• @iAvicenna
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    113 hours ago

    what oil do you use for steel? I find that if I have to make steel hot enough for it to be non-stick, as soon as I put oil on it it starts smoking if it is plant oil or burning if it is fat.

    • @[email protected]
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      113 hours ago

      Whatever I have on hand or fit’s the dish.

      Mostly rapeseed oil, sometimes olive oil. When I first started (before I was able to just guess), I put a drop of water in the pan. As soon as the water started to boil, I added the oil and was ready to go.

      Nothing stuck for quite a while. But if it did, sometimes it was enough to wait a bit for everything to release by itself.

      Aside from that: butter. Butter does some magic.

      • @iAvicenna
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        211 hours ago

        doesn’t the oil burn when you put it on a very hot steel pan or do you have a trick? I guess rapeseed oil burning point is higher but if I put butter on a very hot pan it immediately turns brown and then burns in a matter of seconds.

        • @LePoisson
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          28 hours ago

          Maybe you’re just getting the pan too hot? I know that sounds silly but it might be as simple as turning the heat down some and cooking whatever for a little longer.

          Or at least that’s like my cardinal cooking sin, I’m always getting the pan too hot and burning shit unless I’m very careful to think about it.

          • @iAvicenna
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            15 hours ago

            but you are supposed to heat the steel pans until water kind of jumps in it (to make it nonstick) and that much heat generally already burns the oil I am using…

            • @angrystego
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              15 hours ago

              And if you heat any oil too much it starts producing carcinogenes. Butter is especially prone to do that even in relatively lower heat if it’s not ghee. So it becomes toxic in a similar way as teflon is.