Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

2020-08-24 Thread Linda S. via Cookinginthedark

Maybe your husband used it as a planter? (lol)

On 8/24/2020 1:01 PM, Regina Marie via Cookinginthedark wrote:

Hi Again. My pot is substantial and not thin. I have used colanders as well.
This is just easier and does not take any extra time. Just works like a
colander.

I did have a steamer pot that doubled as a pasta pot. For steaming, you
placed water below the internal colander. For pasta, you filled with water
as normal with the internal colander in place. To drain the pasta, you used
oven mitts and just lifted the internal colander out by the 2 side handles.
It was a lovely pot. It grew legs and walked away somehow from my kitchen.
*grin*


With Warm Regards:
Regina Brink
President, ACB Capital Chapter of California Council of the Blind
Find me at: https://facebook.com/reginamarie
Follow me on: https//:www.twitter.com/mamaraquel

-Original Message-
From: Cookinginthedark  On Behalf Of
meward1954--- via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Monday, August 24, 2020 9:19 AM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: meward1...@gmail.com
Subject: Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

We used to have lock lid pasta pots at my old job in rehab.  But they were
very thin.  I didn't recommend them because, to tell the truth, I didn't
feel safe using them.  They looked to me like they were just asking to tump
over when I put the top on.  Very flimsy.  Maybe these ones you guys have
are better.  Also, do you have to stand there and drain the pasta for a long
time?  I usually pour the pasta into the colander, shake it around for a
little while,  and then walk off and do something else while I wait for it
to finish draining.

Once you have learned to use a colander in the sink, it is very safe. The
main thing is that you have to feel the inside curve of the colander with
the outside curve of the pot you are pouring the pasta from.  That sounds
complicated, but it really is not.  Imagine putting a small cup or bowl
upside down into a larger one without touching the one on the bottom.

If I needed to learn to use a colander today, I would do it in the sink with
just cold water.  Then I would put something in the pot of cold water that
would not hurt the drain too much, cereal, rice, or some non-food items, as
long as you are sure that you won't get things down the drain that don't
belong there.  Maybe even use pasta.  Then I would practice pouring the
liquid from the pot into the colander and then checking to make sure that
all the objects landed in the colander.  I would practice until I was fairly
confident that the objects all go in the colander  all or most of the time.
Finally, I would practice with real boiling water and then I would go ahead
and just cook the pasta and drain it.  You can take your time positioning
the edge of the pot over the lip of the colander, using oven mitts if you
need to.

-Original Message-
From: Cookinginthedark  On Behalf Of
Regina Marie via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Sunday, August 23, 2020 7:22 PM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: Regina Marie 
Subject: Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

Hi Debbie. I bought mine from Walmart. Check on

https://www.walmart.com/search/?query=locking%20lid%20pasta%20pot
With Warm Regards:
Regina Brink
President, ACB Capital Chapter of California Council of the Blind Find me
at: https://facebook.com/reginamarie Follow me on:
https//:www.twitter.com/mamaraquel

-Original Message-
From: Cookinginthedark  On Behalf Of
Deborah Armstrong via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Sunday, August 23, 2020 2:11 PM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: Deborah Armstrong 
Subject: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

When I was a teen, forty years ago, the AFB aids and appliances catalog sold
a lock-lid saucepan.

It was about six quarts and had a handle. What made it unique was the tiny
holes along the top rim on the opposite side of the handle, around 5 of
them.

The lid locked in to place when you pressed down.

Steam escaped out of those tiny holes.

But the best part was when you cooked pasta, you could simply lock on that
lid, take it to the sink and pour. No strainer was necessary.

I'm really wanting one of these again.

When I moved out and went to college, I let my dad keep mine because he used
it every night. When my dad passed away, my mom who doesn't cook gave it to
a thrift store.

Anyone know where I can find such a pot?


--Debee

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Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

2020-08-24 Thread Immigrant via Cookinginthedark
With the locklid saucepan, I wear oven mitts to carry the pan to the sink.
Then, I invert the pan over the sink, so that the side containing the holes
is away from me. The water drains through the holes into the sink, and it
doesn't take too long. The steaming hot water does not even touch me while
it drains out. Then, I pour cold tap water into the pan, with the lid still
locked in place, and drain it off. Not too much water, just enough to rinse
the starch off, not to cool the pasta. And then I am ready to unlock the pan
and take the pasta out. With the colander, you have to open the pan while
the pasta and the water are still red hot, and pour into a colander. I would
rather do the locklid pan.

