Cooktop warm zone

TastyReuben

Nosh 'n' Splosh
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Does your stove/range/cooktop/cooker have a handy-dandy warming zone? Here’s what I mean:

IMG_9749.jpeg


You can see the one burner there is labeled “Warm Zone,” and the little button to toggle it on and off is in the top-right corner.

It is exactly what it says it is, a spot on the cooktop that gets warm, but that’s it. No other temperature control other than off or on.

If you have one of those, do you use it? If so, what do you use it for?

I use mine all the time, but probably not the way the manufacturer intended, which is to hold, say, a soup or a sauce at a warm temp while waiting on something else.

What I use mine for:

1. Melt butter - put the required amount of butter in a small bowl, pop it on the warm zone, and several minutes later, melted butter, without having to worry about potential spatters in the microwave, or having to cover it. It takes longer, but it’s less messy - you just have to remember to do that first thing.

It’s also nice because it’ll hold that melted butter indefinitely, without browning or burning jt.

2. Heat maple syrup for pancakes and waffles - same idea as the butter. Stick some syrup in a little glass jar, in with a dollop (or five) of butter, and let the warm zone do its magic.

3. I used it just yesterday to heat up a very small amount of from-powdered chicken broth. I needed a mere two ounces, so into a prep bowl with 1/8 teaspoon of powdered broth, the water, and in short order, it was warmed through enough to mix up the broth.

Larger amounts, I use the microwave. Last one…

4. I’ll occasionally use it as a hotspot for my mug of tea or coffee, when I’m making breakfast. Plop it on there, and it never cools down.

How do you use yours?
 
Does your stove/range/cooktop/cooker have a handy-dandy warming zone? Here’s what I mean:

View attachment 120394

You can see the one burner there is labeled “Warm Zone,” and the little button to toggle it on and off is in the top-right corner.

It is exactly what it says it is, a spot on the cooktop that gets warm, but that’s it. No other temperature control other than off or on.

If you have one of those, do you use it? If so, what do you use it for?

I use mine all the time, but probably not the way the manufacturer intended, which is to hold, say, a soup or a sauce at a warm temp while waiting on something else.

What I use mine for:

1. Melt butter - put the required amount of butter in a small bowl, pop it on the warm zone, and several minutes later, melted butter, without having to worry about potential spatters in the microwave, or having to cover it. It takes longer, but it’s less messy - you just have to remember to do that first thing.

It’s also nice because it’ll hold that melted butter indefinitely, without browning or burning jt.

2. Heat maple syrup for pancakes and waffles - same idea as the butter. Stick some syrup in a little glass jar, in with a dollop (or five) of butter, and let the warm zone do its magic.

3. I used it just yesterday to heat up a very small amount of from-powdered chicken broth. I needed a mere two ounces, so into a prep bowl with 1/8 teaspoon of powdered broth, the water, and in short order, it was warmed through enough to mix up the broth.

Larger amounts, I use the microwave. Last one…

4. I’ll occasionally use it as a hotspot for my mug of tea or coffee, when I’m making breakfast. Plop it on there, and it never cools down.

How do you use yours?
I have gas. None of the burners are low enough for a warm zone. I can turn them on low, wait until warmed, then cover the pan, but that's about it.
 
If I want a warm zone, I just stick the pot outside next to the fence. :laugh:

I've got an electric cooker, same brand as you, but no "warm zone". I actually put the pot next to the last heating ring I used. That generally keeps things "warm".
 
I just put any of the burners on the lowest heat setting. That helps keep the food warm, especially when it's done. For spaghetti sauce or marinara sauce it helps keep the sauce from burning. :whistling:
 
Last edited:
Does your stove/range/cooktop/cooker have a handy-dandy warming zone? Here’s what I mean:

View attachment 120394

You can see the one burner there is labeled “Warm Zone,” and the little button to toggle it on and off is in the top-right corner.

It is exactly what it says it is, a spot on the cooktop that gets warm, but that’s it. No other temperature control other than off or on.

If you have one of those, do you use it? If so, what do you use it for?

I use mine all the time, but probably not the way the manufacturer intended, which is to hold, say, a soup or a sauce at a warm temp while waiting on something else.

What I use mine for:

1. Melt butter - put the required amount of butter in a small bowl, pop it on the warm zone, and several minutes later, melted butter, without having to worry about potential spatters in the microwave, or having to cover it. It takes longer, but it’s less messy - you just have to remember to do that first thing.

It’s also nice because it’ll hold that melted butter indefinitely, without browning or burning jt.

2. Heat maple syrup for pancakes and waffles - same idea as the butter. Stick some syrup in a little glass jar, in with a dollop (or five) of butter, and let the warm zone do its magic.

3. I used it just yesterday to heat up a very small amount of from-powdered chicken broth. I needed a mere two ounces, so into a prep bowl with 1/8 teaspoon of powdered broth, the water, and in short order, it was warmed through enough to mix up the broth.

Larger amounts, I use the microwave. Last one…

4. I’ll occasionally use it as a hotspot for my mug of tea or coffee, when I’m making breakfast. Plop it on there, and it never cools down.

How do you use yours?
No, but then we didn't choose the stove we have, it's a rental property.

If we want warm plates in winter, we just fill the washing up bowl with plain hot water from the tap and warm the bowls or plates in that. That water then gets washing up liquid put in it after the meal and gets used to wash the same dishes. So no waste.

(I have finally managed to stop my OH heading plates up in the microwave. It kept killing the microwave literally and since he's stopped, we've basically had no more microwave failures! Odd that :banghead: :o_o:
 
Does your stove/range/cooktop/cooker have a handy-dandy warming zone?

My Samsung stove is a glass top like yours and has a warming burner along with 4 regular burners. I rarely use it. I work hard to get everything to finish cooking at the same time. If I fail there is always the microwave oven.
 
For warm plates, the oven as a “Keep Warm” setting, for holding bigger items, like Dutch ovens filled with stew, at temp - we just use that, unless we’ve already been using the oven, then we just toss them in there a few minutes before serving.
I have a warming tray in the bottom of my oven that I never use.
 
I have a warming tray in the bottom of my oven that I never use.
We had that, plus a warming burner on our last stove. The drawer/tray got used for storage, except for 1 time that I remember when we had a lot of guests. Had that stove over 10 years.
 
For warm plates, the oven as a “Keep Warm” setting, for holding bigger items, like Dutch ovens filled with stew, at temp - we just use that, unless we’ve already been using the oven, then we just toss them in there a few minutes before serving.
No such thing on ours, plus I'd not see the point when I know the water is going to get used anyway immediately after our meal. I'm not one for putting electricity on unnecessarily as you have probably gathered.

Right now I'm annoyed with our electricity provider and separately the hot water distributor which is on a separate circuit in Australia. The supplier has now handed over our hot water supply to our provider who have advised us that they are going to use excess solar energy to ensure we have hot water 24/7. No issues there, makes sense in a country with high solar panel take up and excessive amounts of sunshine. What I'm peeved at is that they intend to continue to heat the water at night as usual and top you up during the day and still charge you the same rate even when the electricity is surplus to demand and it's not a fixed rate per day top do the for water, so basically they have the ability to charge you for heating hot water during the day that you'll not use or want when you know that the hot water only heated at night is more than enough. They've written their own pay cheque and except us to pay for whatever volume of electricity they think we need, not what we actually need!
 
We had that, plus a warming burner on our last stove. The drawer/tray got used for storage, except for 1 time that I remember when we had a lot of guests. Had that stove over 10 years.
Mine has gas burners and an electric oven. But yeah, I use the drawer to store baking sheets lol.
 
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