Quality cookware can’t make bad food taste good

We’ve frequently posted swoon-inducing photos of the latest offerings from cookware manufacturers like Le Creuset and Staub. They make tremendous products that can make cooking easier and help you create better meals. However, the mere presence of a gorgeous enameled cast iron pot is not sufficient to conjure deliciousness from bad ingredients or a bad recipe. Case in point: my recent hotel breakfast and dinner.

I’m not going to name names, but I recently stayed at a Minnesota location of a well-known worldwide hotel chain that served almost all of the food at its bar/restaurant in Le Creuset cookware. Order the pasta? It comes in a small LC Dutch oven. Same for the salad (?). I ordered my burger to go, but sadly they did not provide me with a pot to take up to my room. Oh well, it was worth a try.

The breakfast buffet also featured a trove of Le Creuset Dutch ovens, brasiers, and skillets in various hues. As attractive as this display was, it did not make the soggy French toast, limp home fries, or dry scrambled eggs taste good. The food was, in a word, awful. The best thing the buffet had to offer – hot oatmeal – was served in a bog standard chafing dish, proving that the pan doesn’t make the meal.

This is not to say that cookware makes no difference at all in how your food will turn out: the only time my toffee has ever failed is when when I made it in a thin aluminum saucepan instead of the heavy tri-ply stainless steel pot that I normally use. High quality pans make it easier to maintain consistent heat levels and provide other benefits as well. And I cannot deny that I love the way the Sea Salt Le Creuset and copper Mauviel pans look sitting on my cooktop, which in turn inspires me to make delicious food.

Despite my affinity for high end cookware, some of my favorite meals have been made in beat up, cheap pans. I’ve pumped out amazing dishes in kitchens with minimum equipment and erratic ovens. Once I had a few really nice pans in my arsenal, however, I realized how much easier it was to cook with them – which is different than making my cooking better. Quality cookware can make meal prep more pleasurable, and it can allow you to avoid some pitfalls. For instance, a thin pan will scorch in an instant, but you have more leeway with a pan that has thicker walls. But in the end, even a beautiful, well-made pan isn’t going to make rubbery eggs taste good. Much credit goes to the ingredients and to the cook.

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3 Comments

  • Jenny  on  January 4, 2023

    Breakfast buffets are not known for their high culinary standards. If you don’t eat French toast minutes after it comes off the pan – it’s going to lack luster. Eggs will dry out sitting there – anything that is made in bulk and put under a sneeze guard isn’t going to win any Michelin stars. LOL

    I do agree you have to have good ingredients and be a smart cook – but roasts etc are always better when I use my Staub pot (at least in my experience). I don’t think anyone needs thousands of dollars of quality cookware but as much as I love cooking — a few quality pieces does make it easier and for me serving and clean up faster – as they go right to the table to cleaning up quicker than cheaper pieces that stick etc.

  • jay.moe  on  January 5, 2023

    My husband once told me that he gets excited when he comes home and sees the enameled cast iron Dutch oven on the stove because he knows he’s going to get something delicious for dinner.?

  • cookbookaddict2020  on  January 5, 2023

    what an odd gimmick! Creuset is wonderful for stews (and I do think it makes a difference to the final product when the heat is even and well retained) but who wants stewed breakfast?

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