-Original Message-
From: Cookinginthedark  On Behalf Of
meward1954--- via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Monday, August 24, 2020 12:19 PM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: meward1...@gmail.com
Subject: Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

We used to have lock lid pasta pots at my old job in rehab.  But they were
very thin.  I didn't recommend them because, to tell the truth, I didn't
feel safe using them.  They looked to me like they were just asking to tump
over when I put the top on.  Very flimsy.  Maybe these ones you guys have
are better.  Also, do you have to stand there and drain the pasta for a long
time?  I usually pour the pasta into the colander, shake it around for a
little while,  and then walk off and do something else while I wait for it
to finish draining.  

Once you have learned to use a colander in the sink, it is very safe. The
main thing is that you have to feel the inside curve of the colander with
the outside curve of the pot you are pouring the pasta from.  That sounds
complicated, but it really is not.  Imagine putting a small cup or bowl
upside down into a larger one without touching the one on the bottom.  

If I needed to learn to use a colander today, I would do it in the sink with
just cold water.  Then I would put something in the pot of cold water that
would not hurt the drain too much, cereal, rice, or some non-food items, as
long as you are sure that you won't get things down the drain that don't
belong there.  Maybe even use pasta.  Then I would practice pouring the
liquid from the pot into the colander and then checking to make sure that
all the objects landed in the colander.  I would practice until I was fairly
confident that the objects all go in the colander  all or most of the time.
Finally, I would practice with real boiling water and then I would go ahead
and just cook the pasta and drain it.  You can take your time positioning
the edge of the pot over the lip of the colander, using oven mitts if you
need to.

-Original Message-
From: Cookinginthedark  On Behalf Of
Regina Marie via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Sunday, August 23, 2020 7:22 PM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: Regina Marie 
Subject: Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

Hi Debbie. I bought mine from Walmart. Check on 

https://www.walmart.com/search/?query=locking%20lid%20pasta%20pot
With Warm Regards:
Regina Brink
President, ACB Capital Chapter of California Council of the Blind Find me
at: https://facebook.com/reginamarie Follow me on:
https//:www.twitter.com/mamaraquel

-Original Message-
From: Cookinginthedark  On Behalf Of
Deborah Armstrong via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Sunday, August 23, 2020 2:11 PM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: Deborah Armstrong 
Subject: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

When I was a teen, forty years ago, the AFB aids and appliances catalog sold
a lock-lid saucepan.

It was about six quarts and had a handle. What made it unique was the tiny
holes along the top rim on the opposite side of the handle, around 5 of
them.

The lid locked in to place when you pressed down.

Steam escaped out of those tiny holes.

But the best part was when you cooked pasta, you could simply lock on that
lid, take it to the sink and pour. No strainer was necessary.

I'm really wanting one of these again.

When I moved out and went to college, I let my dad keep mine because he used
it every night. When my dad passed away, my mom who doesn't cook gave it to
a thrift store.

Anyone know where I can find such a pot?


--Debee

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Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

2020-08-24 Thread Regina Marie via Cookinginthedark
Hi Again. My pot is substantial and not thin. I have used colanders as well.
This is just easier and does not take any extra time. Just works like a
colander. 

I did have a steamer pot that doubled as a pasta pot. For steaming, you
placed water below the internal colander. For pasta, you filled with water
as normal with the internal colander in place. To drain the pasta, you used
oven mitts and just lifted the internal colander out by the 2 side handles.
It was a lovely pot. It grew legs and walked away somehow from my kitchen.
*grin*


With Warm Regards:
Regina Brink
President, ACB Capital Chapter of California Council of the Blind
Find me at: https://facebook.com/reginamarie
Follow me on: https//:www.twitter.com/mamaraquel

-Original Message-
From: Cookinginthedark  On Behalf Of
meward1954--- via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Monday, August 24, 2020 9:19 AM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: meward1...@gmail.com
Subject: Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

We used to have lock lid pasta pots at my old job in rehab.  But they were
very thin.  I didn't recommend them because, to tell the truth, I didn't
feel safe using them.  They looked to me like they were just asking to tump
over when I put the top on.  Very flimsy.  Maybe these ones you guys have
are better.  Also, do you have to stand there and drain the pasta for a long
time?  I usually pour the pasta into the colander, shake it around for a
little while,  and then walk off and do something else while I wait for it
to finish draining.  

