I hope this is ok to post: cast iron adjacent and has not better home on Lemmy ….
Seafood feast I made for the kids last night. That fried rice started as 2c dry rice and would have been tough to make without the space of this griddle top! Or maybe it’s just me, I can’t seem to make it without spreading out and making a mess
It’s all an experiment
only the second time cooking tuna steak
only a few times trying to sear shrimp
fried rice - ok, hot sesame oil was new, gave it a nice kick without being hot
Probably use it for a massive number of pancakes tomorrow
So this is also a cry for help: what can I replace this with?
I’m getting an induction glass top, which doesn’t support griddles of any kind
I don’t want to go back to Teflon, that all stand-alone electric griddles seem to be
I don’t know how big to consider: during the week it’s just me and a skillet is sufficient, but kids do come home from college
I considered getting a Blackstone or similar, but the weather here is not friendly to outdoor cooking half the year
Anyone have ideas what to look for in a stand-alone griddle that’s not Teflon, and is cast iron or cast iron adjacent?
It’s 3/8” steel. Similar to cast iron in many ways, but not. It’s still magnetic though
It may need air circulation underneath. Currently sits on the grates of my gas stove so has an inch below, plus cautions it needs an inch on back and sides. For electric burners, they sell one with legs, so it’s not directly on the glass top
The induction stove I got doesn’t support griddles of any kind. The ones that do, synch two adjacent burners so the magnetic pulses are the same. I have no idea whether not being synced is lower Efficiency, doesn’t work, or may cause some sort of problem
So both the griddle top manufacturer and stove manufacturer would discourage using it. Neither are explicit about what would happen but the stove is too expensive to just yolo it
Just buy a electric one, I grabbed one from Amazon for like $200 a few years ago, it's 20x36 and works like a champ. These ones that go on the top of the stove make me feel like the weight is going to break some shit lol
Is there a specific reason your induction stovetop doesn't support griddles? The only requirement I could find is that the griddle has to be flush on the surface, similar to a pan. Other then that I couldn't find any technical barriers.