The Advantages Of Magnetic Induction Cooktops

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Imagine this scenario. You drag in from work and have to cook dinner for your family. As you get the food ready to go, you place to pots on the cook top to start heating up. Meanwhile, your two small children are running around the kitchen after being cooped up all day in day care or preschool. Before you know it, one of the trips and grabs the cooktop to stop from falling. Your child’s hand touches the edge of the burner that is hot and burns his hand pretty badly which means a trip to the hospital.


This scenario can and does happen each and every day in households across the United States and around the world. Now, imagine the same scenario with a magnetic induction cooktop. Your child’s hand touches the edge of the burner but DOES NOT get burned! You get to fuss at your children, tell them to quit running around so wildly and then you kick them out of the kitchen. There is no burned flesh and no need to make a trip the ER to have your child’s hand treated for burns!


I don’t know about you, but the second scenario is much more appealing to me. This exact scenario could play out in your house if you owned a magnetic induction cooktop. You would never again have to worry about you or your kids accidentally touching the cooktop and getting burned. This is a reality for many people that are confined to wheel chairs as well.


Magnetic induction cooktops are the fastest-heating cooktops that you will find. When you turn on your magnetic induction cooktop, electricity passes through the magnetic elements under the cooktop’s surface. When this happens, a magnetic field of energy forms that then heats up the pan that is sitting on the cooktop. Induction isn’t new but it isn’t widely used right now. Restaurants and cooking schools are starting to make the switch to this type of heat and it is a top seller for industry leaders like Gaggenau, Kenmore, and Viking.


There are a lot of advantages to using magnetic induction cooktops. First, they are breaking records for the speed that they bring 6 quarts of water close to boiling. The heat that is emitted is even and liquids simmer perfectly. The cooktop stays much cooler than a conventional cooktop which means no burned flesh, no burnt on spills and less heat loss which leads to a very hot kitchen. A huge safety feature is that induction elements turn off automatically when the magnetic pot is removed from the burner, even if you don’t want them to. So this greatly reduces the chance of having a cooking related fire in your kitchen.


The biggest reason that you don’t find magnetic induction cooktops in every home is the cost of the cooktop and the pots and pans. When this technology first came out, prices range from $1,800 to $3,500. When you compare that with $550 to $750 for top-performing electric cooktops and $650 to $1,200 for gas, the price is a bit steep for most people. But if you shop around online, many times you can find discounts that will make it more affordable.


You also have to figure in the cost of new cookware for the new cooktop. This technology requires you to use cookware that is made of cast iron or enameled steel. You can try to use your old stainless-steel cookware and sometimes you will get lucky and it will work. But if you have copper or aluminum pots and pans, you are out of luck. One way to test your cookware is to see if a magnet will stick to it. If the magnet sticks, your cookware will most probably work.


Find discount magnetic induction cooktops for your home.



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