating situation!
Yup, the video didn’t address issue with Asian cooking at all. I can’t live without my wok and induction just doesn’t work with it. This is why induction didn’t take off in many Asian countries.
@@chongli297 - Somethings not adding up. Carbon steel pans are excellent conductors of heat, that's a reason why they're preferred over others. If you're getting a Hotspot that's probably because your heat is too high, so the part that gets heated heats up faster than it can dissipate it.
You can't treat induction and gas stoves the same, there's a learning curve/adjustment, but that's its own issue.
Great video! As a european I switched to inductive stoves 27 years ago. I didn't regret it for a second. The cost for a good inductive stove with quiet fans is currently about 400-500 Euro for a 4 section version, from a premium brand (Siemens, Bosch, Miele, ...). You mentioned savety in your video, but I wanted to add a few issues: Kids playing unatended will not be able to start the stove/generate heat without a pot on the stove. Additionally you lock the keyboard completly to avoid anybody to start the stove. If you remove the pot from the stove and you forget to switch it of the stove will not generate heat anymore and will switch off. For elderly people that is a great advantage to add security (my stepmother almost burned the house down with her old stove). Over time I converted all my friends an family to use inductive stoves.
I regulary watch your videos. Ithink that I have a similar approach to the environment: I installed solar thermal heating (20 sqm) 27 years ago and solar cells (10KW peak 11) years ago dramatically reducing my CO2 footprint and energy cost.
Here in the UK, 4 'burner' induction hobs can be had for under £200 for some of the cheaper models (pricier ones are of course available).
I'll openly admit I used to be a bit of a 'gas snob'. Whilst I do still have the gas hob, I recently bought a 2 'burner' portable induction hob, and I'm totally converted. As soon as it's practicable to do so, the gas hob will be going.
I have electric. The biggest problem I see is the fact that the electric grid barely handles the needs we have now. With the addition of electric cars, electric water heaters and so on, we will be faced with going back to wood stoves because the grid will fail.
@@ABobbyDee
Installing more solar panels and batteries on more homes and businesses will help take the pressure off of the grid. Generating some of your own electricity needs will literally take some load off of the grid. And more and more of those electrical appliances, batteries and EVs are getting smart enough to automatically act to help stabilize the grid, absorbing excess generation by wind and solar, and discharging when the grid needs help.
@@rayopeongo Exactly, with the solar I have at my home, all my air conditioning/heating and the majority of my household loads are supplied from my solar, only my stove is on the grid due to it's high draw being too much for my inverters, as it can use 7 to 10kw and I have 9kw of capacity on my inverters, so the grid only has to deal with my stove for 20 to 30 minutes out of a day typically while my other loads the grid doesn't even see for the majority of most days. Of course my setup doesn't feed my solar into the grid, it's all generated and stored onsite for all my needs due to net metering where I am at being miniscule, so as long as I have energy coming in from solar and sufficient capacity in my storage, the rest of my loads are disconnected from the grid and I use all my power generated. My bills are practically nothing. Eventually I'll add another large inverter that can handle the stove but seeing as the grid doesn't have to handle my heating and cooling for most days I've already removed a major stress from the grid. My ductless mini splits are very efficient.
@@andycanfixit
Good for you! Unfortunately, neither my house nor property are suitable for a large solar installation, so I am primarily limited to reducing my demand for fossil fuel energy: increasing insulation, buying more efficient appliances, driving an electric car, etc.. I am also considering getting a large battery installed. It would be usable as both a backup plan, and maybe to reduce expenses. We have time of use charges here, so I could charge the battery overnight when power was cheaper and the grid not so busy, and then use the battery during the day to save some money and reduce the demand on the grid during peak hours.
It always bugs me a little bit when I see a large, flat commercial roof going unused. How much energy could be generated, and how much less carbon dioxide released, if, for instance, every WalMart in the world had it's roof covered in solar panels? At noon on a bright, hot, sunny summer day, would it be enough to completely offset the power being used by the store for lights, air conditioning, refrigeration, etc.? That would remove a huge load from the grid.
@@rayopeongo When you drive past farmer's giant cow sheds and they have little or no solar on them... painful isn't it? I have a crap, east-west facing roof. We do have a big garden but council keep rejecting plans for a small ground array because the field behind us has a footpath in it and the people crossing that footpath will have their views wrecked. I suggested that I put a large wall around my property so that the 4 walkers a year who use that path wont have to look at my solar panels, but thats apparently not allowed again, apparently not being able to see my son playing in his paddling pool or my wife planting onions will be so aweful for the walkers that again, I mustn't even plant a hedge. Devon in the UK is still sadly run by very old people who know they will be dead before the climate crisis affects them.
Been using a Nuwave induction hotplate for years now. I absolutely love it, especially for very temperature sensative foods like sauces, dairy, rice, and sweets. My three favorite things about induction is precision heating, rapid temperature changes, and consistency in routine dishes. Energy efficiency is just the cherry on top. Also easy to clean cause it only heats the pan, so stuff doesn't get vulcanized onto the cooktop itself lol.
At home I got a mobile induction plate and a gas stove.
The induction for me is just so inaccurate and sensitive stuff just burns in the pattern of the induction coil.
That is the reason for me that I like gas more.
Many also be that the induction stove is of a lower quality than the gas one.
I have used nuwave it cant keep up the temperature for f the pan. The fan isn't powerful enough it has to slow the heating down. I can design a better one
@@kmukul It's probably because it's a 110V portable appliance. Integrated cooktops should use 220V (in the US system) or 400V (3 Phases, in Europe), so they can just use more power.
Me too. It's awesome and that's after about 8 years of using it. Quick, clean, efficient, safe, no issues, no regrets. It's one infomercial I've seen in my lifetime that actually lived up to the "sizzle". Induction, if you can do it, is def the way to go.
I never thought about it not burning spilled over food to the glass. That's great! Induction is our plan once our current glass top electric stove stops working.
We've known forever that electric will boil water faster than even a 17,000 BTU gas burner, so we've recently ordered a stand-alone induction burner for things like boiling to go next to our big Thermador gas range. In an old house, the waste heat from the stove is not wasted at all in the cool season, and we basically do most of the heat-intensive cooking outside in summer anyway. My sister and brother-in-law, who have no gas service to their house, bought an induction range a little over 5 years ago (some European brand I think starts with a "B"), and they love it, although it has been pretty unreliable and very expensive to fix. The Thermador has had zero failures in 17 years.
Upvote for your Thermador. Great cooking tool.
One thing you didn't mention with induction stoves is they're even easier to clean than resistive electric ones. With a resistive stove, the ceramic surface gets very hot and any spills or grease that touches it will burn and leave hard to remove residues...
Switching to an induction stove was a revelation for me. Cleaning is literally a 15s affair, seriiusly.Just wipe it with a sponge and some soap and that's it, it can even be done a couple of minutes after finishing cooking since the surface will be cool enough for that.
We just switched from gas to an Induction range , I ran a test before I switched over and with the gas range it took 6:43 to boil 1 quart of water , same kettle same amount of cold tap water the (Beko) Induction range took 1:56 I was surprised that it was that much faster. We have only had it a week but there is no problem using or understanding what you can or cannot use to cook with and we also found some induction friendly silicon cooking pads to put on the cooking surface .
Thank you
That's nuts. I didn't know there could be such a difference.
@@pcatful it all just comes down to how many BTUs you were using before…. If you had a small gas cooktop, and you have a very, very large induction top, you’re going to get faster boiling. The trade-off of course is the cost, the electricity will cost you more than the gas (at least in the US). It’s also important to realize that there’s a lack of options involved here, when everything revolves around electricity the electrical company can basically charge whatever they want, and every aspect of your life is held hostage by however much they want to charge you for it.
