How to Fry Eggs on a Stainless Steel Pan Without Them Sticking

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  • čas přidán 12. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 35

  • @CaptainHieronymusLex
    @CaptainHieronymusLex Před 8 dny +3

    Best one I have seen so far. Funny thing is I have no trouble frying eggs in my stainless steel pan, but everything else just burns 😂 everyone talks about the 'water dancing on the pan-trick' but its WAY too high temperature then!

    • @CrazyEggsFood
      @CrazyEggsFood  Před 8 dny +1

      Thank you! That's why I decided to make this video. I had problems with dancing water too, so I decided to investigate. :-) I hope I will make other food videos too.

    • @CaptainHieronymusLex
      @CaptainHieronymusLex Před 8 dny

      @@CrazyEggsFood Yes please!!

    • @nyanuwu4209
      @nyanuwu4209 Před 5 dny +1

      This video is certainly better than that 'water trick' but it's still needlessly vague and fiddly. Just buy an infrared thermometer. They're cheap as hell (lowest is $9) on Amazon for an ugly gun-shaped one or $30 for a nice-looking space-saving one from Subminimal. Use it to check the temp of the actual pan surface. Oil in first (how much depends on pan size; find what works) and at 260F, it's nonstick for eggs. (Note that the thermometer doesn't work well on a shiny surface like stainless. That's why you add the oil first instead of just temping the steel). No 'water tricks', no watching for smoke and fiddling with heat. Just precise and simple, and you can use it to cook other things non-stick too.

    • @13Voodoobilly69
      @13Voodoobilly69 Před 4 dny +1

      I agree that water dancing Leidenfrost technique is way too hot. Someone put that information out and it seems all of CZcams believed it as the only way.

  • @jonathanm9436
    @jonathanm9436 Před 4 dny

    This information is VERY useful. I have just bought my first Hestan nano pan, and because I didn't understand this technique, the eggs stuck firmly to the surface. I then followed someone else's advice and used butter next time - no sticking. I will now use your technique, which I have previously used on a cast iron pan with some success. Excellent. Thank you.

  • @artelisx
    @artelisx Před měsícem +6

    Please give more guides on using steel pans, like for cooking other foods without sticking.

  • @OneWingedNote
    @OneWingedNote Před měsícem +4

    Helpful, to the point, 10/10 video

  • @Boricheck
    @Boricheck Před 9 dny +2

    This is great! Thank you! Ypu got a new sub!

  • @Sylian
    @Sylian Před měsícem +2

    Learned something new! thanks!

  • @bicivelo
    @bicivelo Před 16 dny +2

    Great stuff!! Thanks 😊

  • @derekl2250
    @derekl2250 Před 8 dny

    I really like your shirt, where did you get it?
    And thanks for the videos I have been struggling cooking eggs on my new stainless pans

  • @Airikw
    @Airikw Před měsícem +2

    Do you have a link to the pan you used? Great video!

  • @DavesRabbitHole
    @DavesRabbitHole Před 4 dny

    very good, do you have to do this every time you want to use the pan to fry eggs?

    • @CrazyEggsFood
      @CrazyEggsFood  Před 4 dny

      @@DavesRabbitHole In this case yes, this process for people who wash their pans each time. There is another video where I am frying in minimal oil, maybe it will be more clear.

    • @DavesRabbitHole
      @DavesRabbitHole Před 4 dny +1

      @@CrazyEggsFood thanks, I just tried this with a carbon steel De-Buyer frying pan, so it works in carbon steel too. Usually when I fry eggs with this pan, even when seasoned, its is only non stick with butter, but I just tried it using veg oil, I got it to smoke a bit and then turn it down low, left it for a few mins to cool a bit and then put in a tiny bit more oil (maybe a teaspoon) then added the eggs (fried eggs, not omelette) they came away from the pan ok by lifting gently with the spatula, and left no mess, but they weren't sliding around like a Teflon pan. I'm not sure if I will use this all the time, it seems to take a long time, but it is interesting, and useful if I run out of butter :)

    • @CrazyEggsFood
      @CrazyEggsFood  Před 3 dny

      You can still do it and use butter.
      When I cook white eggs with soft yolks, I spread vegetable oil all over the pan. Heat it quickly, then skip the full cool-down - just lower the heat. Add salt and butter, then the eggs.
      You can always add more vegetable oil so the eggs will slide easily. Now you can experiment. The key idea of my video is to heat the oil to the smoking point and then cool it down - you can do this with all vegetable oils.

