How to measure the temperature of a pan?Are cooking thermometers essential?specific temperature vs “medium heat” on an induction cooker?How should I handle food that sticks in stainless steel pans or woks after cooking in sunflower oil?Baking without a thermometer?How do I make buckwheat pancakes without non-stick cookware?Old-Fashioned Candy/Deep-Fry Thermometer - How Shallow Can I Go?Why do my pancakes fizz?After full reseasoning of my cast iron, eggs are still stickingLearning how to cook again, burned cooking oil making pancakes but not sure what it produces?How much smoke is normal for pan cooking steak?How to approximate the Maillard temperature (154°C) in a pan?What temperature does the Maillard reaction occur?Best way/temperature to get maillard reaction on meat/steakEffects of elevated storage temperature on bread qualityAre cooking thermometers essential?How to properly measure the temperature of meat with a meat thermometerOur oven consistently undercooks foodWhy does oil transfer heat to food more gradually than water?Measuring temperature of diced chickenWhat is the maximum allowed temperature to cook onions saving the fructooligosaccharides?

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How to measure the temperature of a pan?


Are cooking thermometers essential?specific temperature vs “medium heat” on an induction cooker?How should I handle food that sticks in stainless steel pans or woks after cooking in sunflower oil?Baking without a thermometer?How do I make buckwheat pancakes without non-stick cookware?Old-Fashioned Candy/Deep-Fry Thermometer - How Shallow Can I Go?Why do my pancakes fizz?After full reseasoning of my cast iron, eggs are still stickingLearning how to cook again, burned cooking oil making pancakes but not sure what it produces?How much smoke is normal for pan cooking steak?How to approximate the Maillard temperature (154°C) in a pan?What temperature does the Maillard reaction occur?Best way/temperature to get maillard reaction on meat/steakEffects of elevated storage temperature on bread qualityAre cooking thermometers essential?How to properly measure the temperature of meat with a meat thermometerOur oven consistently undercooks foodWhy does oil transfer heat to food more gradually than water?Measuring temperature of diced chickenWhat is the maximum allowed temperature to cook onions saving the fructooligosaccharides?













10















When I need to know if a pan is above or below 100 Celsius but don't have a thermometer handy, I squirt some water on it. Say I want to check for another temperature, e.g. for the Maillard reaction or killing Trichinella parasites.



What are some ways for estimating other specific temperatures? How accurate are they?










share|improve this question


























    10















    When I need to know if a pan is above or below 100 Celsius but don't have a thermometer handy, I squirt some water on it. Say I want to check for another temperature, e.g. for the Maillard reaction or killing Trichinella parasites.



    What are some ways for estimating other specific temperatures? How accurate are they?










    share|improve this question
























      10












      10








      10


      2






      When I need to know if a pan is above or below 100 Celsius but don't have a thermometer handy, I squirt some water on it. Say I want to check for another temperature, e.g. for the Maillard reaction or killing Trichinella parasites.



      What are some ways for estimating other specific temperatures? How accurate are they?










      share|improve this question














      When I need to know if a pan is above or below 100 Celsius but don't have a thermometer handy, I squirt some water on it. Say I want to check for another temperature, e.g. for the Maillard reaction or killing Trichinella parasites.



      What are some ways for estimating other specific temperatures? How accurate are they?







      equipment temperature






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Feb 16 '11 at 21:29







      user4697



























          4 Answers
          4






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          4














          • Sauté / stir fry : When you're just below the smoke point of an oil, it'll shimmer ... but that's only useful for a precise temperature if you know what the smoke point for that oil is, and you actually want to use oil for cooking.


          • Grilling : I can't remember if it was an episode of Good Eats or on Alton Brown's first book that he recommended that if you had an automatic ice maker, so had consistent sized ice cubes, that you time how long it takes them to melt at different temperatures, so you could use that to judge how hot a grill is.


          • Grilling / Pans in general : For grilling, and campfire cooking, I've always gone with the hand near the cooking surface to gauge how hot it is, but I don't know that it's all that accurate ... and people have a different tolerance for pain, so you'd have to do some tests to calibrate. It doesn't work as well for cooking on a stove except for cast iron; I suspect it requires a more radiant heat source.


          • Deep / shallow frying : I like the wooden spoon test -- dip something wooden into the hot oil, and as there's moisture in the wood, you should see small bubbles rapidly form if it's hot enough.


          • Searing : Listen as you add food ... After you've added a bit of oil, touch the food to the pan, and you should hear sizzling. If it doesn't, pull it back and wait a few more minutes for it to heat.