I see. We are using a not a so great electrical (non-induction) range. We once wanted to switch to gas but our solar panels cover our electricity, and induction might be better and use less power. The power company also controls gas prices, but I believe the electrical cost will rise due to power grid problems @@Matt-yg8ub
@@Matt-yg8ubEven if both cooktops are rated the same BTU, the waste in heat will still double the time it takes to boil the water.
I have had an induction range for over a year now. I love it. If one is a perfectionist when it come to cooking, make sure you get a cooktop that can be set by specific increments such as .35 etc. Mine is very similar to an electric stovetop so can’t be set to an exact temperature. Since I don’t need that feature I love mine as is and at the price I obtained. I knew I wanted an induction cooktop with a convection oven so when I saw one in IKEA’s scratch and dent section I jumped on it and got it for 40% off.
Just bought my first induction which is why I am reading up on it. I have a Power Boost button and it sizzle the pam in the skillet immediately after turning it on. That's FAST! few more steps to cooking but so far I'm thrilled about the switch.
I've had an induction oven for at least a decade already, highly recommended. However, I live in a nation (Norway) where electric been the standard for ovens for as long as I've lived (four decades), so I didn't switch from gas to induction, but from an electric cooktop to induction which made the switch easier as the electric infrastructure for it was already there. I personally also didn't need to replace any of my cookware when I made the switch. Though a few of my stew pots with double bottoms take relatively longer to heat up (still comparable to a regular electric), but since stew is better when slow cooked I didn't replace those either, instead treating it as a feature for the appropriate dishes, lol.
I've always used a crock pot for stew, so it's automatically slow.
@@williamhicks558 I got a crock pot I'm using for bean-based stews and similar, so definitively recommended as well, but I prefer the oven for rice-based stews. :3
Most US homes don't have gas, unless they are in cold climates with gas heating or in relatively wealthy areas. Induction is thus likely to displace gas relatively quickly, but radiant electric will take longer, especially because manufacturers put a lot of effort into making their smoothtop radiant electric stoves so nice to use and so efficient while maintaining lower purchase prices.
We've had a gas stove for ever, but ever since the gas prices increased and gas providers saw this as a way to make people pay more, even when the gas prices went down, I managed to find a induction cooktop on the cheap, now I say on the cheap, but it is quite an advanced model, it was just considered broken, but I managed to fix it, our home is now gas free entirely and we're saving money while doing it.
Next up - solar panels to lower your electricity costs!
BTU for BTU, gas costs half of what electric costs.
A gas dryer costs less to operate than an electric dryer.
A gas stove costs less to operate than an electric stove...
@@chrisemmert1387 watt for watt (!), induction stoves put more of the energy into what you're cooking, rather than the air around you...
@@chrisemmert1387
And?
Without doing a Greta T harangue rant the idea is to clean up the atmosphere, as in remove the fossil fuel gases.
Eventually everyone everywhere will be using electricity for everything it's possible to use electricity for.
Cost won't come into it.
In fact you are seeing this as we type.
Good luck with expecting the old normal to return ... that's pretty unlikely.
Plus we don't as yet know what the "new" normal will be.
@@chrisemmert1387 A heat pump dryer uses half the energy. I can make my electricity, I can't make my own gas (well - unless I want to have a gas bottle glued to my arse). And yes, solar panels cost money but once I spend the money I've fixed the cost of a percent of my electricity.
In Australia, induction has been around for over ten years, I think,we've had ours for about 1 year. It is awesome, way more control than gas, no residual heat lag, hotter than any stove top I've ever owned. Only cost about $375 au, some are as cheap as$200,for a 4 burner ,easy to install. I tell everyone who will listen how good it is.
'I tell everyone who will listen'. I'm with you, and i'm amazed how angry and defensive some people get because, in their minds, induction = Green = global conspiracy to strip them of everything they hold most dear = induction is the Anti-Christ. Any other considerations, like those you've mentioned, get washed away by the neurosis and paranoia. All of which makes me feel like a poached egg. Go The Matildas! All the best from a cabin in a swamp in a rainforest in New Zealand.
I.ve used induction for at least 14 tears now and I never go back to gas, I moved into my last house one year ago, and it had a six burner gas stove, I tried it for a week , and it took ages just to get my potatoes to the boil so I threw it out And installed an induction 4 burner stove No open fire, The cleaning alone makes so much difference, it works way faster then gas, I don't need an air-conditioner to cool the kitchen in summer . I put a tissue under the cooking pot to keep the pot and the surface of the oven clean, if it boils over.
Induction in the US is a trendy feature that automatically adds around $1000 over other models -- or at least it feels that way, I ended up with a glass top instead of induction because of this. I know that it isn't adding cost to produce them because many other countries are selling them for a lot less and that would indicate that parts and research isn't causing the price hikes.
The induction top is also hardened glass. , but the heat is generated in the bottom of the pan that is on it, or any peace of iron for that matter And the surface doesn't get hot. . Not hotter than if you put a hot pot on any surface, that will be heated from the pot. Kind regards Hans@@jfftck
@@jfftck Plenty of options on Amazon (US) for sub-$400
A few months ago I purchased a single element induction cooker to see what it was like. I've been so pleased with it I'm sure I'll eventually get a full-size induction top or complete range. Amazingly, even pans with short metal loop handles cook an item to completion without heating to handles to the point of needing pot holders or gloves. The heat all goes into the bottom of the pan.
Absolutely.......
We have a four burner electric hob which is fine for everyday use but struggles with large pans of fluids. Bought a Tefal portable induction hob with single burner rated at 2,100 watts. Fantastic!
Not noisy, fast boil, controls from 1 - 9. Boils a huge pan of water quickly and easily retains a vigorous rolling boil. Plugs into standard socket so no extra wiring required. Now there are "Plug-in" four burner induction hobs available but they're very low wattage and full power can't be used as they drop down the power load when all rings are on.
A decent hob will have 2,200, 2000, 1700 and 1400 burners which will all work at the same time but needs heavy duty electrical connections at the fuse box. Most likely a 10mm wiring connection as well.
First question I'm going to ask when we record the STILL TO BE DETERMINED episode this weekend: are all the emissions attributed to gas stove while "off" true for ALL gas stoves, or only those with a pilot light?
That is what I was wondering.?. Are they suggesting that the valves on gas stoves are not adequate for retaining the gas?
@@spnyp33 it was already looked into and the study was ridiculous looking at completely non modern setups. Just think logically... The wealthy have money to pick any option. If it was that bad for health, it would be replaced instantly. It's not. Corporate interest groups make a huge lobbying difference. But hey, I can't complain about other people wanting to eat. The medical emergency we went to was a 7 figure payout for my family. Pharma stock options finally paid off. I'm sure other people want their payouts too. I'd loaded up on Tesla stock awhile ago too, so getting the inflation reduction act bonus was icing on the cake. The government doesn't just do things because it's nice... Someone is always making millions.
All of the major political backers of this still have gas stoves lol.. And they're not poor, they can get it replaced within a week, it's only a couple tens of thousands, tops. Nothing for most people in congress.
@@Tential1ah?
And just how high (low) are those emmisions?
Another exploitation of the broken window fallacy. If we create problems, then the money we spend to fix them benefits everyone involved. Hah!
As a viewer from South Africa, we simply cannot use electrical cooking tops as electricity has increased significantly in cost. Also, big one here, we only have electricity for about half a day due to our state sponsored blackouts (aka loadshedding), thus you may not have electricity to cook with when you need to. But if you have a stable electricity supply, by all means, is cooking with electricity the way to go.
