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NON STICK FRYING PANS

(62 Posts)
Ramblingrose22 Wed 12-Feb-25 14:41:41

Can anyone recommend which ones to get, please?
I bought a set of 3 rated No.1 by Which magazine and 3 years on, all the food sticks like crazy to the pan unless I first tip loads of oil in.
Such a waste of money all round, and the same had happened with the pans I used before these

Barleyfields Wed 12-Feb-25 14:46:42

I have some Berghoff frying pans and saucepans which are very good. They are expensive but always having sales, which I took advantage of.

Sago Wed 12-Feb-25 14:57:05

The best are Hexclad but brace yourself……..they don’t come cheap.

Barleyfields Wed 12-Feb-25 15:09:45

Unfortunately HexClad are made in China. Berghoff, which I have, manufacture in Belgium.

kittylester Wed 12-Feb-25 15:19:50

I wanted another 'occasional use' one and spotted one in Aldi's aisle of shame for £10.00 so bought it. It's really good.

Norah Wed 12-Feb-25 15:31:19

Ballerini Parma.

Oopsadaisy1 Wed 12-Feb-25 15:36:28

Make sure they are chemical free, cheap pans have toxins in them that leach into the food.

Google it for more info.

Septimia Wed 12-Feb-25 15:37:23

Swan Retro pans have a non-stick ceramic coating. I've been really pleased with mine - DH bought me the set of 3 saucepans and 2 frying pans - they're really easy to clean. The only drawback is that you probably have to buy the whole set.

Jaxjacky Wed 12-Feb-25 16:14:26

I love this one, 6 months after I bought the first I bought another in case they disappeared, the original is still going strong after four years.
10 year guarantee

Greyduster Wed 12-Feb-25 16:32:02

I have Tefal non-stick pans that haven’t stayed the course, and have bought a couple that, despite saying they are suitable for induction hobs, will only work on certain rings which are usually the ones I don’t want to use. I have an omelette pan that I bought in a hardware store in Bakewell and, like Kittylester, a sort of semi-wok that I got from Aldi. Both have proved to be excellent.

spottybook Wed 12-Feb-25 17:13:20

Jamie Oliver frying pans are very robust.

Maggiemaybe Wed 12-Feb-25 17:33:26

We have a set of Tefals, inherited when one of our offspring got an induction hob. We always love it when they upgrade. smile The pans have been great - we started off carefully washing them by hand, but soon stopped that nonsense.

Allira Wed 12-Feb-25 17:35:46

We bought two Tower ceramic frying pans (cerastone) and they stick. "Superior non-stick" - bah!
Expensive waste of money.

Barleyfields Wed 12-Feb-25 17:39:39

I bought two large oval Rick Stein frying pans from John Lewis some years ago, for fish of course. They are great but I don’t think they are made now.

escaped Wed 12-Feb-25 17:54:25

I agree with Jaxjacky and spottybook about Jamie Oliver frying pans. They last for ages.
I like my Le Creuset ones too because they withstand me scraping the coating with metal utensils. They're also easy to clean.
My cheapy one is a Stellar, it's OK.

Faierynan Wed 12-Feb-25 17:58:45

I am another fan of Tefal. I don't wash them, up I wipe them out with a damp cloth and 4 years on do not stick. I also fell for the ceramic ones which do stick. They are now in the garage awaiting a new home.

Allira Wed 12-Feb-25 18:00:34

I've got a Stellar ordinary (not non-stick) stainless steel pan, never use it but am so reluctant to get rid of if.

The best pan I had for pancakes was an ordinary aluminium pan, Swan I think, not non-stick. It never stuck and i kept it just for pancakes but DH threw it out because he thought it was old and it was aluminium.
He nearly didn't get pancakes that year. 🥞

NotSpaghetti Wed 12-Feb-25 18:08:08

Like escaped I have Le Creuset frying/ omelette pans. They have been going strong since the 1970s. I suppose they aren't technically non-stick (?) ... but they don't stick.

I do use a little butter or oil though - I don't entirely "dry-cook" in them.

Barleyfields Wed 12-Feb-25 18:12:21

My Le Creuset pans are just too heavy, so rarely used.

Ali23 Wed 12-Feb-25 18:20:43

John Lewis’s own brand are very good.

Witzend Wed 12-Feb-25 18:36:25

I’ve bought different expensive pans, and very cheap ones, and TBH I’ve found very little difference - in fact the best I ever had was a cheapie from Asda.

Freya5 Wed 12-Feb-25 19:09:18

Allira

I've got a Stellar ordinary (not non-stick) stainless steel pan, never use it but am so reluctant to get rid of if.

The best pan I had for pancakes was an ordinary aluminium pan, Swan I think, not non-stick. It never stuck and i kept it just for pancakes but DH threw it out because he thought it was old and it was aluminium.
He nearly didn't get pancakes that year. 🥞

I have a pro cook stainless steel saute pan, with lid. Use it on induction hob, bring it up to heat, then turn right down, retains heat, doesn't stick. Give yours a try you might be surprised!

Grammaretto Wed 12-Feb-25 19:14:05

I have a very good one bought in Lakeland, quite expensive but so far it's been true to its description unlike the cheaper ones bought from the Midl of Lidl

BridgetPark Wed 12-Feb-25 19:17:11

Judge saucepans are excellent, and are very long lasting.

Allira Wed 12-Feb-25 19:28:09

Freya5

Allira

I've got a Stellar ordinary (not non-stick) stainless steel pan, never use it but am so reluctant to get rid of if.

The best pan I had for pancakes was an ordinary aluminium pan, Swan I think, not non-stick. It never stuck and i kept it just for pancakes but DH threw it out because he thought it was old and it was aluminium.
He nearly didn't get pancakes that year. 🥞

I have a pro cook stainless steel saute pan, with lid. Use it on induction hob, bring it up to heat, then turn right down, retains heat, doesn't stick. Give yours a try you might be surprised!

I will try it again, used to use it a lot.
We have a gas hob (as yet untested!).