Gear Heads | The Best Nonstick Skillets for Avoiding Sticky Situations



We love the idea of smaller nonstick skillets for frying an egg or cooking smaller meals, so we tested 8 options until we found one that stood up to our testing.

Buy our winning 8-inch nonstick skillet:
Read the full review:

ABOUT US: Located in Boston’s Seaport District in the historic Innovation and Design Building, America’s Test Kitchen features 15,000 square feet of kitchen space including multiple photography and video studios. It is the home of Cook’s Illustrated magazine and Cook’s Country magazine and is the workday destination for more than 60 test cooks, editors, and cookware specialists. Our mission is to test recipes over and over again until we understand how and why they work and until we arrive at the best version.

If you like us, follow us:
Hannah’s Instagram:
Lisa’s Twitter:

source

Similar Posts

29 Comments

  1. I just found your channel, and love this video. Have you tested any of the granite coated and the "diamond" coatings? Very curious as to how they fare against the others you reviewed here?

  2. Two year review: Great pan but sadly the coating peels after two years even after careful use and no metal spatulas. Bought a set of granitestone pro pans from Costco for $30 (which will also probably last only a couple of years)

  3. Swiss Diamond ??? I have two and they are great. But, I have learned to use both cast iron and carbon steel and my favorite non-stick is the well seasoned carbon steel. Just my 2 cents.

  4. I despise allclad handles they are the absolute worst ever. Hate hate, the really hurt they are such heavy pans they just dig into your hand very bad non ergonomic. People who say they are good are just allclad fan boys.

  5. foolish with no grain ,why don't we go ahead and buy a pan ,season it use it ,discard it after few years to come across a reliable brand ,Surprised that the Lady on left has not yet seen a worthy pan in all her years of cooking experience .she goes along with the younger lady to put up a worthless show ,

  6. Have to add dropping butter knives into the pans to the durability test. This happens a lot when someone has a pan in the sink and someone else tosses a knife in there. That's where most of those little divots come from. And an induction rapid heat test as well. MANY times when people get warped bottoms it's from using an induction heater on high.

Leave a Reply