It's alright, don't feel guilty.
Also I heard things were in chaos in South Africa... or is that just "parts of africa"? be safe.
I thought wind and solar farms were being built to supply electricity. Waves from the ocean also can be used to generate electricity with the newest eco friendly tech.
"As a viewer from South Africa, we simply cannot use electrical cooking tops as electricity has increased significantly in cost"
Need rooftop solar 🙂
@@neutrino78x Only works if you are living in houses. Still quite a lot of people live in apartments. I used to live in South Africa and we moved from a house to an apartment to avoid crime. We've been hijacked/burglarized, etc on a frequent basis (couple times a year). Can't imagine a brighter beacon asking to be burglarized if not living in a house inside a trusted gated community with shiny new solar panels installed.
Induction cooking is a lot more efficient than using an element. That said, I understand the need for more than one system of cooking in your situation. You might invest in a single burner induction cooktop and use it occasionally.
During Michigan's last cold snap, AEP electric was texting warning messages advising customers to cut back on electric consumption. It was comforting to have natural gas service to keep the house from freezing and the pipes from bursting in case of an electric grid failure.
Maybe Michigan should not have shut down two of our nuclear plants?
Maybe we should have solar and battery storage. Heat pumps sound pretty good.
As solar works so well in Michigan and we are running out of Cobalt minners.
They for sure should not have. Power backup can be achieved for electricity though also if needed. However if you live where you loose power often and already use gas heat/cooking I can see how this would make one less interested in the investment. For me personally I want all electric not because its green but because unlike gas I can make my own power and be independent from the grid and its fluctuations in availability(power outages) and price. It's a bit of money to put down but with smart planning ang optimal sizing I can get to where in a few years I'll have enough solar and battery to survive without any hook up fees. Can't wait.
@@EdBruceWRX yknow they can charge batteries with the same electricity in the grid thats not used at night...no need to have child labor to strip mine for the whole system or have fans killing the birds on mass...just the child labor for the batteries...
nothing says green like 3rd world slavery
The main issues in Michigan are publicly traded utilities that have very little incentive to harden their grids. We have enough electricity; we don't have good enough lines in many places. Snow storms should be a non-event here.
I switched from gas to induction 7y ago, and its indeed amazing, cannot imagine to go back to gas.
Few issues to add to your excellent video:
1/ choose a model with a separate scale to set the power level for each "burner", otherwise, first choosing the burner and then choosing the power level is very annoying. This makes the cooking surface a little smaller, as 4 scales take more place, but its a great deal.
2/ making large pancakes is not easy, as the largest burner is still too concentrated on my induction stove. Might depend on the quality (price) of your stove. If you like big pans to fry food, please check if you have a model which has at least one burner with a large magnetic field
3/ cost: you mention 1000 USD in the US, thats very high, in the EU good models are available at about half that cost, lets say 500€ for a 60cm model, obviously for 90cm model it goes easily above 1500€
4/ its fun to cook in old-style iron cast pans or de Buyer iron plate pans. As they are in iron (without a coating) they last a lifetime and are great on induction. You need to heat them up at a lower power setting to get a more even heating of the pan, not at the maximum.
5/ I have been experimenting with insulated cooking on top of an induction stove. A pot wrapped in a cotton towel at very low power setting to cook something that needs a long time works perfectly. I have not seen this recommended anywhere, it looks safe but I dont know if there could be a safety problem with this. So, I cannot recommend it. I mention it so maybe someone with expertise can look into this
For me, almost certainly the best thing about induction is that it is so easy to keep clean! In five minutes or less, my range top is sparkling clean. That means I clean it after each and every use. When I had my gas range, on the other hand, I cleaned it once - in over a year! Each burner element had 3 parts to it (some of which could and did fall down the drain) and then there were three 10 lb iron grids that were designed to damage my sink. I absolutely hated cleaning that gas range. I hated the idea of cooking all together. With my induction range, now I love cooking on it and have honed my skills greatly since installing it. Yes, it was expensive, but worth every penny! I will never not have induction. The precision it provides both in terms of instant temperature change as well as totally consistent behavior, plus the phenomenal power it has to boil lots of water quickly for pasta, and the total end to all stove-top burning incidents, makes it one of my most prized and valued possessions.
We bought a convection/induction range 9 months ago and couldn’t be happier. As stated in the video, we did have to buy new pots and pans. The speed of cooking is excellent!
Here in Denmark I can get a single-plate Induction stove from IKEA for 50 USD converted (and that's with our 25% sales tax applied). Generally fair quality Induction stoves here (4 plate stoves) cost between 300 and 500 USD converted - so with the US market and pricing in mind, there is no reason the avg Induction stove price would be any higher than 300-400 bucks in the US. Probably less.
Induction is CHEAP to manufacture and use. The absolutely only reason Induction pricing may be high, is if competition and supply is extremely limited. Paying 1000 bucks for an average Induction stove seems absolutely mental to me.
Since Induction is so common here and have been for a decade or more, most pots and pans are Induction certified too, probably 90% of the ones I see in stores can be used with Induction - and their price is unchanged.
I was gonna say. For $1000 you'd get one of these fancy cooktops with dozens of heating elements that lets you place your pots and pans wherever.
@@jfolz Exactly. Even some new full ceramic counter tops with built-in induction so you can use it almost anywhere you want. I would have thought Induction was worldwide by now
Welcome to capitalism lol
In the US there are a LOT of things we should be doing to move towards a better future but if that cuts into a company's profit, then it's either condemned or priced so high it seems like a useless upgrade.
Electric vehicles for example or solar for homes and businesses.
Businesses here cannot see that they can still make money if they just switched because they're scared and uninformed and well, honestly, most are too old to change their ways and they hire to continue that trend.
@@tutkobobisek9955 no actual kitchen range uses just 120v, they are all 240v, my stove is on a 240v, 50 amp circuit
I bought an induction cooktop about a year ago, and I love it. I liked my gas cooktop, but the kitchen is now cooler and I find it to be about as sensitive as gas. There’s sometimes a mild hum or click, but nothing very noticeable and nothing as loud as the fan I always had to have running when the gas was on. I bought some very thin silicon pads from Amazon that stop the glass cooktop from getting scratched. They work really well. I made sure that the cooktop I bought has one element that is large enough to handle the biggest crockpot or casserole pot. And for those who cook with all four elements at the same time, rare for me, there is some power sharing in some models, which means you can’t get absolute full power on all four at the same time. But I can’t think of a scenario when I would need that. It has not been an issue. All in all I am very happy with it.
My Induction plate is about 90cmx55cm and I can move the pans around. The plates adapt the coils that are used to compensate my displacement. Also I can set it to have a higher „flame“ at the front and a lower one when I shove it further back.
The timer that turns individual plates off when down to zero comes in also very handy.
Also you can never forget to turn off the plates when you move a pan to the table, as it‘s load is not there anymore. I really like it.
Had this in our last apartment, only have a 60cm in the house now. cant wait to uopgrade to a bigger induction plate again 😂
Having used all three different stove types, I would go induction every single time. They heat up the fastest by a country mile, seem least affected by the thickness of the pan used (e.g. a frying pan vs a metal casserole), and heat the surrounding area up least. Some other commenters have mentioned issues with ring size or pan shape; the induction hob I used (my parents' Miele hob, before they moved) was huge, and even had a double-ring in the middle that could accomodate a full sized oven tray, so they are avaiable (at least here in England).
Very expensive in the US. Cheap induction stoves in Ikea in Europe is only $400.