          • Breadmaking : If I need warm water for making bread, I'll run the hot tap against the inside of my wrist ... once it feels slightly warm, but not hot, it's just above body temperature, so should be good (around 38-40°C / 100-105°F)


          None of these are going to be completely precise, but there's lots of ways to gauge temperature other than a thermometer.






          share|improve this answer

























          • Throwing an ice cube into a hot pan that already has oil in it sounds ... entertaining, if a little dangerous.....

            – rackandboneman
            Apr 23 '18 at 8:54











          • @rackandboneman : I never said use ice for pans with oil. Grilling is a dry heat. Use a long handled wooden object (skewer, spoon, etc) for oil

            – Joe
            Apr 23 '18 at 14:02











          • Don't use hot tap water for cooking. It tends to leach metals from your pipes.

            – Isaac Rabinovitch
            Nov 18 '18 at 19:14











          • @IsaacRabinovitch : if that was the case, your pipes would wear out. If you're getting off flavors for hot water but not cold, drain the sediment from your hot water heater.

            – Joe
            Nov 20 '18 at 1:34











          • nytimes.com/2008/01/29/health/29real.html

            – Isaac Rabinovitch
            Nov 21 '18 at 3:54


















          5














          You can get a remote-sensing thermometer (they have a laser that shines on the object to show you where you're pointing it). They read reasonably accurately without touching the heated object, and come in various sensitivities. Mine reads as high as 700 degrees F, but there are cheaper ones that don't go as high.



          Apart from that, I would think you'll always be just estimating and not very accurately at that.



          Don't forget also that the temperature of your cooking surface must be higher than strictly required for the Maillard reaction. If the meat needs to get to 155C for it to occur, you will probably need to heat your pan higher to account for heat lost to the meat on contact.



          And for killing bacteria, you may also need to get the entire piece of food to the required temp, so a regular food thermometer is a better bet than trying to measure the heat of the pan.






          share|improve this answer


















          • 1





            I recently got an infrared thermometer and now that I have it, can't imagine how I lived without it. You can get a decent one cheap and they're useful for so much more than just pan/food temperature - I use mine to regularly check the temperature differences between the top and bottom of my fridge, freezer, and oven, as well as computer equipment, air vents in the house, and tap water temperature. Also, great suggestion on a food thermometer, for many meats (poultry, for example) you need to know the interior temperature and there's no other way to know for sure.

            – stephennmcdonald
            Feb 16 '11 at 22:20












          • I love my infrared thermo too. I probably use it the most to check that my pizza stone is up to temperature when preheating the oven.

            – bikeboy389
            Feb 16 '11 at 22:28











          • I've always assumed that infrared thermometers were terribly expensive and never tried. Looks like they are not! Anyway, I was interested in ways of finding the temperature when I don't have a thermometer handy. Even if I had one, I wouldn't carry it with me wherever I went.

            – user4697
            Feb 16 '11 at 22:58







          • 3





            I guess, then, that my extended point that knowing the temperature of your surface won't help much in actual cooking is probably the operative part. There's a lot of latitude there, and "hot enough" is probably all you really need--and guesswork is fine for that.

            – bikeboy389
            Feb 16 '11 at 23:19


















          5














          Here's one example: The Rouxbe cooking school has a video lesson demonstrating how to check that a pan is at the right temperature for pan frying to prevent the food from sticking to the pan. Their method is to make use of the Leidenfrost effect. The effect is that as the pan heats up, at some point a drop of water put into the pan no longer immediately evaporates, but forms a ball that glides on the surface of the pan. The video is also available on YouTube:



          http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CB-SCA1reqE



          This may be reliable enough for the intended goal of preventing the food from sticking to the pan, but I'm not sure whether this indicates a very specific temperature, as it says on Wikipedia:




          The temperature at which the Leidenfrost effect begins to occur is not easy to predict. Even if the volume of the drop of liquid stays the same, the Leidenfrost point may be quite different, with a complicated dependence on the properties of the surface, as well as any impurities in the liquid. Some research has been conducted into a theoretical model of the system, but it is quite complicated. As a very rough estimate, the Leidenfrost point for a drop of water on a frying pan might occur at 190 °C (374 °F).




          It certainly looks cool though.






          share|improve this answer


















          • 1





            My mom would always use that as a test when cooking pancakes ... but don't ever do this for non-stick, as you don't want to preheat a non-stick pan dry.

            – Joe
            Feb 18 '11 at 12:17


















          0














          What is the reason for not preheating a non-stick pan when dry?





          share








          New contributor




          Ken is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.



















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            4 Answers
            4






            active

            oldest

            votes








            4 Answers
            4






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            4














            • Sauté / stir fry : When you're just below the smoke point of an oil, it'll shimmer ... but that's only useful for a precise temperature if you know what the smoke point for that oil is, and you actually want to use oil for cooking.


