this post was submitted on 06 Jul 2025
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I'll tell you why these two situations are different.
In the case of the electric burner:
In the case of induction cooking:
In other words with induction cooking heat appears inside the metal of the cookware without a need for there to be a path by which it can enter. Because of that you can eliminate the paths by which it could exit.
I should say though that the glass ceramics that cooktops are made of are actually pretty good thermal insulators (as evidenced by the fact that, even in an electric cooktop, the entire surface doesn't get hot, just the area above and right next to the burner). I don't know if they are better insulators than a centimeter or so of air, but if so then separating the pan from ceramic surface might actually be detrimental, like taking off a blanket when you're cold. But if this is the case then it would be detrimental for the opposite reason: because you would be reducing the insulation.