a 5 cent hack for protecting induction and glass cooktops from steel & cast iron: Circular parchment paper rounds available at any dollar store. Work perfectly.
Thanks for this excellent, educational video. For those of us who can't quit afford the Atlantis line, could you possibly recommend a 2nd and 3rd choice ? (All Clad copper core? Lodge? Le Creuset? I see already you don't recommend AC for induction cooktops)
The big problem I have with the Atlantis line is that it is so induction responsive that it completely mimics the pulsing of my induction stove. So I frequently get high heat intervals during what is supposed to be low heat cooking. Proline pans are better at that after preheating
I cook with the Atlantis line on an eight year old Bosch induction range and although it does pulse, I haven't noticed a problem when cooking on low heat. Maybe try cooking with your Atlantis cookware on a friend's induction range and see if you get the same result.
Same problem with cast iron on an Inventum induction stove: a Lodge skillet, a Creuset braiser and a Staub Dutch Oven all fail to maintain a constant temperature. It's a dirty little secret of induction stoves and problem solving consists of blaming the victim instead of improving the technology and more honest advertising.
While I like Demeyere I have seen excellent results from Allclad D3, D5, various cast iron skillets, Scanpan frypans, Greenpan frypans, and even some old Farberware Millennium pieces on my Diva Induction ccoktop. I've never had a rivet fail on Allclad but if that happened it's an easy fix. Demeyere...not so much. But they do look sharp without rivets.
Hi, thanks. That is a great question. I have found the Atlantis/Pro-Line to behave more like heavy copper or cast iron, when preheated and using other heat sources.
Atlantis is wonderful but SO heavy. Some of the Industry pans are similar in weight, but I think you'll find for most similar sizes Atlantis is significantly heavier than those Industry pans you just bought. Pick one up and hold it for a count of 30 and ask yourself if you really wanted anything heavier.
Does this cookware make the noises when used on the cook top? I have one very small stainless sauce pan that doesn’t make any noise at all but all the rest of them do. All I want is quite cooking any help would be great appreciated.
@@Cook-Culture yes I have just had my induction stove top installed and trying to find some cookware that doesn’t make the sound but I’m thinking that might be just the way it is.
I wanted an atlantis steelpan, but then I saw the weight and it is to heavy for me, the steelpan i have now is 1/3 of the weight of that. But does it really matter if your water boils even or oneven tho? I can understand the pans, but what s so extra about the pans? 🤔
When you do anything else than mostly water, then even hating matters. Atlantis is also really responsive due to copper being its main bottom material.
@@kaspervendler1726 oh that explains, thanks. Personally i almost never boil anything else then water. Maybe once a year milk. But now it at least makes sense 😊
Hi, for Atlantis, the engineering from inception was to build the best induction cookware. Nothing on the market is made the same what so its difficult to compare. The advantage on induction that everything works getting. Boiling is faster yet simmering is more delicate
@@Cook-Culture The goal to engineer the best induction cookware doesn't mean it is the best on the market. Why specifically is it better than the bottom disk Tramontina or Fissler? Is there science to back it up? Did Demeyere R&D dept. make comparisons in order to make a claim as being the best? I'm just trying to understand why Demeyere is the best before I throw down a chunk of money for a skillet lol.
@@plumbooks Yes, they did compare it to the leading European brands, on different hobs. They believe that their testing showed that Atlantis is the best. This does not mean that it's the best value for each user. That is for the individual to decide.
@@Cook-Culture That's a good point! Aside from science and pricing, the best value will be varied from one to the next person. I do really like the esthetic of the Atlantis skillet handles! Thank you for your valuable time in answering my inquiries.
Very interesting interview. Good argument for getting the Atlantis line over the Industry line. Dumb question. Is Induction used only on the stove top hobs, or can induction be used for baking inside the oven as well?
Induction requires contact with the pan. The heat is actually produced IN the metal of the pan. The burner will not get hot unless there is a metal pan on the burner. So, there's no such thing as an induction oven. At least no residential induction cooking appliance oven. There is such a thing as an induction smelting oven that melts metal to make steel - but again, it produces the heat right in the metal. Think of how an old style electric burner works. The burner gets hot, and heat is "conducted" to the pan, and the pan conducts the heat to the food inside it. With an induction burner, the magnetic field produced by the cooktop "inducts" heat directly to the pan, and the pan conducts heat to the food. You're skipping a conduction step. However, if you can use a dutch oven type pan on an induction cooktop for some kinds of cooking you would do in an oven - but not for baking.