            • Grilling : I can't remember if it was an episode of Good Eats or on Alton Brown's first book that he recommended that if you had an automatic ice maker, so had consistent sized ice cubes, that you time how long it takes them to melt at different temperatures, so you could use that to judge how hot a grill is.


            • Grilling / Pans in general : For grilling, and campfire cooking, I've always gone with the hand near the cooking surface to gauge how hot it is, but I don't know that it's all that accurate ... and people have a different tolerance for pain, so you'd have to do some tests to calibrate. It doesn't work as well for cooking on a stove except for cast iron; I suspect it requires a more radiant heat source.


            • Deep / shallow frying : I like the wooden spoon test -- dip something wooden into the hot oil, and as there's moisture in the wood, you should see small bubbles rapidly form if it's hot enough.


            • Searing : Listen as you add food ... After you've added a bit of oil, touch the food to the pan, and you should hear sizzling. If it doesn't, pull it back and wait a few more minutes for it to heat.


            • Breadmaking : If I need warm water for making bread, I'll run the hot tap against the inside of my wrist ... once it feels slightly warm, but not hot, it's just above body temperature, so should be good (around 38-40°C / 100-105°F)


            None of these are going to be completely precise, but there's lots of ways to gauge temperature other than a thermometer.






            share|improve this answer

























            • Throwing an ice cube into a hot pan that already has oil in it sounds ... entertaining, if a little dangerous.....

              – rackandboneman
              Apr 23 '18 at 8:54











            • @rackandboneman : I never said use ice for pans with oil. Grilling is a dry heat. Use a long handled wooden object (skewer, spoon, etc) for oil

              – Joe
              Apr 23 '18 at 14:02











            • Don't use hot tap water for cooking. It tends to leach metals from your pipes.

              – Isaac Rabinovitch
              Nov 18 '18 at 19:14











            • @IsaacRabinovitch : if that was the case, your pipes would wear out. If you're getting off flavors for hot water but not cold, drain the sediment from your hot water heater.

              – Joe
              Nov 20 '18 at 1:34











            • nytimes.com/2008/01/29/health/29real.html

              – Isaac Rabinovitch
              Nov 21 '18 at 3:54















            4














            • Sauté / stir fry : When you're just below the smoke point of an oil, it'll shimmer ... but that's only useful for a precise temperature if you know what the smoke point for that oil is, and you actually want to use oil for cooking.


            • Grilling : I can't remember if it was an episode of Good Eats or on Alton Brown's first book that he recommended that if you had an automatic ice maker, so had consistent sized ice cubes, that you time how long it takes them to melt at different temperatures, so you could use that to judge how hot a grill is.


            • Grilling / Pans in general : For grilling, and campfire cooking, I've always gone with the hand near the cooking surface to gauge how hot it is, but I don't know that it's all that accurate ... and people have a different tolerance for pain, so you'd have to do some tests to calibrate. It doesn't work as well for cooking on a stove except for cast iron; I suspect it requires a more radiant heat source.


            • Deep / shallow frying : I like the wooden spoon test -- dip something wooden into the hot oil, and as there's moisture in the wood, you should see small bubbles rapidly form if it's hot enough.


            • Searing : Listen as you add food ... After you've added a bit of oil, touch the food to the pan, and you should hear sizzling. If it doesn't, pull it back and wait a few more minutes for it to heat.


            • Breadmaking : If I need warm water for making bread, I'll run the hot tap against the inside of my wrist ... once it feels slightly warm, but not hot, it's just above body temperature, so should be good (around 38-40°C / 100-105°F)


            None of these are going to be completely precise, but there's lots of ways to gauge temperature other than a thermometer.






            share|improve this answer

























            • Throwing an ice cube into a hot pan that already has oil in it sounds ... entertaining, if a little dangerous.....

              – rackandboneman
              Apr 23 '18 at 8:54











            • @rackandboneman : I never said use ice for pans with oil. Grilling is a dry heat. Use a long handled wooden object (skewer, spoon, etc) for oil

              – Joe
              Apr 23 '18 at 14:02











            • Don't use hot tap water for cooking. It tends to leach metals from your pipes.

              – Isaac Rabinovitch
              Nov 18 '18 at 19:14











            • @IsaacRabinovitch : if that was the case, your pipes would wear out. If you're getting off flavors for hot water but not cold, drain the sediment from your hot water heater.

