My induction stove does not evenly heat a frying pan. Is it broken or am I doing something wrong?
I have used a Kenmore Elite induction stove after moving about 6 months ago from a gas range and it has many good qualities but no matter what I try I can't get it to heat evenly when frying food. Like when I try to sear a steak with some olive oil or stir fry something the pan ends up with a hot spot in the middle and a cool outer rim. This applies not only when heating up the pan but also in the middle of cooking it maintains this problem. This happens no matter which heating circle I use. I have tried cast iron, steel, induction element pans of various sizes, and yes they are flat,and always have this problem. I desperately need advice at this stage.
Best Answer
What I would do is invest in a $30 - $50 single induction hob that can be put on your counter, and see if the problem persists there. At the worst case, you just have an extra hob for stocks or something, but it could very well be that you'll have some success there, which gives you a hob that you could use for searing and such. It helps you to eliminate the range itself as the culprit.
The other thing you could do (again, any action here is going to cost money) is invest in some 3 or even 5 ply cookware from a vendor like All Clad. They have steel / copper / steel / aluminum / steel 'sandwich' pans that are tested to conduct heat perfectly evenly.
Given what you've tried, I tend to think the range itself is the culprit. Some induction ranges (especially earlier ones) just didn't perform very well for cooks that ventured beyond basic boiling and frying. This is why getting an extra hob might be the best course you could take.
If it is the range itself then high-tech / high-performance layered cookware is going to probably help a little, but it's not going to fix the fact that the rings aren't functional comparable to the dispersion of a flame (which modern hobs can mostly claim, even the cheaper ones).
While cast iron isn't guaranteed to be an even conductor and can have its issues, those issues shouldn't be nearly as bad as what you're seeing, which strongly points at the range itself as the likely culprit.
Good luck, unfortunately this is one of those problems that requires a little spending to figure out.
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Does induction heat the pan evenly?
According to Consumer Reports, \u201cInduction cooktops heat 25-50 percent faster and distribute heat more evenly than radiant stovetops, and they offer quick, precise temperature adjustment.\u201d Induction cooktops are safer since they only heat the pan, not the burner, and cool quickly after the pan has been removed.How will you know if the frying pan is works with induction?
You can tell whether the pots and pans you're currently using are magnetic simply by holding a magnet to the bottom of a pan to see if it sticks. You can also check the underside of your cookware for the induction logo. This is an example of induction symbol.How do you heat a pan evenly?
There are various ways you can attempt to fix the problem of uneven heating:What can damage an induction cooktop?
Induction cooktops are vulnerable due to a glass-ceramic surface on top which can break. It is strong but it is not metal. The surface is made up of durable glass-ceramic composite and doesn't normally break with regular day-to-day use. However, they can get scratched and even crack if used roughly.INDUCTION COOKTOP NOT WORKING
More answers regarding my induction stove does not evenly heat a frying pan. Is it broken or am I doing something wrong?
Answer 2
Your problem here is that the induction coil is too small for your cookware. Basically, if the induction coil is 6" but your pan is 10", then you will have more heat in the middle, hence why you have noticed a hot spot in the middle.
Some types of cookware, like the All-Clad 5-ply copper core, should theoretically get around this by being very good at conducting heat and spreading it evenly. I haven't had the opportunity to try this out on an induction hob, but I can assure you that while it does conduct heat decently on an electric hob, you still need a pan that fit. I still my All-Clad cookware regardless ;)
While induction has many things going for it, you still need to consider the size of the pots/pans you will be using...
Answer 3
I have the same issue with a countertop single cooktop. I returned the unit thinking it was deffective only heating a 5" spot in the centre of the cooking surface of my 9" cast iron pan. New one does the same thing. The hot spot moves with pan position on the cooktop. My pan's bottom is flat, and same deal if I'm boiling water, you can see the heat is only coming from a 5" circle.
I now believe that the problem is that the coil size in the induction cooktop is just too small. I have not found a unit with a larger coil that is still 120v.
Cooking pancakes, omelettes, or even bacon if your not constantly repositioning it is so frustrating that i have gone back to my coiltop.
Answer 4
A lot of induction stove tops cook unevenly you should try to find reviews of it before purchasing in the future, any good review will cook a pan of sugar to show where the browning occurs and whether of not the product is worth its salt.
Answer 5
The biggest ingredient missing in your approach is time. Time to preheat the pan. Use the handle to gauge temperature, it should be too hot to handle.
Once the pan is up to temperature use the hob to balance heat input against heat loss to keep the pan at a constant temperature (increase and decrease the heat input to maintain the cooking temperature).
Yes, the pan will have a hot spot until the temperature is balanced.
Answer 6
I have had this same problem and have not been able to get in touch with a Sears Rep. However, after reading through the manual again and sauteeing some vegetables yesterday without burning the center, I have concluded that I can't cook anything above the medium setting without burning the center. It seems that cooking on anything above the medium setting burns in the center -- the higher settings are for boiling!
Answer 7
I suspect that part of the issue being described is that induction only significantly heats the portion of the pan that’s directly touching the stove very well. Metal parts that are further away drop off in temperature, and depending on the type of pan, convection up the sides of the pan might take heat from the edge of the pan.
Gas burners are the only stove tops that directly heats the sides of a pan. You would expect similar from resistive electric, too.
Depending on what you’re cooking, you might want to consider a griddle or something with a thinner side wall.
Answer 8
Cast iron and stainless steel are both poor conductors of heat, if the pans are not thick enough you will get hot and cold zones, I think you should aim for something with aluminum in it(maybe the stainless-aluminum-stainless type) and try to go for a thicker pan.
That is just my general knowledge, I didn't try induction ovens before.
edit: ignore what I said about aluminum, as JAB pointed out aluminum doesn't work with induction
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