@@Cook-Culture I know that it's something I would be tempted to buy, putting large amounts of instant heat isn't great for cooking always but it is always better for heating water. I assume you have some of the Atlantis, you could run a test with a large saucepan and see how fast it is, that in kettle form for the "fastest cuppa" would I am sure have a market. When I saw how fast my new induction stove boiled water the same day I bought a stove top kettle.
Demeyere DOES make a couple of whistling tea kettles, but they are made in Indonesia and not part of the Atlantis or Industry lines. However, there are probably MANY brands of kettles that will work on an induction stove. The quick heat of induction stoves is not a feature of the Demeyere brand, it is a feature of the induction stove. Demeyere just happens to make some of the very best pans for induction stoves.
a 5 cent hack for protecting induction and glass cooktops from steel & cast iron: Circular parchment paper rounds available at any dollar store. Work perfectly.
Nice
Thanks for this excellent, educational video. For those of us who can't quit afford the Atlantis line, could you possibly recommend a 2nd and 3rd choice ? (All Clad copper core? Lodge? Le Creuset? I see already you don't recommend AC for induction cooktops)
Check out 'Heritage Steel'. Amazing quality, made in the USA, family owned company.
For sure have a couple lodge cast irons. Those are my go to
The big problem I have with the Atlantis line is that it is so induction responsive that it completely mimics the pulsing of my induction stove. So I frequently get high heat intervals during what is supposed to be low heat cooking. Proline pans are better at that after preheating
Interesting. Thank you for the feedback. What type of range are you using?
@@Cook-Culture I am using a stove from a smaller German company, ELAG. But as far as I am aware, there is no non pulsing induction stove available.
@@lgolem09l Thanks. I'll ask my contact at Demeyere. He is all knowledgeable when it comes to these issues.
I cook with the Atlantis line on an eight year old Bosch induction range and although it does pulse, I haven't noticed a problem when cooking on low heat. Maybe try cooking with your Atlantis cookware on a friend's induction range and see if you get the same result.
Same problem with cast iron on an Inventum induction stove: a Lodge skillet, a Creuset braiser and a Staub Dutch Oven all fail to maintain a constant temperature. It's a dirty little secret of induction stoves and problem solving consists of blaming the victim instead of improving the technology and more honest advertising.
While I like Demeyere I have seen excellent results from Allclad D3, D5, various cast iron skillets, Scanpan frypans, Greenpan frypans, and even some old Farberware Millennium pieces on my Diva Induction ccoktop. I've never had a rivet fail on Allclad but if that happened it's an easy fix. Demeyere...not so much. But they do look sharp without rivets.
Could you maybe speak to why you might use Demeyere Atlantis / Triplinduc technology on other hobs even if you haven't moved to induction yet?
Hi, thanks. That is a great question. I have found the Atlantis/Pro-Line to behave more like heavy copper or cast iron, when preheated and using other heat sources.
Hi, thank you for information. I’ve bought today industry 5 series. How it is in comparison with Atlantis and pro series?
Hi, it's radically different but still very good. I highly recommend Atlantis for induction. Industry is a good all around cookware. You've done well!
Atlantis is wonderful but SO heavy. Some of the Industry pans are similar in weight, but I think you'll find for most similar sizes Atlantis is significantly heavier than those Industry pans you just bought. Pick one up and hold it for a count of 30 and ask yourself if you really wanted anything heavier.
in the market ..... sound/buzz levels on this set?
Does this cookware make the noises when used on the cook top? I have one very small stainless sauce pan that doesn’t make any noise at all but all the rest of them do. All I want is quite cooking any help would be great appreciated.
You are using induction?
@@Cook-Culture yes I have just had my induction stove top installed and trying to find some cookware that doesn’t make the sound but I’m thinking that might be just the way it is.
@@lorendabutler4929 Howdy, yes, it's the induction coil repelling the pot. This is why it hums. It should be quieter when full.....?