I just paid $1000 for a 4-burner Samsung in the US
I had an induction stove in my house about 15 years ago. It worked fine and id happily use it for most tasks but I still prefer gas through and through. I can use my wok on it, I always have a source of flame in my house, it works when the power is out etc. If they had a half induction half gas range that would be ideal for my needs.
I miss the induction cooktop/range we had in our last house. It was so fast and so much less waste heat warming up our kitchen. Our “new” house had a propane stovetop, but electric oven. We have a single electric induction “burner” for a lot of everyday things. Also, having a water boiler helps speed a lot of things up! Alec’s videos are the best! 😸 sorry Matt! 🙈😅😸
My range has 2 induction hobs and 4 gas hobs. I find myself often leaning to the induction hobs especially if boiling liquids or slow simmer. Love the speed of response you get. If I ever change ranges I think I’ll go with full induction.
I cant afford electricity anymore....or charcoal. I cook primarily over burning wood at the moment. I understand why many island nations eat so much raw seafood. Thanks for all the insight. Things I never thought of.
Gas ist deffently the loudest.
Also you dont need as much cleaning wich is good for the environment.
As a chef and restaurant owner, I only want Induction.
Faster, more precise and easier to clean.
Im sure it also uses less energy for the same result.
Been using Induction for over 7 years, love it. I first used an induction cook top in Europe, then when I moved back to Canada there was no debate, bought one (a GE model) and I was lucky it was on sale at the time.
We just built an energy efficient (well sealed and insulated) house, which precluded punching holes in the walls for kitchen extractor and bathroom fans, instead relying on an HRV system. So for similar reasons to yourself we chose to go with induction (we inherited a 6 burner gas stove in our previous house) and have been loving it. As you note it's an adjustment to switch from seeing a flame to gauge the temp to pressing a number, but it really doesn't take long. And yes it's quick, instant temp changes and SO easy to clean ;-) Hopefully the cost will continue to reduce to allow more people to enjoy the benefits.
It is worth mentioning that in the United States, there is a tax rebate on upgrading from a gas stove to an electric or induction. You could get a new induction stove for just as much or cheaper than a gas stove. You may have to upgrade your electric if you are in an older house, but there is also a tax rebate for that as well. (Most induction stoves require a 40-50 amp circuit)
it's a rebate, it means he doesn't pay, not that you pay for him.
@@XerrolAvengerII rebate doesn't mean much if you have to wait 6 months +, to get your money back
@@jefftucker9225 uh, yes it does? you may want to read up on delayed gratification and what it means if you can't grasp it
Just 6 months? Here in Italy you get your rebates over 10 years. 6 months is quite immediate!
We switched to an induction range 13 years ago, it has a 4 burner induction cooktop and a convection oven. Absolutely love this unit, the speed of the induction cooktop is stunning, I’m a tea drinker and the speed to boil water is amazing. I couldn’t imagine ever switching back. Cheers
My wife and I were on the fence about our next stove, so we got a induction hotplate (single "burner" stove) to try it out. It was $125 for a model recommended by Wire Cutter, and this was enough to convince us to go with induction for our next stove. The feature we like most? Stupidly simple cleanup vs our gas stove.
With our plan to also move to heat pumps for both heating and hot water, this means we'll cut gas completely -- and that will eliminate a baseline monthly utility fee that is in addition to the cost of the gas itself.
I like being able to set the timer, and have it turn off the induction hot plate for me. No "forgetting" to turn it off and burning the food. :)
@@jameskniskern2261 Your mentioning of timers reminds me of a story back in college. A friend put a pot of water on the electric (non-induction) stove to boil so he could make mac'n'cheese. Then he went over to play video games and completely forgot about it for literally 2+ hours. The water all boiled off and the pot melted onto the stove. It was a miracle there wasn't a fire. Given no one got hurt, it made for a great story at his wedding.
@@dosadoodle - LOL!
I was boiling water on an electric stove while in college, fell asleep, and set off the fire alarm to the apartment complex!
Oh, the memories!
We replaced our gas cooktop with two $69 induction burners. They have the full timer, temperature, and power settings you mentioned. Indeed, it's like going from analog to digital. One very nice thing is we can cook with a temperature below the smoke point of whatever oil we are using. I have found that the cookware size problem is actually on the other end: A very small sauce pan doesn't couple well with the electromagnetic coil, so the burner flags it as an error just like turning it on with no cookware present. These actually look like small induction cooktops, with a very easy to clean glass surface. The other nice thing is we can put one or both in the drawer below the countertop, when we want less cooktop and more workspace.
We are now fully electric, having replaced our oven with a countertop convection oven, our water heater with a tiny electric flash water heater, our clothes dryer with an electric unit, and our propane-powered furnace with small electric heaters that only heat the rooms we occupy. Expensive? No, because our solar panels always give us a net-metered electric bill of zero dollars each year. And even better, we no longer have to pay rent on a propane tank.
Update: Still working great 8 months later. There is just the two of us, and we find we hardly ever need both induction burners running at once. We use the extra counter space all the time for food prep, and leave the second burner in the drawer. That's a terrific benefit over the large range we had there before. We installed a storage cabinet below that counter because the burners are under three inches tall.
Thanks for mentioning the cracking issue, this is especially an issue for apartments, where replacing that glass can be very expensive. I’d add that cleaning a glass top stove requires extra care. Harsh cleansers can cause scratching that can require replacing the glass at the same high cost to a tenant.
My new glass top stove is beautiful, but requires much more care than my used gas stove.
My used gas stove is a workhorse.
That is the same issue I had with them. They are hard to keep clean and have to use a stove top cleaner to get them clean. Unless anyone has any other tips. I found that I used the stove less because I knew it look dirty after.
I love induction cooking. Gas cooking heated up the kitchen so much that the AC was very undersized. Besides, I kept the kitchen window open whenever I used the gas cooker to offset the use of running the range hood vent on high to reduce indoor air pollution. When I switched over to induction cooking, in 2015, I noticed I could cook a full meal without heating up the kitchen as much. I still use the vent, but on a lower RPM and the window in the kitchen is open but a crack to equalize the indoor air pressure. Induction was an easy switch, as I was already using cast iron, porcelain coated carbon steel or stainless steel cookware. The few aluminum pans I had already sported a nifty induction base. In addition, I have more control over the cooking temperature and can even cook "low and slow" with more precision, for healthier meals. Finally, I noticed the electric oven heats faster, produces no fumes, and doesn't heat the surrounding air nearly as much. It's a win-win.
I switched to induction 10 or so years ago. There were a few growing pains learning how to cook as far as cooking times go... I.E. the silly things heat up faster than I had thought. I had no problems with cookware as the majority of my pots and pans are cast iron. Cooking with gas does have a better feedback mechanism than induction as you can see and feel the heat but once you go induction you will not miss the sweat, open flames, and open windows in the summer.
Many induction cooktop have temperature sensors that will feel the heat for you. For example, I can tell it to heat my pan to 340°F. I can even use the temperature probe for sous vide of incubating yogurt.
I was able to experience all three. My home had a natural gas cooktop and I absolutely loved it. The kitchen area opened up to a larger room and I never felt any issues do to exhaust or fumes and I loved the instantaneous control over my cooking. We recently purchased a second home (future retirement home) and this home had an electric glass cooktop. OMG. I could not cook on tis thing. It was incredibly slow to heat up and cool down. I found that I used anything other than the cooktop for cooking because it was so bad. Well we just sold our main home (gas cooktop) and moved permanently to our retirement home. I immediately knew I could not live with the electric so I bought an induction cooktop. I absolutely love it! I never imagined how fast you could boil water nor how quickly and precisely you could control the heat. It is crazy how responsive it is. Yes it was more expensive but given that we use this every single day this was something my wife and i agreed was worth every penny. I was able to get a small rebate from my power company so this helped offset some of the cost. Having used all three there is no competition, induction beats the pants off the others bar none.
