floridaboy,
I think the reason they're not lasting for you is because there aren't any that can do all you're wanting at the same time.
That's why there are different tools (pans/materials) for different uses.
Here are my top suggestions for each of your wants based off what we use in our kitchen today and having started off with (years ago) Circulon which I don't think I'll ever go back to. Also, these are investments which will last you the rest of your life... and then some....
1. melt a piece of cheese in it and let it slide off like a puck on watery ice.
Berndese
Analon Nonstick
Calphalon Hard-Anaondized aluminum
If you want and egg to "let it slide off like a puck on watery ice" then dedicate one pan just for that and don't use it for anything else.
2. put it under the oven broiler without damage
Iron Skillet
Calphalon Hard-Anaondized aluminum
All-Clad (not nonstick)
You don't broil anything with teflon or coating. It will ruin the composition of the material is potentially dangerous for numerous reasons.
3. ditto into the dishwasher
All-Clad
Analon
Berndes
4. be able to loosen those meat tidbits with cold wine or water
Anything I mentioned
5. cook on high heat anytime
With any of the cookware I've mentioned, they are such excellent conductors of heat, you get higher heat from your pan using lower settings from your stove.
Is there not a nonstick that will last at least several years??
Yes. An iron skillet. You just won't be able to put it in the dish washer. Actually, you never wash it with soap.
Questions for you: Any other higher end cookware you've been using besides Circulon?
There is an informative thread here on
buying cookware you may want to check out.
Excellent article here:
Can Non-Stick Make You Sick? Quote:
Originally posted by lamington I think there's been a thread here about the supposed dangers of Teflon. Anyway, the poisonous stuff is, if I remember rightly, only produced at heats well above cooking temperatures. There appears little reason for the conventional user of non-stick coatings to worry, unless some brand new finding contradicts that.
"As the Environmental Working Group showed 20/20 in a kitchen demonstration, however, a pan can reach that temperature in just a few minutes.
"At 554 degrees Fahrenheit," said Houlihan, "studies show ultrafine particles start coming off the pan. These are tiny little particles that can embed deeply into the lungs.""
From: Can Non-Stick Make You Sick? |