Saucepans at John Lewis (£150 max)
Saucepans at John Lewis (£150 max)
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Discussion

Dr Murdoch

Original Poster:

3,925 posts

161 months

Tuesday 27th December 2016
quotequote all
What is the general consensus with saucepans available at John Lewis? I have a budget of £150 to replace my current set. I'm hoping for 3 pans and a frying pan, preferably 2 (frying pans).

I would like this set to last....

Manufactures within budget appear to be...

John Lewis Stainless Steel Pan Range
Eaziglide Neverstick Cookware Set, 4 Piece


le-creuset seem to be very expensive, 3 piece coming in at £210. What makes them so special?

Any recommendations or 'ones to avoid...'?



Fittster

20,120 posts

239 months

Tuesday 27th December 2016
quotequote all
le creuset are very heavy. That maybe why the last well but my partner struggles with the larger pans.

Turn7

25,461 posts

247 months

Tuesday 27th December 2016
quotequote all
We have a set of the Le C Stainless and I wouldnt have anything else now.

Thay are superb quality, have a lifetime guarantee and no teflon stuff to wear out.

That £210 will last you a lifetime.

guitarcarfanatic

1,968 posts

161 months

Tuesday 27th December 2016
quotequote all
Worth checking out Costco.

I ordered http://www.costco.co.uk/view/p/kirkland-signature-... from Costco. Their own brand Kirkland stuff is made by Meyer. 12 months in and still like new and a joy to cook/clean.

The Stainless stuff is also meant to be epic as well, but we are lazy!

anonymous-user

80 months

Wednesday 28th December 2016
quotequote all
I thmk JL stock Circulon. I use Ciefulon pans heavily. Eventually the coating is going to wear if you use metal utensils, but otherwise they're pretty bombproof.

MrsFallon

9,586 posts

269 months

Wednesday 28th December 2016
quotequote all
I've just bought a set of Circulon Hard Anodised pans. Quite pleased with them, they are replacing a set of Tefal Jamie Oliver and Analon (Related to Circulon), these 2 have also given great service over the years and were about 11 years old.

Bonefish Blues

35,475 posts

249 months

Wednesday 28th December 2016
quotequote all
Turn7 said:
We have a set of the Le C Stainless and I wouldnt have anything else now.

Thay are superb quality, have a lifetime guarantee and no teflon stuff to wear out.

That £210 will last you a lifetime.
Good advice. We're at c10 years and they are as good as new. Buy these.

Do not be tempted by their non-stick frying pans BTW. They don't last - at all smile

miniman

29,619 posts

288 months

Wednesday 28th December 2016
quotequote all
Bonefish Blues said:
Turn7 said:
We have a set of the Le C Stainless and I wouldnt have anything else now.

Thay are superb quality, have a lifetime guarantee and no teflon stuff to wear out.

That £210 will last you a lifetime.
Good advice. We're at c10 years and they are as good as new. Buy these.

Do not be tempted by their non-stick frying pans BTW. They don't last - at all smile
Ditto all this. The stainless pans are excellent, ours are well past 10 years now. We got them at the factory outlet. Also have the non-stick pan, but as above the non-stick is poor.

Bonefish Blues

35,475 posts

249 months

Wednesday 28th December 2016
quotequote all
miniman said:
Ditto all this. The stainless pans are excellent, ours are well past 10 years now. We got them at the factory outlet. Also have the non-stick pan, but as above the non-stick is poor.
Albeit if you ask very nicely and put up with their oft-repeated mantra about your overheating it and damaging the non-stick, then one can get a replacement about every 2-3 years whistle

miniman

29,619 posts

288 months

Wednesday 28th December 2016
quotequote all
Bonefish Blues said:
miniman said:
Ditto all this. The stainless pans are excellent, ours are well past 10 years now. We got them at the factory outlet. Also have the non-stick pan, but as above the non-stick is poor.
Albeit if you ask very nicely and put up with their oft-repeated mantra about your overheating it and damaging the non-stick, then one can get a replacement about every 2-3 years whistle
Hmmm... I think I may be around a decade too late for that hehe

Foliage

3,861 posts

148 months

Wednesday 28th December 2016
quotequote all
Personally I don't buy a set of pans, I buy or have bought the ones I need, a couple of stainless pans (1 small, 1 large), a cast iron griddle, an iron frying pan and a non-stick wok. All with riveted metal handles so that they can be used in the oven. (except the wok)

ETA - id get a couple of 'classic' john lewis pans, john lewis griddle if you need one,

Edited by Foliage on Wednesday 28th December 10:09

Bonefish Blues

35,475 posts

249 months

Wednesday 28th December 2016
quotequote all
miniman said:
Bonefish Blues said:
miniman said:
Ditto all this. The stainless pans are excellent, ours are well past 10 years now. We got them at the factory outlet. Also have the non-stick pan, but as above the non-stick is poor.
Albeit if you ask very nicely and put up with their oft-repeated mantra about your overheating it and damaging the non-stick, then one can get a replacement about every 2-3 years whistle
Hmmm... I think I may be around a decade too late for that hehe
Try 'em (seriously) online. You never know, after all you're a very loyal customer who has only ever used it over a single match with plasticine tools. Honest.

dazco

4,281 posts

215 months

Thursday 29th December 2016
quotequote all
We have used circular pans (anodised) in a restaurant for four years, would gladly buy them again.

Stainless steel pans stick, Le Crueset pans stick and are too heavy

battered

4,088 posts

173 months

Thursday 29th December 2016
quotequote all
I use some upmarket stainless ones I bought 20 yrs ago. I also have some cheap Tesco SS ones that are just as good to use. Le C is great but you triple the price for the brand. The chefs at work use ss for everything except the cast iron griddle that gets heated until it smokes and is used for searing.

hyphen

26,262 posts

116 months

Thursday 29th December 2016
quotequote all
dazco said:
, Le Crueset pans stick and are too heavy
But they have a handle on each end so not too much an issue, plus some recipes from top chefs explicitly asks for a heavy pan so must have some benefits.

Also for anyone seeking a griddle, consider the rectangular one over the normal handled ones.


Edited by hyphen on Thursday 29th December 01:22

thebraketester

15,627 posts

164 months

Thursday 29th December 2016
quotequote all
I got a set of pans last year. Circulon Commercial. think it was 4 pans, a "wok" type thing, frying pan and roasting tin. 200 bangers. Absolute bargain, as the rrp was over 600quid.

dazco

4,281 posts

215 months

Thursday 29th December 2016
quotequote all
hyphen said:
dazco said:
, Le Crueset pans stick and are too heavy
But they have a handle on each end so not too much an issue, plus some recipes from top chefs explicitly asks for a heavy pan so must have some benefits.

Also for anyone seeking a griddle, consider the rectangular one over the normal handled ones.


Edited by hyphen on Thursday 29th December 01:22
Not the ones I had, they had wooden handles

Bonefish Blues

35,475 posts

249 months

Thursday 29th December 2016
quotequote all
The Le C pans being discussed and recommended by many are their Tri-Ply stainless steel ones btw.

craig1912

4,489 posts

138 months

Thursday 29th December 2016
quotequote all
Bonefish Blues said:
The Le C pans being discussed and recommended by many are their Tri-Ply stainless steel ones btw.
Just about to say that- we've had a set for six years and they are like new- as said above , their non stick aren't as robust

dozen

148 posts

232 months

Thursday 29th December 2016
quotequote all
We have had the Le C Tri-Ply pans for 10 years now. They are like new.

We bought the frying pan and as said above the non-stick is poor, but we have had ours replaced via John Lewis every 3 years.