              – Joe
              Nov 20 '18 at 1:34











            • nytimes.com/2008/01/29/health/29real.html

              – Isaac Rabinovitch
              Nov 21 '18 at 3:54













            4












            4








            4







            • Sauté / stir fry : When you're just below the smoke point of an oil, it'll shimmer ... but that's only useful for a precise temperature if you know what the smoke point for that oil is, and you actually want to use oil for cooking.


            • Grilling : I can't remember if it was an episode of Good Eats or on Alton Brown's first book that he recommended that if you had an automatic ice maker, so had consistent sized ice cubes, that you time how long it takes them to melt at different temperatures, so you could use that to judge how hot a grill is.


            • Grilling / Pans in general : For grilling, and campfire cooking, I've always gone with the hand near the cooking surface to gauge how hot it is, but I don't know that it's all that accurate ... and people have a different tolerance for pain, so you'd have to do some tests to calibrate. It doesn't work as well for cooking on a stove except for cast iron; I suspect it requires a more radiant heat source.


            • Deep / shallow frying : I like the wooden spoon test -- dip something wooden into the hot oil, and as there's moisture in the wood, you should see small bubbles rapidly form if it's hot enough.


            • Searing : Listen as you add food ... After you've added a bit of oil, touch the food to the pan, and you should hear sizzling. If it doesn't, pull it back and wait a few more minutes for it to heat.


            • Breadmaking : If I need warm water for making bread, I'll run the hot tap against the inside of my wrist ... once it feels slightly warm, but not hot, it's just above body temperature, so should be good (around 38-40°C / 100-105°F)


            None of these are going to be completely precise, but there's lots of ways to gauge temperature other than a thermometer.






            share|improve this answer















            • Sauté / stir fry : When you're just below the smoke point of an oil, it'll shimmer ... but that's only useful for a precise temperature if you know what the smoke point for that oil is, and you actually want to use oil for cooking.


            • Grilling : I can't remember if it was an episode of Good Eats or on Alton Brown's first book that he recommended that if you had an automatic ice maker, so had consistent sized ice cubes, that you time how long it takes them to melt at different temperatures, so you could use that to judge how hot a grill is.


            • Grilling / Pans in general : For grilling, and campfire cooking, I've always gone with the hand near the cooking surface to gauge how hot it is, but I don't know that it's all that accurate ... and people have a different tolerance for pain, so you'd have to do some tests to calibrate. It doesn't work as well for cooking on a stove except for cast iron; I suspect it requires a more radiant heat source.


            • Deep / shallow frying : I like the wooden spoon test -- dip something wooden into the hot oil, and as there's moisture in the wood, you should see small bubbles rapidly form if it's hot enough.


            • Searing : Listen as you add food ... After you've added a bit of oil, touch the food to the pan, and you should hear sizzling. If it doesn't, pull it back and wait a few more minutes for it to heat.


            • Breadmaking : If I need warm water for making bread, I'll run the hot tap against the inside of my wrist ... once it feels slightly warm, but not hot, it's just above body temperature, so should be good (around 38-40°C / 100-105°F)


            None of these are going to be completely precise, but there's lots of ways to gauge temperature other than a thermometer.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Apr 23 '18 at 13:59

























            answered Feb 17 '11 at 2:41









            JoeJoe

            60.6k11104309




            60.6k11104309












            • Throwing an ice cube into a hot pan that already has oil in it sounds ... entertaining, if a little dangerous.....

              – rackandboneman
              Apr 23 '18 at 8:54











            • @rackandboneman : I never said use ice for pans with oil. Grilling is a dry heat. Use a long handled wooden object (skewer, spoon, etc) for oil

              – Joe
              Apr 23 '18 at 14:02











            • Don't use hot tap water for cooking. It tends to leach metals from your pipes.

              – Isaac Rabinovitch
              Nov 18 '18 at 19:14











            • @IsaacRabinovitch : if that was the case, your pipes would wear out. If you're getting off flavors for hot water but not cold, drain the sediment from your hot water heater.

              – Joe
              Nov 20 '18 at 1:34











            • nytimes.com/2008/01/29/health/29real.html

              – Isaac Rabinovitch
              Nov 21 '18 at 3:54

















            • Throwing an ice cube into a hot pan that already has oil in it sounds ... entertaining, if a little dangerous.....

              – rackandboneman
              Apr 23 '18 at 8:54











            • @rackandboneman : I never said use ice for pans with oil. Grilling is a dry heat. Use a long handled wooden object (skewer, spoon, etc) for oil

              – Joe
              Apr 23 '18 at 14:02











            • Don't use hot tap water for cooking. It tends to leach metals from your pipes.