  • @KlayDoppar
    @KlayDoppar Před měsícem

    Thanks, i didn't know that! I usually add quite a bit of oil and it works out but then at other times it just sticks all over -especially when im doing an omelette. Ill try again with these principles in mind

    • @CrazyEggsFood
      @CrazyEggsFood  Před měsícem

      Just be sure to control heat during frying. It must be low. Will do an omelette later on video.

  • @familyofgeniuses
    @familyofgeniuses Před měsícem

    Who wouldn't trust a guy who says, "I am in glasses because it is science minute"?

    • @CrazyEggsFood
      @CrazyEggsFood  Před měsícem +1

      I was trying to add at least a little silly twist to that boring information. :) What do you think-did I provide valid information, or was it misleading? And how is your frying on pan?

  • @ShazWag
    @ShazWag Před měsícem +1

    Helpful video, thanks. Yes, olive oil is healthy. However, if it reaches smoking point, it then becomes an unhealthy trans-fat. In this case, rapeseed (canola) or avocado oil is best. Also, sea salts contains far higher levels of nano- and microplastics than cheap table salt which uses the evaporation method. Happy egg frying 🍳

    • @CrazyEggsFood
      @CrazyEggsFood  Před měsícem

      Overall you can stay under smoking point, as soon as you see smoke - turn off the heat. After some experience you will not need to wait smoke and low down heat earlier. Also layer is not absorbed by food much, so you are not consuming it, if you want food to be more juicy, you can add more oil on low heat when layer is ready :)
      Simply telling, if you care about pure health - all frying is banned :)
      I will learn more about avocado oil, what about coconut?

  • @pinoficara
    @pinoficara Před měsícem

    👍

  • @soopahsoopah
    @soopahsoopah Před 19 dny +1

    accent + glasses increases credibility 100%

  • @peetsnort
    @peetsnort Před 8 dny

    I dont like brown underside. Those looked good and white....I think

  • @DaCheat100
    @DaCheat100 Před měsícem

    Right! So wait for 13 hours for the pan to heat to the perfect level.. or... just buy a non-stick pan and be done in less than 5 minutes.

    • @lokeshsingh7680
      @lokeshsingh7680 Před měsícem

      @DaCheat how dumb can u be to not understand a 4 min video?...go buy those toxic laden non-stick pans if you can't spend more time to cook healthy food

    • @CrazyEggsFood
      @CrazyEggsFood  Před měsícem +12

      It take time to explain, but it take 3 minutes to heat a pan with oil. You just denier because it sounds harder than it is, when you understand steps it is fast, I will never use non stick pans again.

    • @yevgeny79
      @yevgeny79 Před měsícem +8

      I dont know what kind of stove you are running, but if it takes 13 hours to come up to temp you might want a new stove. My STEEL pan is up to temp in under a minute, cast iron a few more. Non stick pans are designed with planned obsolescence in mind so you have to buy a new one every few years. Meanwhile, you are ingesting carcinogens like PFAS (polyfluorinated compounds) you can thank Mr Dupont personally for the chemical exposure when you get to your version of afterlife.

    • @Allexz
      @Allexz Před měsícem +1

      Haha, you have to heat up the frying pan no matter what pan you use. Do you put your eggs on the pan while it is cold? no?
      Do you wait until the oil reaches the smoking point to get perfect eggs in a non-stick aswell? Of course. What do you mean the difference is here?

    • @valentoniy
      @valentoniy Před měsícem

      ​@@Allexz You have to heat up Stainless steel pans to Leidenfrost effect to avoid sticking. But if you are using carbon steel with natural non-stick coating, or nonstick Teflon pan then you do not have to heat up your pan that high and wait after that when it will cool down and will be ready for eggs. Many vegs and seeds oils smokes approximately at the same temperature as Leidenfrost effect comes. So nothing new this guy show in video. It is the same approach as using water to see if pan is ready. Cooking egs in stainless steel took a lot of time compare to non-stick or CS, unless you use butter. 2mm thick carbon steel is better option for quick egg cooking.