lea_hazel: The outlook is somewhat dismal (Feel: Crash and Burn)
lea_hazel ([personal profile] lea_hazel) wrote in [community profile] boilingwater2011-01-30 09:46 pm
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Frying Question

I am a decent semi-cook. I can make a few things reliably, including a few steady mistakes. Recently I realized that my kitchen always gets slightly smoky when I fry pancakes or French toast. Not like billowing smoke, but enough for me to notice once I've gone into the other room and back.

I get the feeling that I am doing something basic wrong. That is, my basic frying-things-in-a-teflon-pan technique is flawed. Part of it is that I tend to have lousy timing, and flip the pancakes either too soon or too late. I think. Anyway, it strikes me as a beginner's question, so I'm posting here for tips or advice. Please save my tearing eyes from breakfast-for-supper. ;_;
miome: (I dunno)

[personal profile] miome 2011-01-30 08:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Do your pancakes or french toast taste burnt? If not, you might want to check the bottom of your pan, the burner and the tray below your burner. There may be some crumbs or something stuck to it and smoking.
yarnofariadne: morticia addams from the sitcom sitting in a chair (misc: desperate housewife)

[personal profile] yarnofariadne 2011-01-30 08:14 pm (UTC)(link)
I had the same problem until I really, really scrubbed the burner and under the burner. It's not a fun job but it solved the problem.
jumpuphigh: Pigeon with text "jumpuphigh" (Default)

[personal profile] jumpuphigh 2011-01-30 08:39 pm (UTC)(link)
My best guess is that you are trying to cook on too high heat for the oil that you are using. That could also be why you are having problems timing the flipping.
eleanorjane: The one, the only, Harley Quinn. (Default)

[personal profile] eleanorjane 2011-01-30 08:50 pm (UTC)(link)
I have a similar problem, and mine's a halogen cooktop and I know it's clean (as are my pans).

I know any time I panfry things, especially if it's in butter rather than oil, I get heaps of smoke. (I get a lot less if it's something where I can afford to cook it on a lower heat; butter on a high heat is terrible for smoke, I find.)

Could it be ventilation? Thing is, I recently had my kitchen renovated and it has less air flow than it used to, and I'm really noticing the difference. A simple lack of ventilation might be the problem?

[personal profile] yarngeek 2011-01-30 09:40 pm (UTC)(link)
Either your oil has too low a smoke point, or your heat's too high. If any cooking makes the kitchen smoky, your burner's probably dirty.

My problem with pancakes is usually that I start them at too high a temperature, though.
amadi: A bouquet of dark purple roses (Default)

[personal profile] amadi 2011-01-31 10:15 am (UTC)(link)
Your pan is waaaay too hot. Turn down the heat. Heat the pan, then add the oil/butter and heat the oil. (Hot pan + cold oil = food won't stick.) You also really don't need that much oil/butter for pancakes if you're cooking in a non-stick pan, if you need any at all. Pancakes aren't really a fried food as much as cooktop-baked. Too much fat in the pan will cause the smoky situation as well as making sure that the pancakes cook too quickly and end up either dense and chewy or overly browned while still kind of raw in the middle.