this post was submitted on 31 Dec 2025
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Induction burners are of limited utility in some scenarios like restaurants or with certain cuisines (someone else mentioned woks) but 99.9% of residential needs are readily met with an induction burner. In fact, were I live electric coil stoves are the norm in homes anyway and induction is generally considered an improvement over those.
Their utility isn't limited. Restaurant chefs love them.
We just don't have the infra. Buildings and backbone would need retrofits.
There is a slight limitation on what kind of cookware you can use on them. The pots and pans have to be ferromagnetic. Aluminium cookware doesn't work and it looks like stainless can be hit or miss depending on how it's made. It's not a big issue unless most of your cookware doesn't work on it.
Do restaurants use a lot of cheap aluminum crap, or prefer shit that will last?
Also: retrofits for existing ones if the former, but new restaurants would prefer induction if infra allowed
And that would obviously be too much of burden for the betterment of things. Small changes but unfortunately dismissed as not a silver bullet.
Even if you have a gas stove, most people aren't going to have one that puts out the amount of BTUs to really make traditional wok cooking work anyway, so it's a bit of a non-issue on at least that front. If I was going to bust out a wok and start trying to nail Chinese food, I'd skip right past my rapid-boil burner and go to one of the portable propane stoves they sell in Asian supermarkets. In the US, at least, I wouldn't expect to see a stove that can deliver that sort of heat output (aside from something custom made) anymore than I would expect an off the shelf oven to be able to replicate the temps in the pizza oven at a pizzeria.
I have a 100000 BTU burner used for frying turkeys. That gets me almost the same kind of flame I see in restaurants, but I do need to do it outside!