Most small town or 'country' small hardware stores have cast iron fry pans.
Ode

At 09:47 AM 3/4/2006 -0500, you wrote:

I have and do use the visions, but my two favorite fry pans for my stirfrys and lightly sauteeing have teflon and one thing i have definitely realized is that i dont want teflon. Went to Walmart three days ago - every frlying pan there had teflon, geeeeesssssshhhhhhh, but some one here had a good suggestion, am going to flea markets and yard sales now, looking for the cast iron or more visions. Thank you all of you wonderful people that have given me the information to help me see what to do. Jen

----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, March 04, 2006 8:24 AM
Subject: Re: CS>Visionware


Hi,

As I understand, The silicate in the corningware doesn't affect us unless it is heated to such high temperatures that it would practically melt. I don't recall the specific information on the toxicity report. it was listed here at one time by a fellow lister. Temperature if I'm not mistaken was around the 700 fereheit mark. That is pretty hot..infact very hot. I don't believe anyone cooks anything with that degree of heat. just to stir people's curiosity..My apologies for not having this information on hand. Corning glasswear is almost impossible to locate now. One would "assume" corning stopped producing the transparent cookware for a good number of reasons and good health I think is definately one of them. I managed to get a hold of a few sets of this stuff in almost mint condition at a flea market. it's better then anything I have used. don't use scrub pads on them and there is no worries. However, if one is obsessed with what one is ingesting..then where does the anti stop. How far is one willing to go? And how much can one afford.?

Ernie


From: <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
To: <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: CS>Visionware
Date: Sat, 4 Mar 2006 7:53:56 -0500

Correct -magnetic stainless is mostly 410 alloy -containing ONLY chrominun and iron.
>
> From: Sharie Hartwell <[email protected]>
> Date: 2006/03/04 Sat AM 05:29:59 EST
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: CS>Visionware
>
> Hi Wendy,
>
> I remember getting the Visionware at Canadian Tire (cheap!) and at
> Zellers in Hanover, Ontario back in the 90's.  I know you weren't
> supposed to use the green scrubbies (would scratch and dull the
> finish on glass) but I got lazy and gently tried to remove the cooked
> (sometimes burned) food.  It not only dulled the glass but left a
> metallic sheen that looked like aluminum.  I got ahold of a customer
> service rep from Corningware and he said there was aluminum silicate
> in the glass as well as in the white corningware products.



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