I've cooked with all three methods discussed in this video for an extended period of time. There is a learning curve to all three if you've never cooked with them before. Cooktops with resistive heating elements in my opinion tend to be the worst by far. That is then followed by gas, with induction tending to give the best and easiest cooking environment. Even with all negative health and efficiently considerations put aside, induction is the most pleasant to cook with. Induction has all the benefits of gas with none of the negatives. Plus anecdotally I think it might be more easy and quick to adjust temperatures compared to gas. (because it only heats the pan/pot so the only residual heat is transferred from the pan/pot to the cooking surface rather than the other way around which is why I think it seems to be even quicker than gas) The only downside like mentioned by Matt is cost. Though, if you cook from home a good amount of the benefits might out way the costs especially if it will push you to cook more at home than going out. One final point, I am a decent home cook but the induction cook top makes it so much easier to correct mistakes as far as cooking temperature so I'd say it's also the best option to beginner home cooks.
Only downside of induction againts gas is that heat distribution can be uneaven:)
@@tgregi On the cheap ones yes. Nothing a quick turn of the pot can't even out though.
1. Cooking is better with gas for many people not because of speed, but intuitive control (which you mentioned) and consistency. It allows you to lift the pan while still keeping it to flame to get specific results, especially on the edge of the pan if you need to tilt it (like home cooks will often do). This might sound like a mild benefit, but to cooks it is huge.
2. If I routed my exhaust from my car into the cabin of the vehicle, that would also be a problem. I ended up researching the statistics for the whole “gas stove scare”, and found it was primarily (if not entirely) homes with either no exhaust for their stoves, or an improperly sized exhaust (which you alluded to with insufficient exhaust being an issue). These are often much older homes whose kitchens are also much smaller in size. If a properly installed exhaust were installed, then this would entirely resolve the issue and concern.
Induction stoves are amazing, but you frame them as being inherently better. They aren’t better. They are different. I would agree that probably more than half the population would be even better off with one over your typical electric stove top or even gas, but to suggest that everyone who doesn’t is “behind” is absurd. That’s framing. I would never go induction, because we actually cook like chefs in our home. Induction would be a negative for us. I think this video had an unintended bias. If any stove needs to go, it’s an electric glass top or coil. It should be induction or gas.
I hope you make a video about cooking pans with coatings. Now that’s a scary topic.
Agreed I don't want the government push there bullshit of excuses on us anymore im staying propane
Not to mention, most comments who said positive about induction lived in Europe or US which cook on flat cook ware. But in Asian, most people used wok which has shape like halved ball because usually Asian cook in big amount and it doesn't fit on induction. That's why Asian still used gas.....
The reason you have to lift the pan using gas is because gas doesn't allow you to precisely control the heat. You have to actually lift the pan off the heat LOL.
@@sappyjohnson, I think you misunderstand. You’re not lifting the pan off of the flame entirely. The point is to change the focus of heat to the edge of the pan by giving it a tilt or mild lift while still maintaining contact with the flame. This is important for certain things like basting or concentrating/reducing. You simply cannot do this on an induction stovetop, and would instead have to use a free hand to adjust the temperature. If you’re using flame, wood or gas, you don’t have to do any adjustments and can maintain your attention on your utensil/instrument and pan handle. Again, it’s a more intuitive way of cooking. The act of lifting or tilting is in fact precision control on the user’s end.
@@Civenash I hear you. But I think a lot of it is learned habits. I bet you spent most of your time cooking on a gas stove. Generally, if I want to cook with flames, I cook outdoors
I've been using induction cook tops for about a decade, but I first remember hearing them back in the early 80s. Induction is better than gas in every way. I would not consider resistance or halogen electric, only induction. Some thing that could have been given more emphasis are, the risk of fire is almost non-existent from grease spatter or spills, The pot handle, lid, utensils, and even the upper pot stay muck cooler so little risk of burn, due to the low temp of the glass clean up is far (extremely far) easier than typical resistance electric glass tops. You showed a dollar next to a pot, I typically demonstrate by boiling water with tissue paper between the pot and the glass and in a short time when the water is boiling, remove the pot and pick up the perfect unsinged tissue with bare hands. The reaction is like to a magic trick
My wife was a die hard gas fan, but just a few weeks with a quality induction cook top and she will never go back. At first she complained that induction was too fast, but she got used to it. On portable induction cook tops, I've given away many. I've found them for a low as $30, but I would not take one with less than 1800 watt. There are 1300 watt and 1500 watt, but the price different isn't noticeable, but the lower wattage will be slower.
Good luck on convincing people to change. Gas is like a religion. The facts don't matter and people will stick with whatever they want to believe regardless how obvious it is that induction is better in every way.
I’ve invited friends over to try out induction when they were upgrading their kitchens. Even die hard gas fans can’t argue with ‘just come over and see for yourself’. Every single one goes for induction once they’ve had a chance to try it out themselves. Experience is the best salesman.
The problem with induction and hot plate is that when the power is out, you're screwed. With a gas stove i can easily cook during a power outage. Plus induction only works on flat pans/pots which is annoying for the types of food I cook
Also there is still the big issue of cost Ferrell said the cost of stove is 400? That's is top of thr line quality where I'm from you can easily get a decent one for 150$ and as low as 89.99 which is still very much functional if you take good care of it
So it is about 10x the cost of gas also gas is cheap where I live compared to electricity in some areas
I don't deny that if I get the opportunity to use it I would like it hell I even co sider getting one for myself if we only consider the benefit but it is not cost effective for me and it is unreasonable to expect ppl to change so ppl use gas stoves is not religious is out of the current need
@@wahahabuh I get the point about the pan shape. I have a heavy cast iron wok with a slightly flatted base that works ok and can get very hot but it won’t compare with the restaurant wok burners. Do you get a lot of power outages where you live? I’d base my decision on how I cook 99.9% of the time. To be honest if the power goes out I’m more concerned about not having WiFi connection, I can always grab a sandwich 😁
@@kevinsantos5050 yes it’s true that cost is an important factor for many people. If you can afford the upgrade it’s twice as efficient so the cost per kW or thermal unit will be less divergent but probably still more expensive. The costs have come down a great deal on the units as the technology develops and saturates the market. We cooked over fires once upon a time and gas will go the same way at some point.
We have an induction stove and love it. We have a tip to protect the glass surface. This has not been indorced by the manufacturer, nevertheless it's been working well for us. We had a BBQ Grill mat (or oven mat) that we cut into circles the size of our pots and place one between the pot and the cooking surface. We cut a small hole in the center to help position them quicker.
Hope this is helpful!
Thanks for your show - regular viewer!
You mean you're placing those mats inbetween pot and stove while cooking? You DO realize that induction efficiency decreases with distance, right?
@@sascharambeaud1609 that may be true but I'm not seeing any noticable difference. I'm more concerned about protecting the glass surface.
Some use newspaper paper between pan and cooktop. Makes for very easy cleanup after messy cooking.
@@pizzablender interesting, my first thought is the paper would catch fire, but apparently not, cool!
Same here, but we use an induction silicon mat. We bought ours online. Think it was called bake o glide and and can be cut, with scissors, to the size of your hob. Love my induction stove.
