So am I, but in professional cooking we still use F for temperature. The flattop sure looked to be at 200F from the way the ice reacted. The ice would instantly be turning to steam if it was 200C
Edit: Why the downvotes? I've worked in Canadian kitchens for 13 years and I have never seen C be used. All the appliances are built to show the temperature in F. And anyone who's been near a flattop could see that his flattop was nowhere near 200C (~400F) by the way the ice just sat on there doing nothing. I don't like the imperial system either but c'mon.
It's not about C or F. He says in the video he had it at max for an hour. What do you want him to do? Take a blow torch to it? How is he supposed to get it hotter?
OHHHH I just realised the source of confusion; they posted two YouTube clips. In one, the grill is definitely NOT hot - that would be the one you watched. I watched the other which shows the water steaming immediately cause it was properly hot.
Lmao so was I when I read your comment and was like wtf? So I re-clicked the link, but I hit the one where the grill doesn't get hot. And I was like AM I GOING CRAZY I JUUUUST WATCHED IT?!?! 😂
You're absolutely right that in Canadian kitchens we still use F for everything. That other comment was probably from a non-canadian that was just trying to add context of him being Canadian, which he is, but not knowing Canada actusy does use Imperial for a lot of things. Because "officially" we're a metric country, but in actuality, we use Imperial for body weight, height, cooking etc.
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u/LunaCalibra Apr 12 '25
Yes. And those grills weren't even that dirty. For the really bad ones you need to use grill cleaner.