Jump to content

Menu

Gas or Electric stove?


Recommended Posts

Hmm, not sure about your children, but I much prefer the instant off of gas. And the obvious flame. We have gas, but at my mother's cottage there is electric. I'm constantly placing empty pots on just used burners so nobody gets burned on a coil that doesn't look hot. And I much prefer cooking on gas myself.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I wouldn't worry about the "open flame." If anything, some electric stoves are even more dangerous to unaware kids because they don't look hot when they really are. Gas cools down incredibly fast. It'll still be hot after turning it off, but if you're boiling water on a gas stove, the moment you turn it off, it'll stop boiling. Not so on electric, which will hold heat longer.

 

For cooking, a cheap electric stove is better in some ways than a cheap gas stove. Simply put, it'll get hotter. However, a really good, pricey gas stove will get much hotter than electric, as well as cooler (as in, for doing low heat tasks like melting chocolate). Plus, cheap or expensive, you can control the heat on the gas stove much better than on the electric meaning the instant something starts to burn, you can turn it down and get a faster response.

 

They're just different. I'm used to gas so when I cook on electric, it throws me. When it's an inexpensive model, there's pluses and minuses to both.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I prefer a gas stove. I like that when I turn the burner off, food doesn't continue to cook.

 

I think it's just a matter of getting used to it. My mother is 76 and still deathly afraid of gas stoves :001_smile:. As long as you supervise while your kids are learning the new stove, I'm sure you'll be fine.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Neither. I have induction - it's the best of both worlds. No gas smell, super easy cleanup on smooth top surface (truly nothing burns this is not an electric smoothtop), instant temp changes like gas, burner doesn't get hot. Burner instantly turns off when pan is removed, and it heats things super fast (my canning pot that used to take an hour to boil now boils in less than 20 minutes). Only drawback is your pots and pans have to be magnetic.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

We have a gas stove and I would never have anything different. I like how the temperature can be quickly adjusted. We have never had a problem with the kids getting burned, but I think partly it is because they can actually see the flame and that has made them more cautious.

 

Lesley

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have a dual fuel we love. Since it's not a SS, I added the full-across the top grates. (which I adore)

 

I've never had a problem with my highly curious special needs child, despite the controls on the front (there are child-proof knob covers available in child proofing sections of stores). It also has a control lock-out child-proof lock (as do my dishwasher and washing machine. think the dryer does too.). Yours should too.

 

I like that I can use it when we have no power. (despite living in the middle of a city, we've had power outages greater than four days three times. Always in the winter . . . .:banghead: )

 

I like that I can instantly change the temperature up or down, and it is obvious if it is on.

Edited by gardenmom5
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I love gas and will never have electric again, for all th ereasons everyone else mentioned. Also, whenever we lose power (electric) we can still cook on the stove (gas). It's nice to be able to do that. You just have to light a match near the burner and it comes on. Our hot water heater uses natural gas too, also nice. When the power goes out, we can cook, heat the bottom level with the oven and take hot showers. Makes it not that bad :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Neither. I have induction - it's the best of both worlds. No gas smell, super easy cleanup on smooth top surface (truly nothing burns this is not an electric smoothtop), instant temp changes like gas, burner doesn't get hot. Burner instantly turns off when pan is removed, and it heats things super fast (my canning pot that used to take an hour to boil now boils in less than 20 minutes). Only drawback is your pots and pans have to be magnetic.

 

My parents have one of those. It is so neat and we will be having one someday in our dream home. They are so fast and so much safer. I saw that they had some of them in the Food Network kitchens on a special once. They have induction and gas. I don't think they even use electric. You just can't get the precision with electric.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have gas now and I would much rather have a flat electric stove. I hate cleaning up the gas stove. Too many places to clean crumbs and drips from.

 

We had one of these too. The glass cracked while I was simmering soup stock. Nothing had fallen on it or anything. When I told him I'd just been simmering stock he said "Well you aren't really supposed to cook on them continuously for a couple of hours."