              – Isaac Rabinovitch
              Nov 18 '18 at 19:14











            • @IsaacRabinovitch : if that was the case, your pipes would wear out. If you're getting off flavors for hot water but not cold, drain the sediment from your hot water heater.

              – Joe
              Nov 20 '18 at 1:34











            • nytimes.com/2008/01/29/health/29real.html

              – Isaac Rabinovitch
              Nov 21 '18 at 3:54
















            Throwing an ice cube into a hot pan that already has oil in it sounds ... entertaining, if a little dangerous.....

            – rackandboneman
            Apr 23 '18 at 8:54





            Throwing an ice cube into a hot pan that already has oil in it sounds ... entertaining, if a little dangerous.....

            – rackandboneman
            Apr 23 '18 at 8:54













            @rackandboneman : I never said use ice for pans with oil. Grilling is a dry heat. Use a long handled wooden object (skewer, spoon, etc) for oil

            – Joe
            Apr 23 '18 at 14:02





            @rackandboneman : I never said use ice for pans with oil. Grilling is a dry heat. Use a long handled wooden object (skewer, spoon, etc) for oil

            – Joe
            Apr 23 '18 at 14:02













            Don't use hot tap water for cooking. It tends to leach metals from your pipes.

            – Isaac Rabinovitch
            Nov 18 '18 at 19:14





            Don't use hot tap water for cooking. It tends to leach metals from your pipes.

            – Isaac Rabinovitch
            Nov 18 '18 at 19:14













            @IsaacRabinovitch : if that was the case, your pipes would wear out. If you're getting off flavors for hot water but not cold, drain the sediment from your hot water heater.

            – Joe
            Nov 20 '18 at 1:34





            @IsaacRabinovitch : if that was the case, your pipes would wear out. If you're getting off flavors for hot water but not cold, drain the sediment from your hot water heater.

            – Joe
            Nov 20 '18 at 1:34













            nytimes.com/2008/01/29/health/29real.html

            – Isaac Rabinovitch
            Nov 21 '18 at 3:54





            nytimes.com/2008/01/29/health/29real.html

            – Isaac Rabinovitch
            Nov 21 '18 at 3:54













            5














            You can get a remote-sensing thermometer (they have a laser that shines on the object to show you where you're pointing it). They read reasonably accurately without touching the heated object, and come in various sensitivities. Mine reads as high as 700 degrees F, but there are cheaper ones that don't go as high.



            Apart from that, I would think you'll always be just estimating and not very accurately at that.



            Don't forget also that the temperature of your cooking surface must be higher than strictly required for the Maillard reaction. If the meat needs to get to 155C for it to occur, you will probably need to heat your pan higher to account for heat lost to the meat on contact.



            And for killing bacteria, you may also need to get the entire piece of food to the required temp, so a regular food thermometer is a better bet than trying to measure the heat of the pan.






            share|improve this answer


















            • 1





              I recently got an infrared thermometer and now that I have it, can't imagine how I lived without it. You can get a decent one cheap and they're useful for so much more than just pan/food temperature - I use mine to regularly check the temperature differences between the top and bottom of my fridge, freezer, and oven, as well as computer equipment, air vents in the house, and tap water temperature. Also, great suggestion on a food thermometer, for many meats (poultry, for example) you need to know the interior temperature and there's no other way to know for sure.

              – stephennmcdonald
              Feb 16 '11 at 22:20












            • I love my infrared thermo too. I probably use it the most to check that my pizza stone is up to temperature when preheating the oven.

              – bikeboy389
              Feb 16 '11 at 22:28











            • I've always assumed that infrared thermometers were terribly expensive and never tried. Looks like they are not! Anyway, I was interested in ways of finding the temperature when I don't have a thermometer handy. Even if I had one, I wouldn't carry it with me wherever I went.

              – user4697
              Feb 16 '11 at 22:58







            • 3





              I guess, then, that my extended point that knowing the temperature of your surface won't help much in actual cooking is probably the operative part. There's a lot of latitude there, and "hot enough" is probably all you really need--and guesswork is fine for that.

              – bikeboy389
              Feb 16 '11 at 23:19















            5














            You can get a remote-sensing thermometer (they have a laser that shines on the object to show you where you're pointing it). They read reasonably accurately without touching the heated object, and come in various sensitivities. Mine reads as high as 700 degrees F, but there are cheaper ones that don't go as high.



            Apart from that, I would think you'll always be just estimating and not very accurately at that.



            Don't forget also that the temperature of your cooking surface must be higher than strictly required for the Maillard reaction. If the meat needs to get to 155C for it to occur, you will probably need to heat your pan higher to account for heat lost to the meat on contact.



