The government has not assessed the safety of non-stick cookware. According to a Food and Drug Administration (FDA) food safety scientist: "You won't find a regulation anywhere on the books that specifically addresses cookwares," although the FDA approved Teflon for contact with food in 1960 based on a food frying study that found higher levels of Teflon chemicals in hamburger cooked on heat-aged and old pans. At the time, FDA judged these levels to be of little health significance.
Even if you don't have pet birds, Teflon toxicosis is something to be aware of and, in our view, concerned about. There is absolutely no doubt that when heated to temperatures well within normal cooking range, for instance, Teflon and products with other non-stick PFC coatings emit toxic fumes that can be harmful to people. They can make you and your family sick. The long term effects of routine exposure to Teflon fumes, and "fume fever" itself, have not been adequately studied.
Of course not, but i think it's very managable to stay under 340°C while cooking some food, just don't preheat the pan and fill it with something to cooktom wrote:Well, if you pay more attention, it's unfortunately not just about the death of birds.
Great! Now tell it to my wife-Adrian wrote:Of course not, but i think it's very managable to stay under 340°C while cooking some food, just don't preheat the pan and fill it with something to cook
Then I'm golden! I use a teflon coated ashtray....Mihai wrote:I heard cigarette smoke neutralizes those toxic fumes.
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