Induction cooking question.

The friendliest place on the web for anyone that enjoys cooking.
If you have answers, please help by responding to the unanswered posts.

GMAC

Assistant Cook
Joined
Aug 1, 2022
Messages
1
Location
Sunshine Coast
We have recently put in an induction cooktop and purchased new induction friendly saucepans. The smallest saucepan does not work on the hob as I’m now finding out that it does not cover enough of the induction area. I’m keen for recommendations of a suitable product that will allow me to use my smallest pan on the hob.
 
I do not have an induction stove top but have used a single burner one. I did not find that happen. All of the pots I've tried, from small up have worked. Admitedly I did not use my tiniest sauce pan. It's barely 3" across.

Perhaps only one of the other burners will take the pot? Meaning maybe some of them are for large pots and some for small? Have you tried more than one of them?

I know my friends' stove top has different sizes but she has never mentioned having to place them in a certain area. But then, we've never discussed that.
 
We have recently put in an induction cooktop and purchased new induction friendly saucepans. The smallest saucepan does not work on the hob as I’m now finding out that it does not cover enough of the induction area. I’m keen for recommendations of a suitable product that will allow me to use my smallest pan on the hob.


What model of stove do you have? Many stoves have differnt coils placements under the ring on the cooktop.


It's possible that the coils of your induction area are towards the outer ring of the area, if that makes sense.

You can get an indication of where the inductions coils are if you bring a pot of water to the boil. Look to see where the little bubbles start. That's where the coils are.



If you put your little pot off-centre, on top of where the coils seem to be, that might help.
 
If you mention the model or size of your induction cooktop it would be easier to solve your problem. In cases not mentioned here, you can use a converter disk suitable for the size of your smallest pan.
Although converter disks are used in non-induction cookware.
This seems to me to be the best solution. This is my personal opinion, so I'm sorry if I'm wrong.
 
Welcome to the forum, @GMAC and @The best cooking things!

I only have an induction burner, not a cooktop, on which I use a 1 qt Calphalon saucepan, with no problems, even when it moves around some. The contact area is just over 4 1/2". Is yours something like that, of even smaller?

As others have mentioned, have you tried all of the burner spots? I assume you have, but I know they vary, on most brands.
 
@Sheetal3v - I use an induction hob as mentioned in the link in your above post, but even though I tried two different induction converter discs, none of my s/s pans worked with either of them.
 
You can buy a steel plate or disk that's big enough. Then use you pan on top of that. Search on induction disk. One with a handle is convenient. Also good for aluminum non stick pans. The trade off is you lose some responsiveness.
 
Back
Top Bottom