For Indian cooking, a tricky choice arises for flat breads ('rotis' / 'chapatis' / 'parathas'), pancake-style preparations ('dosa', 'uthapam', 'cheela') and patty-like preparations ('tikki'). Actually, all of these involve flours (pulverized grains) or pulverized beans. Since I consume grains and beans in their whole, intact form, I haven't faced the problm of finding non-stick cookware for preparing oil-free rotis, chapatis, dosa, uthapam, cheela and tikki. I hear that high-end non-stick cookware like ScanPan and GreenPan is good; I have no personal experience with these.
In 2020, Dr Greger published a 3-video series explaining which materials are safe for tableware (plates, serving containers, forks, spoons, ladles, …) and cookware (pots and pans for heating).
For tableware, Dr Greger recommends glass, ceramic, porcelain, or stainless-steel. For cooking utensils, he recommends wooden or stainless-steel.
(4 mins) Transcript.
After watching this video, I discarded two melamine storage containers I had with me. I used to use these containers for serving, storage and re-heating food in microwave.
(6 mins) Transcript.
(5 mins) Transcript.
Dr Neal Barnard: In this 1-min video, Dr Neal Barnard explains that those with Alzheimer's have amyloid plaques in the brain that have traces of iron, copper, zinc and aluminum. Where do we get these from? Food (lobster, shrimp, …), cookware (iron utensils, aluminum utensils) and supplements (with added iron, copper, …).
(1 min) From offset 15:20 to 16:40 in this video, Dr Alan Goldhamer (from TrueNorth Health Clinic in Santa Rosa, CA, famous for guided water-only fasting) explains:
(92 seconds) Main points:
(78 seconds) From offset 3:42 to 4:50 in this video, Dr Greger says:
(4 mins) No teflon. High grade surgical stainless steel. Ceramic-coated or enamel-coated cast iron. Encourages us to browse through Safe and Healthy Cookware (2019) by Food Revolution.
Dr Greger has an overview article on Iron. I found the two videos below insightful. Since these two videos are information packed, I had to watch them multiple times.
Dr Greger's videos convinced me not to use cast iron utensils because there is a possibility of excess iron accumulating in my body, which is considered unhealthy.
(3 mins) Transcript.
I found the first two paras of the video transcript insightful (Dr Greger also speaks them during the video):
Note the last sentence: heme iron (this is iron from animal sources) can just 'zip through' our intestinal barrier even if we have too much in our system; we have no control over it. Note that Dr Greger uses the word 'can', so maybe this doesn't happen in everybody or all the time. But I imagine it happens often enough that it's a serious concern.
Note the first sentence: "… human body has no mechanism to rid itself of excess iron…" and this sentence: "… we evolved to tightly regulate the absorption of iron".
Let's revise the main concepts:
(4 mins) Transcript. In this video, Dr Greger explains several concepts, especially heme vs non-heme iron.
Heme iron comes from animal sources. The word 'heme' is derived from a Greek word that means 'blood'; so 'heme iron' is basically 'blood iron'. Non-heme iron (we may call this 'non-blood iron') comes from plant sources. A quote from the article:
In my conversations with friends, I've noticed the following: many people believe that animal sources are rich sources of iron but plant sources are poor sources for iron. While this may be true quantity-wise, it turns out that the two irons are different quality-wise. As Dr Greger points out, heme iron (the 'blood iron' coming from animal sources) is associated with cancer and heart disease risk but non-heme iron (coming from plant sources) is not; in fact, non-heme iron is great!
Food Revolution: Safe and Healthy Cookware (2019) divides cookware into three categories: (A) Least Safe Cookware: non-stick teflon, aluminum & copper, (B) Moderately Safe Cookware: cast iron, glass, carbon steel, and (C) Healthy Cookware That Is Also Effective: stainless steel, enamel-coated cast iron, ceramic or ceramic-coated, titanium. I was surprised to see glass in category (B). Is it due to physical safety (may break) and usability (can't use it everywhere, e.g., on flame)?
(2006) Non-stick Pots and Pans: Are They Safe? by Dr McDougall.
(2015) Are Non-Stick Pans Safe? by Cathy Fisher, chef at TrueNorth Health Center, Santa Rosa.
The Best Stainless Steel Waffle Maker with No Teflon. In addition to oatmeal/banana breakfast waffles, we may explore these recipes using a waffle maker: handwa, uttapam, Pudla/chilla and falafel.