Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Induction Cooking

Induction is a third method, completely different from all other cooking technologies-- 
it does not involve generating heat which is then transferred to the cooking vessel, 
it makes the cooking vessel itself the original generator of the cooking heat.

Put simply, an induction-cooker element (what on a gas stove would be called a "burner") is a powerful, high-frequency electromagnet, with the electromagnetism generated by sophisticated electronics in the "element" under the unit's ceramic surface. When a good-sized piece of magnetic material--such as, for example, a cast-iron skillet--is placed in the magnetic field that the element is generating, the field transfers ("induces") energy into that metal. That transferred energy causes the metal--the cooking vessel--to become hot. By controlling the strength of the electromagnetic field, we can control the amount of heat being generated in the cooking vessel--and we can change that amount instantaneously.

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