… the pans are likely not “nontoxic” some independent testing and research suggests. Nor are they even “ceramic” – at least not in the way the public broadly thinks of ceramics. Now, regulators are investigating some of the pan sellers’ claims.
Really need regulatory action on this. People have no idea.
You won’t be seeing this in the US, EVER. Too much money in politics
While the current regulatory environment is very…discouraging, it’s not impossible, particularly if individual states take action.
This is an area where anything less than proactive regulation should be unacceptable… your attitute of “it is technically possble” is how you now have a dictator in charge of government
“The companies won’t tell the public what else is in the pans, and their formulas are shielded by confidential business information laws, making it very difficult to verify their claims.”
I’d think the answer to this should be super simple… Investigators go to the factory and demand the Material Safety Data Sheets.
They don’t have an MSDS? Shut that shit down.
Virtually all my cookware is enameled cast iron since I found the Le Creuset outlet store and 30% to 60% off deals. :) I do have a seasoned carbon steel wok and full ceramic bakeware though!
Does anyone have a source saying that ingesting cast iron seasoning (burnt fat) is ok?
I just want to make sure I’m not just picking my flavor of cancer. I assume burnt food is better than PFAS (not forever)
The seasoning on cast iron is polymerized oil and it’s chemically bonded to the iron. You’re only really going to be removing the seasoning if you’re using abrasives or scrubbing too hard with steel wool or something like that.
https://www.seriouseats.com/the-truth-about-cast-iron#toc-myth-4-dont-scrub-with-soap
Any loose bits of black gunk that are coming off while you’re cleaning it with a sponge or a scrubby are just burnt food.
Just use stainless steel and carbon steel if you are worried about that, I honestly use my stainless pans 70% of the time, carbon steel like 20% and my cast iron is that last 10% when cast iron is actually beneficial
Huh, I’m opposite.
- I use cast iron 70% of the time because foods I cook go in a skillet and browned foods taste good
- stainless 20% of the time when there’s a reason (like simmering curry or any acidic stew). Or pasta, because the spaghetti pot is stainless
- carbon steel 1-2/week - gotta use it to cook breakfast on weekends
- Teflon occasionally (unless you count my rice cooker, but that’s on the list to replace with stainless steel when it dies)
It’s likely not ok. But focusing on every source of carcinogen in your life won’t stop you from getting cancer eventually. Eating healthy and using Teflon pans will probably give you a better life than eating like shit on cast iron. No real way to know the future though.
Tritan is a good example of this hyper focus on not consuming bad stuff. It has 3 components, 2 of which imitate estrogen. It’s the plastic that replaced polycarbonate. Which is derived from BPA, but in reality contains very little after you wash it once.
So… the crispy bits that result from the Maillard Reaction (the TASTY crispy bits!) may be a known problem because it produces acrylamide.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24875401/
“Based on the evidence of acrylamide carcinogenicity in animals, the International Agency for Research on Cancer has classified acrylamide as a group 2A carcinogen for humans.”
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Just use stainless steel and learn how to cook your food
The problem will go away when the current administration further cuts consumer protections and health oversight.
Sooo… this is as close to a product recommendation as you can get on The Guardian without reverting to ads.
The Xtrema ceramic pans seem really enticing.