            And for killing bacteria, you may also need to get the entire piece of food to the required temp, so a regular food thermometer is a better bet than trying to measure the heat of the pan.






            share|improve this answer


















            • 1





              I recently got an infrared thermometer and now that I have it, can't imagine how I lived without it. You can get a decent one cheap and they're useful for so much more than just pan/food temperature - I use mine to regularly check the temperature differences between the top and bottom of my fridge, freezer, and oven, as well as computer equipment, air vents in the house, and tap water temperature. Also, great suggestion on a food thermometer, for many meats (poultry, for example) you need to know the interior temperature and there's no other way to know for sure.

              – stephennmcdonald
              Feb 16 '11 at 22:20












            • I love my infrared thermo too. I probably use it the most to check that my pizza stone is up to temperature when preheating the oven.

              – bikeboy389
              Feb 16 '11 at 22:28











            • I've always assumed that infrared thermometers were terribly expensive and never tried. Looks like they are not! Anyway, I was interested in ways of finding the temperature when I don't have a thermometer handy. Even if I had one, I wouldn't carry it with me wherever I went.

              – user4697
              Feb 16 '11 at 22:58







            • 3





              I guess, then, that my extended point that knowing the temperature of your surface won't help much in actual cooking is probably the operative part. There's a lot of latitude there, and "hot enough" is probably all you really need--and guesswork is fine for that.

              – bikeboy389
              Feb 16 '11 at 23:19













            5












            5








            5







            You can get a remote-sensing thermometer (they have a laser that shines on the object to show you where you're pointing it). They read reasonably accurately without touching the heated object, and come in various sensitivities. Mine reads as high as 700 degrees F, but there are cheaper ones that don't go as high.



            Apart from that, I would think you'll always be just estimating and not very accurately at that.



            Don't forget also that the temperature of your cooking surface must be higher than strictly required for the Maillard reaction. If the meat needs to get to 155C for it to occur, you will probably need to heat your pan higher to account for heat lost to the meat on contact.



            And for killing bacteria, you may also need to get the entire piece of food to the required temp, so a regular food thermometer is a better bet than trying to measure the heat of the pan.






            share|improve this answer













            You can get a remote-sensing thermometer (they have a laser that shines on the object to show you where you're pointing it). They read reasonably accurately without touching the heated object, and come in various sensitivities. Mine reads as high as 700 degrees F, but there are cheaper ones that don't go as high.



            Apart from that, I would think you'll always be just estimating and not very accurately at that.



            Don't forget also that the temperature of your cooking surface must be higher than strictly required for the Maillard reaction. If the meat needs to get to 155C for it to occur, you will probably need to heat your pan higher to account for heat lost to the meat on contact.



            And for killing bacteria, you may also need to get the entire piece of food to the required temp, so a regular food thermometer is a better bet than trying to measure the heat of the pan.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Feb 16 '11 at 21:37









            bikeboy389bikeboy389

            9,0783239




            9,0783239







            • 1





              I recently got an infrared thermometer and now that I have it, can't imagine how I lived without it. You can get a decent one cheap and they're useful for so much more than just pan/food temperature - I use mine to regularly check the temperature differences between the top and bottom of my fridge, freezer, and oven, as well as computer equipment, air vents in the house, and tap water temperature. Also, great suggestion on a food thermometer, for many meats (poultry, for example) you need to know the interior temperature and there's no other way to know for sure.

              – stephennmcdonald
              Feb 16 '11 at 22:20












            • I love my infrared thermo too. I probably use it the most to check that my pizza stone is up to temperature when preheating the oven.

              – bikeboy389
              Feb 16 '11 at 22:28











            • I've always assumed that infrared thermometers were terribly expensive and never tried. Looks like they are not! Anyway, I was interested in ways of finding the temperature when I don't have a thermometer handy. Even if I had one, I wouldn't carry it with me wherever I went.

              – user4697
              Feb 16 '11 at 22:58







            • 3





              I guess, then, that my extended point that knowing the temperature of your surface won't help much in actual cooking is probably the operative part. There's a lot of latitude there, and "hot enough" is probably all you really need--and guesswork is fine for that.

              – bikeboy389
              Feb 16 '11 at 23:19












            • 1





              I recently got an infrared thermometer and now that I have it, can't imagine how I lived without it. You can get a decent one cheap and they're useful for so much more than just pan/food temperature - I use mine to regularly check the temperature differences between the top and bottom of my fridge, freezer, and oven, as well as computer equipment, air vents in the house, and tap water temperature. Also, great suggestion on a food thermometer, for many meats (poultry, for example) you need to know the interior temperature and there's no other way to know for sure.