I set up a small kitchen for myself and ended up with a portable induction stove top I really didn’t understand what it was prior to buying it. After two years of using it and one upgrade later, I love it. The upgrade allowed me to remove the pan without the stove immediately turning itself off. While I don’t remove the utensil from the stove often having to reset it each time made me a little nutty. It takes a minute to adjust to it but I grew up with an electric stove and adjusted to gas depending on what was available in the house I had moved to so this was just another adjustment. I found it fairly easy. Hope more people will give it a try to protect their family and our mother the earth. 😊
I grew up and currently live in, NE Indiana. Through the years, the heat has gone out a few times. While waiting for repair, I used the stove/oven to heat the house. Even filled the tub with hot water and, used a fan to blow the hot, humid air throughout the place.
Definitely not as efficient as other methods and has several negatives, needing to be solved. Even so, my current home has electricity AND gas available to it. If my home only ran on electricity and it went out, I'd be dead in the water.
I lived in Seattle WA for a few years and used an electric stove, as well as an induction stove. Since 2021 (via a Google search) about 68% of all homes in the State of Washington are electric. This number only continues to rise.
As someone who only possesses basic cooking skills, I very much preferred a gas stove.
I've used gas, elec and induction at different times. I must admit I've always preferred gas for it's sheer simplicity, but I remember liking induction too. Most of my cookware's compatible with induction, the exceptions being my roasting tins and a single non-stick pan while I need to replace anyway - no big deal.
My wife does most of the cooking, and she asked me to replace the ceramic cooktop with a gas version. She really enjoys it, and I have to say I find it much easier to use as a part-time cook that has to experiment with the setting to get it right. It’s on an island with a massive exhaust fan that sends everything outside. I appreciate the advice about leaking while off. I have a gas detector and will go back and check it when off. When I installed the cooktop, I just tested the feed lines - not the burners.
That exhaust to the outside is also a huge energy loss by itself. It's pulling hot air from inside your house and pushing it outside. Most efficient houses use filters now instead.
Make sure your wife never gets to try an induction stove, it's faster than gas with just as much control and when she sees how easy it is to clean she'll regret you guys switching to gas :p
Owned a Thermador Hybrid cook top for the last 15 years. 2 hot plates are induction and the other two hot plates are standard flat tops, so it gives the option of using alloy cookware 👍 It’s been awesome and keeps on trucking 🎈Only thing we had to do was run a heavier gauge wire from the panel and upgrade breaker to 40 amp.
Induction cools faster so we don't get burned when we touch the surface, cooks faster as it heats only the pot or the pan, and in my country, it is freaking cheap, like only US$100 for a decent model. That's why I am an induction cooker user now.
The rental house I was in 8 years ago had a 4-burner induction stovetop. I had never seen one until then, didn't really understand it, but my landlord explained that after I got used to it I would never go back to gas. He was right about that. When I bought my trailer I couldn't afford a full-on stove but the $100 single burner indu I bought to augment the existing glass top electric fits in perfectly. I'll never go back.
We have been using an induction hob for about 6 years now and would never go back, we bought an old house at the end of last year and the first thing I did was swap out the gas hob for an induction hob. For a or so when we first moved into the house when we had to use the gas hob and it really brought it home to me how much better cooking on induction is.
Yes but it cost so much more to use an induction cooktop.
@@kingwillbisthebest Not sure where you get that cooking on gas is cheaper, it certainly isn't where I live, even if it was cheaper to cook on gas, cooking on induction is much nicer and the hob is easier to clean. Most importantly I am not filling my home with nasty particles and adding to the CO2 being pumped in the environment.
I am immensely impressed by the efficiency of an induction stove. Everything Matt says about them is right, and they are easy to clean. The only disadvantage is that the glass is breakable (as I know to my cost).
Induction is also easiest to clean, since the "burners" don't actually heat up much (some heat transfers backwards from the cooking vessel obviously) but nothing ever burns to the cooktop. You can always just wipe up after a spill.
I recommend thicker cookware to cook food more evenly. But this is the same recommendation I'd give for gas or radiant electric. Treat yourself to a nice Fissler frying pan with the money you save on fuel.
I grew up cooking on a gas stove however, I've switched to induction in my new house and love it. One thing to note specifically about compatible pans and pots, even if they do work with induction, it's so effective at heating that your pans can warp over time.
Two things to keep in mind, step up the heat in stages since the pan will react so fast. But a major issue is coil size compared to pan. You don't want to go more then a inch bigger to avoid warping. Most cheap induction coils are only 6 inches and don't heat a larger pan well around edges. Bigger coils jump in price a lot so you'll likely only get one on a average priced unit
@@adrianwilson7536 yeah, I renovated my kitchen and went on the expensive side for all the appliances. While I have an extra large coil in the center, the other four coils are generously sized and also capable of combining for a cast iron griddle surface.
Glad to see you are headed toward induction in your new home Matt. We've been using two large commercial CookTek induction hobs for the last 10 years and couldn't be happier. They are super powerful and easy to clean. I've seen some "but what abouts" in the comments below so here are some answers from someone who knows:
Power outages - We rarely have these, so its not really an issue, but induction works just fine running off my home battery :).
Heat loss in the pan when you lift it - I consider this a good thing for control while cooking, but if you don't like it, use cast iron to retain heat longer (this is true for any stove type)
Woks don't workon induction - I get this a lot, and then I ask that person if they own a wok and they all say 'no.' If you need a wok, they make adapters and even specialized induction hobs for woks if you're really into it.
Induciton is just better, stop the stupidity...
I own a wok.
Thanks for sharing.
Induction is great. I wonder why it is not used everywhere. Easy cleaning, fast temperature changes, even faster than gas, no 'smoke' in house, energy efficient. We use Bosh 8 series, and it is great.
radiation near your body is really bad....
Yep and it's also very cheap and has easy installation. Heats the pan quickly and efficiently. I did enjoy gas previously and still like the charm of open fire cooking, but for everyday practical use I could never go back to traditional electric or gas stoves. It's a wonder why Induction doesn't hold majority on all global markets yet.
I've heard induction used in restaurants really cuts down on the extremely uncomfortable heat in the kitxhen....
Induction is more responsive than people think. Especially when it's on 240v. Before we bought my wife's grandmother's house and renovated it, only one gas burner worked (and poorly at that), so we used a 110v portable induction stove, which was pretty good, but slow. Induction has no residual heat like induction. Really, the only downside I have with induction is being unable to char peppers or flambe. But that's what I have a little culinary torch for.
Honestly one of the main issues with gas, is if maintained improperly they quickly lose some of their effectiveness, or even cut out entirely and you have to perform a repair. With Induction you literally just wipe the surface clean and that's it. It's so hassle free.
@@Real_MisterSir Definitely! Induction is so easy to clean, also because stuff doesn't get burned on the cooktop either. So it may make a mess, but a quick wipe with a cloth while cooking and it's clean again.
I live in Chile, and when figuring out the kitchen renovation, induction was already my go to. I got a bosh 4000-Watt (here outlets use 210v) induction stove and I love it. It's the best decision I ever made, fast, clean and safe. I have small children and replacing the oven and the stove with electric I eliminated the risk of having a kid playing with the knobs creating a gas leak.
How is it that a stove which is turned off emits benzene?
Leaks.
the words 'lack of maintenance as a cause' were apparently omitted.
a properly sealed gas feed and maintained gas stove will not emit anything when off. common sense at work which is something that's lacking in commiefornia at this point in time as evidenced by the 'study'.
@@jfolz benzene is a liquid at room Temp and pressure. It boils at 80 degrees C. Sounds like bull. If there was benzene it would have been in parts per billion. Because the natural gas lines are pressurized. Propane gas cylinders are pressurized to 10 atmospheres. If you increase pressure you decrease evaporation.