I wanted an atlantis steelpan, but then I saw the weight and it is to heavy for me, the steelpan i have now is 1/3 of the weight of that. But does it really matter if your water boils even or oneven tho? I can understand the pans, but what s so extra about the pans? 🤔
When you do anything else than mostly water, then even hating matters.
Atlantis is also really responsive due to copper being its main bottom material.
@@kaspervendler1726 oh that explains, thanks. Personally i almost never boil anything else then water. Maybe once a year milk. But now it at least makes sense 😊
Is there a difference between Proline and Atlantis Proline frying pan? Thank you!
Hi, it's the same
How is Atlantis compared to the Tramontina Tri-Ply base (welded disc bottom) set - Made in Brazil or Fissler Original Profi? What are the differences?
Hi, for Atlantis, the engineering from inception was to build the best induction cookware. Nothing on the market is made the same what so its difficult to compare. The advantage on induction that everything works getting. Boiling is faster yet simmering is more delicate
@@Cook-Culture The goal to engineer the best induction cookware doesn't mean it is the best on the market. Why specifically is it better than the bottom disk Tramontina or Fissler? Is there science to back it up? Did Demeyere R&D dept. make comparisons in order to make a claim as being the best? I'm just trying to understand why Demeyere is the best before I throw down a chunk of money for a skillet lol.
@@plumbooks Yes, they did compare it to the leading European brands, on different hobs. They believe that their testing showed that Atlantis is the best. This does not mean that it's the best value for each user. That is for the individual to decide.
@@Cook-Culture That's a good point! Aside from science and pricing, the best value will be varied from one to the next person. I do really like the esthetic of the Atlantis skillet handles! Thank you for your valuable time in answering my inquiries.
They tested their product against competitors' and came to the conclusion that their own product was the best? Okay...
Hi Jed! Do you know what's a good do it all size for a carbon steel pan (kind of like how a 10-10.25" cast iron skillet is a good do it all size)?
Hi,. that really depends on how many people you are cooking for??
@@Cook-Culture primarily for 2-3 people most days.
I just ordered mine from Amazon.
Very interesting interview. Good argument for getting the Atlantis line over the Industry line. Dumb question. Is Induction used only on the stove top hobs, or can induction be used for baking inside the oven as well?
Hi Geoff, no question is a dumb question! Induction is only on the stove top.
Induction requires contact with the pan. The heat is actually produced IN the metal of the pan. The burner will not get hot unless there is a metal pan on the burner. So, there's no such thing as an induction oven. At least no residential induction cooking appliance oven. There is such a thing as an induction smelting oven that melts metal to make steel - but again, it produces the heat right in the metal. Think of how an old style electric burner works. The burner gets hot, and heat is "conducted" to the pan, and the pan conducts the heat to the food inside it. With an induction burner, the magnetic field produced by the cooktop "inducts" heat directly to the pan, and the pan conducts heat to the food. You're skipping a conduction step. However, if you can use a dutch oven type pan on an induction cooktop for some kinds of cooking you would do in an oven - but not for baking.
What are the EMF levels produced by this range compared to other brands?
Hi, the cookware does not produce energy.
Very interesting stuff. Bought the Cook Culture baking mat, loved it.
Great to hear!
All clad??
None of the All-Clad lines come close to Atlantis performance for induction.
You should make a kettle with this stuff for boiling water very damn fast.
Good point!
@@Cook-Culture I know that it's something I would be tempted to buy, putting large amounts of instant heat isn't great for cooking always but it is always better for heating water. I assume you have some of the Atlantis, you could run a test with a large saucepan and see how fast it is, that in kettle form for the "fastest cuppa" would I am sure have a market. When I saw how fast my new induction stove boiled water the same day I bought a stove top kettle.
Demeyere DOES make a couple of whistling tea kettles, but they are made in Indonesia and not part of the Atlantis or Industry lines. However, there are probably MANY brands of kettles that will work on an induction stove. The quick heat of induction stoves is not a feature of the Demeyere brand, it is a feature of the induction stove. Demeyere just happens to make some of the very best pans for induction stoves.
What about all-clad
For induction, not even close to Atlantis.
You lost me at the carbon bullshit.