              – stephennmcdonald
              Feb 16 '11 at 22:20












            • I love my infrared thermo too. I probably use it the most to check that my pizza stone is up to temperature when preheating the oven.

              – bikeboy389
              Feb 16 '11 at 22:28











            • I've always assumed that infrared thermometers were terribly expensive and never tried. Looks like they are not! Anyway, I was interested in ways of finding the temperature when I don't have a thermometer handy. Even if I had one, I wouldn't carry it with me wherever I went.

              – user4697
              Feb 16 '11 at 22:58







            • 3





              I guess, then, that my extended point that knowing the temperature of your surface won't help much in actual cooking is probably the operative part. There's a lot of latitude there, and "hot enough" is probably all you really need--and guesswork is fine for that.

              – bikeboy389
              Feb 16 '11 at 23:19







            1




            1





            I recently got an infrared thermometer and now that I have it, can't imagine how I lived without it. You can get a decent one cheap and they're useful for so much more than just pan/food temperature - I use mine to regularly check the temperature differences between the top and bottom of my fridge, freezer, and oven, as well as computer equipment, air vents in the house, and tap water temperature. Also, great suggestion on a food thermometer, for many meats (poultry, for example) you need to know the interior temperature and there's no other way to know for sure.

            – stephennmcdonald
            Feb 16 '11 at 22:20






            I recently got an infrared thermometer and now that I have it, can't imagine how I lived without it. You can get a decent one cheap and they're useful for so much more than just pan/food temperature - I use mine to regularly check the temperature differences between the top and bottom of my fridge, freezer, and oven, as well as computer equipment, air vents in the house, and tap water temperature. Also, great suggestion on a food thermometer, for many meats (poultry, for example) you need to know the interior temperature and there's no other way to know for sure.

            – stephennmcdonald
            Feb 16 '11 at 22:20














            I love my infrared thermo too. I probably use it the most to check that my pizza stone is up to temperature when preheating the oven.

            – bikeboy389
            Feb 16 '11 at 22:28





            I love my infrared thermo too. I probably use it the most to check that my pizza stone is up to temperature when preheating the oven.

            – bikeboy389
            Feb 16 '11 at 22:28













            I've always assumed that infrared thermometers were terribly expensive and never tried. Looks like they are not! Anyway, I was interested in ways of finding the temperature when I don't have a thermometer handy. Even if I had one, I wouldn't carry it with me wherever I went.

            – user4697
            Feb 16 '11 at 22:58






            I've always assumed that infrared thermometers were terribly expensive and never tried. Looks like they are not! Anyway, I was interested in ways of finding the temperature when I don't have a thermometer handy. Even if I had one, I wouldn't carry it with me wherever I went.

            – user4697
            Feb 16 '11 at 22:58





            3




            3





            I guess, then, that my extended point that knowing the temperature of your surface won't help much in actual cooking is probably the operative part. There's a lot of latitude there, and "hot enough" is probably all you really need--and guesswork is fine for that.

            – bikeboy389
            Feb 16 '11 at 23:19





            I guess, then, that my extended point that knowing the temperature of your surface won't help much in actual cooking is probably the operative part. There's a lot of latitude there, and "hot enough" is probably all you really need--and guesswork is fine for that.

            – bikeboy389
            Feb 16 '11 at 23:19











            5














            Here's one example: The Rouxbe cooking school has a video lesson demonstrating how to check that a pan is at the right temperature for pan frying to prevent the food from sticking to the pan. Their method is to make use of the Leidenfrost effect. The effect is that as the pan heats up, at some point a drop of water put into the pan no longer immediately evaporates, but forms a ball that glides on the surface of the pan. The video is also available on YouTube:



            http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CB-SCA1reqE



            This may be reliable enough for the intended goal of preventing the food from sticking to the pan, but I'm not sure whether this indicates a very specific temperature, as it says on Wikipedia:




            The temperature at which the Leidenfrost effect begins to occur is not easy to predict. Even if the volume of the drop of liquid stays the same, the Leidenfrost point may be quite different, with a complicated dependence on the properties of the surface, as well as any impurities in the liquid. Some research has been conducted into a theoretical model of the system, but it is quite complicated. As a very rough estimate, the Leidenfrost point for a drop of water on a frying pan might occur at 190 °C (374 °F).




            It certainly looks cool though.






            share|improve this answer


















            • 1





              My mom would always use that as a test when cooking pancakes ... but don't ever do this for non-stick, as you don't want to preheat a non-stick pan dry.