It sounds like pure scare mongering to me. There is not enough left over benzene in any gas supply. The longer it travels over pipe lines, even less of it remains to leak in homes.
I can understand leaking methane, propane, carbon dioxide or even water vapour .. but benzene... Give me a break
@@kbee225 ur comment is so confusing. obviously it would be measured in parts per million thats how u measure the concentration of any substance in the air...
I switched to induction in a cheap way. This was 7 years ago when induction was not as popular as it is today but I could see the potential. I bought a portable induction cooktop, basically an induction hotplate. I never use more than one burner at a time so what I did was I removed the resistance coil from my traditional coil stove and mounted the induction hotplate to the stove.
After some wiring I have a stove with one induction and 3 resistance cooking surfaces. I can't remember the last time I used the other three. It will boil a pot of water in about 13-15 min. No hot spots, perfect pancakes and grilled cheese.
7 years since I mounted it and it still works perfectly as the day I did my back alley instillation.
we had electric as long as i can think and i was always cooking water in a water cooker while a small amount would heat up on the stove. so i would transfer the boiling water to the pot while it heated. since we changed a year ago to induction, i don't have to do that anymore. it has been a great experience so far and the switch was very easy for us. i would not like to cook with gas simply for the reason of fire or explosion.
I have & had electric & gas appliances my entire life. I run half & half today (1 gas stove, 1 electric stove; 1 gas dryer, 1 electric dryer.)
I only ever had a fire 🔥 from a failed heating element in my electric stove.
The electric starting element in my gas oven failed, but the oven merely stopped cooking / automatically shut off.
My neighbor’s house across the street half burned down, due to an electric stove fire 🔥
My neighbor’s house behind mine burned completely to the ground.
It seems counter intuitive, but electricity ⚡️ is a lot more dangerous than gas.
I always wondered what's more efficient? Boiling water from cold on the burner or using the electric kettle to heat the water to boiling first.
@@nazeradom - it is a really good question… most people don’t take the full fuel cycle into consideration:
1. burn 🔥 fuel at power plant -> power line electric ⚡️ losses -> convert to heat in home 🏡
2. Burn 🔥 gas ⛽️ to create heat in home 🏡
There are a lot of losses in option 1,
few take the losses into consideration.
Same with cars over a lifetime:
- average US Hybrid: 6.3k lbs of CO2
- West Virginia EV: 9,146 pounds of CO2
Electricity ⚡️ efficiency depends on what & where your power is coming from (ie fuel source & how far away the generation station is.)
Thanks for telling us about the magnet test. The cookware I invested in a couple of years ago, which I hope will last my lifetime, passed. I'll most likely install induction if I ever need to replace my electric stove, which came with my house, and I honestly find it easy enough to use, after decades of using gas.
Cooked on every type of furnace, last 6 years on induction, never gone use anything else, if I would move to a new house with a new 50K kitchen including gas stove, I would still rip it out, and get induction instead, the speed and ease of cleaning, is unbeatable.
I have spoken to several householders and also builders about this issue here in the UK. The point that comes up every time is that the power that an induction hob uses is extremely high although as you say, brief and every one of the properties that have had induction hobs installed in have had to have 3 phase electric installed as well. This extra cost and higher daily charge needs to be taken into account as well. I am on bottled gas for the hob only along with solar, air source and batteries for everything else. Also a woodburner which I season all my wood (all hard wood) for a minimum of 2 years. Soot in virtually zero.
You can plug loads of induction hobs into a normal 3 pin socket. Most combined hobs with ovens just get wired into the 32amp cooker circuit unless they are rated higher, then a separate 32 amp circuit could be installed- but you’d be pretty stupid to buy it in the first place!
maybe it is a pommie thing but here in australia most houses have no 3 phases and have absolutely no problem with induction cook tops.
the problem is not the inductions cook top, it is the electrician that is super rigid.
No 3-phase in my house (1920s but with many extensions and upgrades over the years) and my 5-ring induction hob is just fine on a 32A dedicated circuit. I have multiple oven circuits and a 32A car charger circuit too and it's no problem. Same applies to my mother-in-law's nearly new flat: very high spec, modern electrics with multiple ovens, electric underfloor heating, induction hob and definitely no 3-phase.
As a UK electrician you do not need 3 phase for an induction hob , many are available to run on 13A supply . They are very efficient compared to other hob types.
@@waynecartwright-js8twin us, my induction cooktop is on 15 amp circuit at 120v. That is just over half what you get. It just means it uses the total capacity of that circuit.
I live in a cold region, so for most of the year inneficies in gas simply heat the house. So i'm not in a rush to change until i see a viable tech. So far, induction cooking that i've tries has been incredibly frustrating, randomly turning off if the pot is not in exactly the right position etc. I look forward to exploring magnetic cooking.😊
Honestly, up until now I believed that induction stoves required expensive proprietary cookware, while that's been cleared up I was still surprised at the base price of an induction cooktop. Its definitely something that's been glazed over by those suggesting them as a perfect alternative to gas. It is nice to know that a simple magnet could be used to identify pots and pans that would work with one though, and the price should come down with time.
Near the end of this segment, he mentioned getting a single burner plug-in induction cooktop for around $60. That’s what we did and it worked out great! Ours was a gift, but only would have cost about $100 if we’d bought it ourselves.
We put it next to our ceramic top electric stove, and now use it about 85% of the time. We eat “mini course meals” instead of older style conventional“dinner plate - dining room” formality. There are only 3 of us, so we take turns using the induction cooktop, the air fryer, toaster oven, or microwave so we seldom need more than one burner at a time anymore.
I kept 90% of my cookware when I switched.
I would assume the prices of induction stoves (in the USA) should come down ONCE there is a critical mass of them installed. But, if this takes 3 years or 3 decades, who knows... induction stoves are not exactly new technology. When living in the USA, I found it really odd just how rare they were there even in newly build premium apartments. Like, here in the UK, a basic induction cooktop from IKEA (in the standard European size, so 60 cm / ~24 inches and four “burners”) starts at 215 pounds ($260) and in a randomly chosen Western European country the same model is even cheaper at about 230 euros ($245), both prices inclusive of the local sales taxes (which are for both countries much higher than anywhere in the USA). The IKEA in USA only had bigger models, with one extra burner, but the price is like $830 already before sales tax... given that the extra burner cannot possibly cost more than a quarter of the price of the cooktop, that is still like thrice the price for the cheapest model. (To be honest, the model sold in the USA was a bit more advanced than the entry-level models here. But, do you always really need the automatic adjustments for the size of your pots. And, it is not like such flexible models, or even the way more advanced fully flexible zoning models, would be that expensive on this side of the pond. And, it is not even like one would not connect a cooktop in the USA to the between phases with 2 × 120 V = 240 V ... so the internals would not really need to change all that much, just the 50 Hz to 60 Hz mains adaptation.)
I was very suprised at that price; here in the UK I recently installed a new induction cooktop and it cost me £280. Are prices really so high in America? The one I bought has 1 huge ring for things like a flat bottomed wok and two normal sized rings, since I rarely use more than 3 at once anyway and need to be able to cook using huge pans.
Matt might be including the cost of paying a certified electrician to install a dedicated cable connection for the electric hob. If you are replacing a gas hob a suitable electricity supply might not be present, especially with the lower voltage the standard US sockets use meaning they aren't suitable for the purpose.
I'm always happy to see this being talked about! I love my cheap 1 burner portable induction plate despite its weird noises. I am very clumsy, so I rolled laughing when that was mentioned. 😂 I really appreciate mention of the different forms of ventilation, very helpful!