 

Right, because, you know, it's only a stove. :glare:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I grew up with an electric stove, and have had alternating gas and electric stoves for 20 years now. Given a choice, I will take a (good) gas stove every single time. My current one is a fantastic gas stove with a continuous grate, and I am in love with it-- and using it to teach my SN DS8 to cook.

 

When you turn a gas stove off, it is OFF. You can adjust the heat level very precisely, and you can see very clearly when it is on. As a PP pointed out, you can buy safety covers for the knobs at most baby stores and hardware stores if you have knobs on the front, and many modern models have a child lockout button on the rear.

 

My Mom was apparently traumatized by an "old fashioned" gas stove when she was little, and tells the same old stories about how horrible and unsafe they are over . . . and over . . . and over . . . again every time she sees my stove LOL (shes >70). But ours is super safe, and IMO safer than electric.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I would take a gas stove over electric any day and a couple of Carbon Monoxide detectors.

 

We have a gas stove top a gas water heater. We lose power here fairly often during storms and having the two keeps us bathed and fed well. I also like the fact that if it's on, you know it and when it's off, it's off. If it leaks, your detectors will let you know if you don't smell it first....

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I wouldn't worry about the "open flame." If anything, some electric stoves are even more dangerous to unaware kids because they don't look hot when they really are. Gas cools down incredibly fast. It'll still be hot after turning it off, but if you're boiling water on a gas stove, the moment you turn it off, it'll stop boiling. Not so on electric, which will hold heat longer.

 

For cooking, a cheap electric stove is better in some ways than a cheap gas stove. Simply put, it'll get hotter. However, a really good, pricey gas stove will get much hotter than electric, as well as cooler (as in, for doing low heat tasks like melting chocolate). Plus, cheap or expensive, you can control the heat on the gas stove much better than on the electric meaning the instant something starts to burn, you can turn it down and get a faster response.

 

They're just different. I'm used to gas so when I cook on electric, it throws me. When it's an inexpensive model, there's pluses and minuses to both.

:iagree:, especially with the bolded. We had gas until we moved here and I wish I could have it again. The gas stove was better to cook with once I was accustomed it. I had greater control of the flame and as such had greater control of how the food was cooking. The grates to sit the pots on were cast iron and they cooled way faster than the coils of my new electric stove. Plus, I could teach my kids that the flame was fire and when they saw fire they had to stay away. With the electric coils, they may be hot but not necessarily red or give any visible warning. I have had some near misses with my dd4 and the electric stove already.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My parents have one of those. It is so neat and we will be having one someday in our dream home. They are so fast and so much safer. I saw that they had some of them in the Food Network kitchens on a special once. They have induction and gas. I don't think they even use electric. You just can't get the precision with electric.

 

 

I've never seen an electric stove on a cooking show. Electric ovens, yes, but not a stove/cooktop.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

We just moved into a place with an electric stove. I hate, hate, hate it. Even though I like a lot about this rental & our neighborhood, I have learned in the past 6 weeks (this is my first real experience cooking on electric) that from now on, electric cooking is a deal breaker for me from now on. I truly detest the thing. It's fairly new, it heats things up quickly-- so it's good for boiling water, but not very helpful when I need to cook something slowly. I have to cook everything on low, and still have problems with things cooking too quickly/burning.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

We redesigned our kitchen and ripped out an electric range to put in a 5-burner gas cooktop and double electric ovens. Best of both worlds.

 

I love gas stoves - especially if you are in an area where power can go out frequently. When we moved, we got a ceramic stovetop (electric) and I am warming up to it. Cleaning is a breeze, hopefully power will stay on more consistently here. I would definitely go with an electric oven because I found out that gas ovens leave a black film on glass dishes like Pyrex.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sounds like I should keep my gas stove. We just moved but our old house (only 2 miles away) had frequent power outages so cooking during that time would be great.

 

I guess I will adjust and will just have to watch the kids more closely. It was easy with the electric stove to tell them to put the burner on 4 for grilled cheese or 8 for boiling noodles, etc. Here that will be harder with gas.

 

It did make nice brownies though today in the oven.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

×
×
  • Create New...