              – Joe
              Feb 18 '11 at 12:17















            5














            Here's one example: The Rouxbe cooking school has a video lesson demonstrating how to check that a pan is at the right temperature for pan frying to prevent the food from sticking to the pan. Their method is to make use of the Leidenfrost effect. The effect is that as the pan heats up, at some point a drop of water put into the pan no longer immediately evaporates, but forms a ball that glides on the surface of the pan. The video is also available on YouTube:



            http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CB-SCA1reqE



            This may be reliable enough for the intended goal of preventing the food from sticking to the pan, but I'm not sure whether this indicates a very specific temperature, as it says on Wikipedia:




            The temperature at which the Leidenfrost effect begins to occur is not easy to predict. Even if the volume of the drop of liquid stays the same, the Leidenfrost point may be quite different, with a complicated dependence on the properties of the surface, as well as any impurities in the liquid. Some research has been conducted into a theoretical model of the system, but it is quite complicated. As a very rough estimate, the Leidenfrost point for a drop of water on a frying pan might occur at 190 °C (374 °F).




            It certainly looks cool though.






            share|improve this answer


















            • 1





              My mom would always use that as a test when cooking pancakes ... but don't ever do this for non-stick, as you don't want to preheat a non-stick pan dry.

              – Joe
              Feb 18 '11 at 12:17













            5












            5








            5







            Here's one example: The Rouxbe cooking school has a video lesson demonstrating how to check that a pan is at the right temperature for pan frying to prevent the food from sticking to the pan. Their method is to make use of the Leidenfrost effect. The effect is that as the pan heats up, at some point a drop of water put into the pan no longer immediately evaporates, but forms a ball that glides on the surface of the pan. The video is also available on YouTube:



            http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CB-SCA1reqE



            This may be reliable enough for the intended goal of preventing the food from sticking to the pan, but I'm not sure whether this indicates a very specific temperature, as it says on Wikipedia:




            The temperature at which the Leidenfrost effect begins to occur is not easy to predict. Even if the volume of the drop of liquid stays the same, the Leidenfrost point may be quite different, with a complicated dependence on the properties of the surface, as well as any impurities in the liquid. Some research has been conducted into a theoretical model of the system, but it is quite complicated. As a very rough estimate, the Leidenfrost point for a drop of water on a frying pan might occur at 190 °C (374 °F).




            It certainly looks cool though.






            share|improve this answer













            Here's one example: The Rouxbe cooking school has a video lesson demonstrating how to check that a pan is at the right temperature for pan frying to prevent the food from sticking to the pan. Their method is to make use of the Leidenfrost effect. The effect is that as the pan heats up, at some point a drop of water put into the pan no longer immediately evaporates, but forms a ball that glides on the surface of the pan. The video is also available on YouTube:



            http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CB-SCA1reqE



            This may be reliable enough for the intended goal of preventing the food from sticking to the pan, but I'm not sure whether this indicates a very specific temperature, as it says on Wikipedia:




            The temperature at which the Leidenfrost effect begins to occur is not easy to predict. Even if the volume of the drop of liquid stays the same, the Leidenfrost point may be quite different, with a complicated dependence on the properties of the surface, as well as any impurities in the liquid. Some research has been conducted into a theoretical model of the system, but it is quite complicated. As a very rough estimate, the Leidenfrost point for a drop of water on a frying pan might occur at 190 °C (374 °F).




            It certainly looks cool though.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Feb 17 '11 at 12:56









            RinzwindRinzwind

            2,05231930




            2,05231930







            • 1





              My mom would always use that as a test when cooking pancakes ... but don't ever do this for non-stick, as you don't want to preheat a non-stick pan dry.

              – Joe
              Feb 18 '11 at 12:17












            • 1





              My mom would always use that as a test when cooking pancakes ... but don't ever do this for non-stick, as you don't want to preheat a non-stick pan dry.

              – Joe
              Feb 18 '11 at 12:17







            1




            1





            My mom would always use that as a test when cooking pancakes ... but don't ever do this for non-stick, as you don't want to preheat a non-stick pan dry.

            – Joe
            Feb 18 '11 at 12:17





            My mom would always use that as a test when cooking pancakes ... but don't ever do this for non-stick, as you don't want to preheat a non-stick pan dry.

            – Joe
            Feb 18 '11 at 12:17











            0














            What is the reason for not preheating a non-stick pan when dry?





            share








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              0














              What is the reason for not preheating a non-stick pan when dry?





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              Ken is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.






















                0












                0








                0







                What is the reason for not preheating a non-stick pan when dry?





                share








                New contributor




                Ken is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                What is the reason for not preheating a non-stick pan when dry?






                share








                New contributor




                Ken is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                share


                share






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                answered 1 min ago









                KenKen

                1




                1




                New contributor




                Ken is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                New contributor





                Ken is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                Ken is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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