Hahaha same! too bad doesn't turn off property so it's pretty dangerous
I love, love, love my new induction stove. I previously worked with a gas range for nearly 20 years but was forced into an electric cook top after our move. After a ton of research while upgrading the new kitchen I went all in on a huge induction cooktop and cannot imagine going back. It's fast, responsive and so easy to clean. Meals come out better than ever with less time and effort. I'll never go back.
Which cooktop did you choose?
I am quite curious if those who install a 4 burners cook top feel it was worth the expense/space for 4 burners - or if you would recommend two burners as being more than sufficient considering the efficient/faster cooking time.
For about $100 you can get a decent single portable induction burner! I just want people to be aware that for many, a quality single portable induction burner may actually be all they need. Induction is so efficient I usually prefer to cook in series (ie make the main dish - then steam a vegetable). This is particularly important for those with limited kitchen space, limited budgets, or preference for flexible use (a portable cook top can be used anywhere you have an outlet and even stored away when not in use).
I completely eliminated my range and used a single induction burner plus convection/microwave oven to regularly cook for up to 12 kids and an adult! I had a two burner portable induction, but rarely used it so I put it in storage. I would recommend a quality single burner for the counter top with a cheap spare single burner in storage for occasional use, unless you have unusual needs. You might want a 2 burner if you have it installed or tend to have lots of pots on the stove at once. The only complaint I have with my $40 burner is the center approx. 6-7 inches diameter heated more than the edges of the pan - I think this is corrected in the better models likely in the $100 range.
@@smarbassiew I purchased a Frigidaire Gallery 36" induction stove. So far it has been fantastic.
@@altzana396 For the past six years, I've been using a 30" Frigidaire Gallery cooktop. I have loved every second of it.
@@amyw1850 I wondered the same thing for quite a while. I got by for a few years using just a single-hob induction hotplate. No oven, either. I was satisfied with that and the idea of a four-hob cooktop seemed excessive. But I bought one anyway. So glad I did. First, the controlability is far better on the proper cooktop, especially at low temperatures. Second, the large surface gives a space to set hot item out of the oven. Third, it did not take long for me to get used to having 3 and even 4 pots and pans going simultaneously - it makes meal prep more fun. I designed my kitchen to have a lot of horizontal prep/cook/serve space on the island with sink/ dirty dish lay-down space and dishwasher on the other side of the aisle. The flow from refrigerator to prep to cook to serve to washing is key. If you have the space, I recommend that the proper cooktop is worth the investment. A 30" unit is plenty big for me.
A few months ago I bought a countertop induction "burner" (fun fact, at about 6 min, the induction burner in the video is the one I bought!). I'm not sure what to call it, but I'll go with burner. Single heating unit, bought on Amazon for about $80. This thing is amazing. I did a couple of tests for my curiosity. Running it at max power, it consumes about 1000-1200 watts. It brought 3 cups of water to a rolling boil in 2 minutes (the installed electric stovetop took 8 min on max -- and I did not have a way to measure its watts consumption but I know it is much higher from a little research). It's as responsive and fast as gas. The low wattage use was a surprise to me; I expected it to be higher. I absolutely love it. There is no question that induction cooktops are a GREAT choice, especially if your house is on solar/battery power, but even for regular grid power. Fast. Efficient. Responsive. Compact (store in a cabinet when not in use). What's not to love? The ONLY downside I encountered (that I knew before I bought it) was I needed to buy new pans. That is only because the pots and pans I had were aluminum (which is crap, and I knew it was crap). So I had to buy "better" pans. They are NOT special. They are NOT specially made for induction. All it requires is that the bulk of the pan material be ferromagnetic (i.e. iron or steel). Whoopty doo. Still regular old inexpensive pots and pans that work great.
A single induction burner can be a good way to experiment with induction to see if it works for you and confirm if your pans are compatible. One advantage of gas is emergency heat and able to cook during a power failure, which are more frequent in rural areas than urban areas
Hi I'm from a rural place, and 1,800 RPM water cooled diesel generators are King for power outages, and some people prefer spark ignition propane or gasoline ones. I myself prefer diesel and propane, the propane for the Winter for easier starting and no air conditioning needed.
When I moved into my current house, I was confused about why my cooktop wouldn't work. It turned out it was inductive and that all of my cookware was incompatible. I was pretty cheesed off about that. I had no choice but to donate all my pots and pans and buy new ones for the inductive cooktop. I was off to a bad start, but I got used to it. Eventually I started to see a lot of positives. It really is fast and efficient - almost as responsive as gas, easier to clean, no harmful vapours. If I ever decide to replace my cooktop, I'll go inductive again. I think a big part of the low uptake is just that nobody introduces us to it properly.
“Low uptake”
Is cost & safety & availability.
- It is freekin expensive
- only had a fire in my house from a failed electric stove
- it is nice to have warm food when the power is out during the winter ❄️ time
@@DavidHalko When the power goes out, use your BBQ. Cooking with gas outdoors reduces the health issues. Here in Canada, a lot of people BBQ year round, even when the power is on.
Having to buy new pots is also an upside (unless you're poor): most induction ready pots are high quality and will make you happy for a long time. Plus here's your chance to buy pots you can stack!
@@timlocke3159 - “BBQ”
great 👍🏼 idea!!!💡
My wife and I are both professional chefs. Electric stoves just can’t compete with the flavor of an actual flame. They have their benefits when you are baking or boiling things, but broiling and cooking on flame just can’t be replaced when it comes to flavor
you are correct in this one, i like the egg boiling with gas, but not like egg cook with electric one, it has different smell
I love my induction countertop cooker; it's 22 old years and it's still my main cooking device! BTW a "Deffuser plate" will allow ANY cookweatr to be used; with only a slight effeciancy loss!
I first experienced induction cooking about 15 years ago in a vacation rental in France. Several years ago I changed my resistance burner stove to an induction stove and would never go back. It was more expensive on initial purchase for sure, but lower electric cost and greatly reduced heating of the kitchen. Besides the instant response like gas, it also heats the pan very evenly with no hot spots which makes cooking easier and with better results. Induction also is much faster on initial warmup. Most induction stoves have a “turbo” mode for initial heating that provides about 10% more energy than the hi setting. Also, since the cooktop isn’t heated, except by the cookware, cleanup is always just a wipe with a dishcloth.
Great point: gas really does heat up the kitchen faster than the pots.
What brand are your induction stoves? In my experience the induction bssed stoves get hot spots more than the resistance ones :(((
@@mantarlos Fridgidare.
@@mantarlos if you are getting hotspots it could be the pan, but I’ve never had that problem.
My biggest issue with induction (when doing a kitchen upgrade) was the lack of options for wok cooking. There are some induction cooktops with a wok element, but the indentation isn't deep enough and it prevents proper stirring wich is usually done by both mixing with a spoon and moving the wok.
That’s my biggest gripe with my induction cooktop too!
My fix is doing it outside on the wok-suitable gas burner that came as part of my BBQ
Quite handy if you’re grilling meat and making a veggie stir-fry on the side!
Having induction doesn’t mean you have to cook everything on it!
Besides, you don’t have the hot, polluted greasy air inside your house!
@Proper Gander thanks both of you because that was my concern and the possible answer I came up with too.
I've also realized I haven't even used my wok for a while, must he time for a stir fry 😀
I wok on induction by choice.
My roommate and I were given an induction hot plate, but had never used it. Out of curiosity last year, we set it up on top of our glass top stove. Fast forward - we now use it for 95% of our cooking. Definitely a fan now!