Which is more economical, to bring half a pan of water to the boil on a gas ring before adding and cooking two 4 minute eggs, or pre-boiling half a pan of water in an electric kettle before putting it in the pan to cook the same eggs?
A bit like for rice but quickerA more efficient way to cook eggs is, bring the water to the boil place eggs in water, turn off heat and leave for ten minutes.
Surely you don't run your gas hobs full tilt on every pan?The only way to find the answer to this would be to do the experiment using your pan and gas hob, with a means of measuring the gas useage far more accurately than any home gas meter.
So I doubt the average youtuber will be able to answer.
I'm going to totally guess that it makes little difference.
Electric kettles do a good job of transferring electrical energy into the water, and they do it quickly with a lid on, so losses should be relatively small as far as a non insulated container goes.
I think gas is incredibly wasteful for heating water in a pan. So much heat flows around the sides of the pan, up and is wasted in heating the kitchen or pulled through the cooker hood and vented outdoors. It takes longer, so there is more time for heat loss. But as gas is three and a bit times cheaper than electricity, it can be much less efficient without being more expensive.
I suspect that gas all the way is a little cheaper, but not enough to matter, and if you are in a hurry start with the kettle as it's faster.
Our gas hob has a couple of medium burners, a small one and a whopping big burner for use with a domestic size wok. For curiousity we compared the medium size gas burner vs one of those tabletop induction hobs boiling a litre of water. The induction was twice (2.5x ?) as fast as the gas but the induction was also a bit more powerful than our medium burners, not just more efficient at transferring the heat.
Gratuitous photo You need to match the pan to your burner. 30cm wok ...
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My wife thinks the gas job has two settings on and off, if the pan’s too hot she moves it to the side . Honestly I have tried to educate!Surely you don't run your gas hobs full tilt on every pan?
No, but even turned to minimum the one in the photo is too big for our smaller pans. And turned down, you really have no idea what the rating / gas consumption might be.Surely you don't run your gas hobs full tilt on every pan?
I still remember the old jingle " cook, cook, cookability, that's the beauty of gas".My wife thinks the gas job has two settings on and off, if the pan’s too hot she moves it to the side . Honestly I have tried to educate!
Assuming they're both consuming the same amount of electricity, I wonder if this is true? If it is, I'd be intrigued to know why.No help at all but an induction hob is even quicker than a kettle!
Probably depends on how tightly the lid fits, as water under pressure will take longer to boil, albeit at a higher temperature, but I'm being pedantic.A pan of water on the hob will boil quicker with a lid on.
I'll guess (again) two reasons.Assuming they're both consuming the same amount of electricity, I wonder if this is true? If it is, I'd be intrigued to know why.
Excellent counter arguments. Can't fault them. Measurements are needed, but not right nowFirstly, I can't see the transfer the heat more quickly argument - if both devices are drawing the same power, then where is the untransferred heat/energy going?
Secondly, induction hobs also are an example of resistive heating, aren't they? Just that it takes place in the pan base, as opposed to the hob.
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