Recoating Teflon Pan - unusual need

Recoating Teflon Pan - unusual need

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vaud

Original Poster:

52,959 posts

165 months

Friday 28th June 2024
quotequote all
I have a Miele induction wok - amazing piece of kit and normally retails for silly money (like £3k) - I picked one up as an ex display for a relative bargain...
The wok has teflon / non stick surface and the surface has degraded and it is no longer non-stick.

A replacement wok is £600...
https://www.miele.co.uk/product/7132780/wok-pan-fo...

Does anyone know of a good service that can clear down a surface and recoat it with teflon?

I'm trying with Miele in parallel for a discounted replacement but would prefer to spend a reasonable fee in re-coating vs £400 in a replacement...


CrgT16

2,173 posts

118 months

Friday 28th June 2024
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Interesting to see if it’s a service that’s worthwhile doing?

Have you considered a stainless steel wok that you just season well?

We got rid of any Teflon coated cooking pans. They always peel and are not needed. Between my stainless steel and cast iron stuff I can cook anything and it doesn’t stick. Can you get a cheaper one than the Miele one?

GliderRider

2,568 posts

91 months

Friday 28th June 2024
quotequote all
Fluorotecoffers a Teflon recoating service for bakeware.

A Google search for 'teflon recoating UK' reveals quite a few possibles.

Invicta Bakeware Whether it is for any product or just there own it doesn't say.

Edited by GliderRider on Friday 28th June 19:17

vaud

Original Poster:

52,959 posts

165 months

Friday 28th June 2024
quotequote all
CrgT16 said:
Interesting to see if it’s a service that’s worthwhile doing?

Have you considered a stainless steel wok that you just season well?

We got rid of any Teflon coated cooking pans. They always peel and are not needed. Between my stainless steel and cast iron stuff I can cook anything and it doesn’t stick. Can you get a cheaper one than the Miele one?
It's a very specific wok as it nestles in this rather (to my eyes) beautiful glass induction base.

https://www.miele.co.uk/product/11323040/smartline...

vaud

Original Poster:

52,959 posts

165 months

Friday 28th June 2024
quotequote all
GliderRider said:
Fluorotecoffers a Teflon recoating service for bakeware.

A Google search for 'teflon recoating UK' reveals quite a few possibles.
Thanks. I had searched before but drawn a blank. Much appreciated.

21TonyK

12,085 posts

219 months

Friday 28th June 2024
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EmailAddress said:
You'd like to put more forever chemicals into the environment for a whimsical piece of consumption hubris?
Better than a new one running on a gas burner rolleyes

21TonyK

12,085 posts

219 months

Friday 28th June 2024
quotequote all
EmailAddress said:
21TonyK said:
EmailAddress said:
You'd like to put more forever chemicals into the environment for a whimsical piece of consumption hubris?
Better than a new one running on a gas burner rolleyes
Probably fairly equal in general terms.

Why not use the <rolling eyes> cast iron that has been defacto for generations.

Sustainable, maintainable. Etc etc blah blah.

Quick, let's run to the specialist to buy the best thing they sell.
Because cast iron is completely unsuitable for use as a wok which relies on instant heat gain and loss largely reliant on the chefs ability to move it rapidly. Hence thin steel used over gas or charcoal.

Induction is (so far) just about the most efficient commercial and domestic source of heat for cooking in terms of energy use and chemicals for cleaning.

Sometimes you just have to lap it up.


Nemophilist

3,100 posts

191 months

Friday 28th June 2024
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If expect something like this to have a long warranty period and if it needs recoating Miele should replace it or recoat it

My le creuset pans (some non stick some cast iron) all have a lifetime warranty
I claimed for one of them and the customer service I received was fantastic without any fuss

vaud

Original Poster:

52,959 posts

165 months

Friday 28th June 2024
quotequote all
EmailAddress said:
To summarise, while the product the OP is looking to refurbish is of some quality and value, I personally don't find the extra value in it above some more reasonable product suggestions.
The issue is I can't just find another wok. It is a specific radius and size to fit in the glass "bowl" of the induction hob as it relies on complete contact from all sides. I am seeking to refurbish and maximise it's lifespan...

vaud

Original Poster:

52,959 posts

165 months

Friday 28th June 2024
quotequote all
Nemophilist said:
If expect something like this to have a long warranty period and if it needs recoating Miele should replace it or recoat it
With a coating it is wear and tear... and it is 6 years old. I have no issue with Miele and as noted I am exploring replacement costs with them.

dudleybloke

20,553 posts

196 months

Friday 28th June 2024
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I would scrape all the teflon off and then give the wok a few seasoning cycles to build up a decent protective layer.

Big Nanas

2,147 posts

94 months

Saturday 29th June 2024
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dudleybloke said:
I would scrape all the teflon off and then give the wok a few seasoning cycles to build up a decent protective layer.
I was just going to reply with the same thing.
Traditional woks never have teflon coatings, so I'd remove it, season it, and you'll be fine.

dickymint

26,255 posts

268 months

Sunday 30th June 2024
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A photo of the damage would help but before you do anything expensive get a tub of this...............





https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B08WJPFZY5?psc=1&r...

We bought a Le Creuset wok that supposedly didn't need any 'seasoning' prior to first use - it was rubbish even after several uses! So scoured youtube etc. and found a few good videos and tried it. Remarkable stuff so did loads of other pans.

Basically warm your pan, rub a layer on and wipe it all off, pop in the oven at 220c, remove and let cool for a bit and redo twice more. Give it a go I find it works on all types of surfaces.

Edit: Buzzy Wax is similar.