Once you have learned to use a colander in the sink, it is very safe. The
main thing is that you have to feel the inside curve of the colander with
the outside curve of the pot you are pouring the pasta from.  That sounds
complicated, but it really is not.  Imagine putting a small cup or bowl
upside down into a larger one without touching the one on the bottom.  

If I needed to learn to use a colander today, I would do it in the sink with
just cold water.  Then I would put something in the pot of cold water that
would not hurt the drain too much, cereal, rice, or some non-food items, as
long as you are sure that you won't get things down the drain that don't
belong there.  Maybe even use pasta.  Then I would practice pouring the
liquid from the pot into the colander and then checking to make sure that
all the objects landed in the colander.  I would practice until I was fairly
confident that the objects all go in the colander  all or most of the time.
Finally, I would practice with real boiling water and then I would go ahead
and just cook the pasta and drain it.  You can take your time positioning
the edge of the pot over the lip of the colander, using oven mitts if you
need to.

-Original Message-
From: Cookinginthedark  On Behalf Of
Regina Marie via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Sunday, August 23, 2020 7:22 PM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: Regina Marie 
Subject: Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

Hi Debbie. I bought mine from Walmart. Check on 

https://www.walmart.com/search/?query=locking%20lid%20pasta%20pot
With Warm Regards:
Regina Brink
President, ACB Capital Chapter of California Council of the Blind Find me
at: https://facebook.com/reginamarie Follow me on:
https//:www.twitter.com/mamaraquel

-Original Message-
From: Cookinginthedark  On Behalf Of
Deborah Armstrong via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Sunday, August 23, 2020 2:11 PM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: Deborah Armstrong 
Subject: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

When I was a teen, forty years ago, the AFB aids and appliances catalog sold
a lock-lid saucepan.

It was about six quarts and had a handle. What made it unique was the tiny
holes along the top rim on the opposite side of the handle, around 5 of
them.

The lid locked in to place when you pressed down.

Steam escaped out of those tiny holes.

But the best part was when you cooked pasta, you could simply lock on that
lid, take it to the sink and pour. No strainer was necessary.

I'm really wanting one of these again.

When I moved out and went to college, I let my dad keep mine because he used
it every night. When my dad passed away, my mom who doesn't cook gave it to
a thrift store.

Anyone know where I can find such a pot?


--Debee

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Cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
http://acbradio.org/mailman/listinfo/cookinginthedark

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Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

2020-08-24 Thread Regina Marie via Cookinginthedark
Hi Linda. They have different styles at Walmart. The one I got is 8 quarts,
a full locking lid with holes on both sides of the lid to drain and locks
well in place. 


With Warm Regards:
Regina Brink
President, ACB Capital Chapter of California Council of the Blind
Find me at: https://facebook.com/reginamarie
Follow me on: https//:www.twitter.com/mamaraquel

-Original Message-
From: Cookinginthedark  On Behalf Of
Linda S. via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Monday, August 24, 2020 9:39 AM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: Linda S. 
Subject: Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

Happy Monday:


I love the suggestion of practicing these skills. I've used oth methods and
and comfortable doing them both.

One thing to watch is if you are using boiling water to fill the colendar
turn your head to the side a little so that the steam doesn't come un in to
your face.

On another note, my husband bought the locklid pan from Walmart. 
Although it is a full likd, half of it is open so that the holes just go on
one half of the pan. I do not like this pan. He said that our old good
locklid was getting old, so he used it to plant something. Brat that he is!
I love him so much, but sometimes ...!

Anyway, there is my two cents. (smile)

Everyone have a nice week.

On 8/24/2020 9:18 AM, meward1954--- via Cookinginthedark wrote:
> We used to have lock lid pasta pots at my old job in rehab.  But they 
> were very thin.  I didn't recommend them because, to tell the truth, I 
> didn't feel safe using them.  They looked to me like they were just 
> asking to tump over when I put the top on.  Very flimsy.  Maybe these 
> ones you guys have are better.  Also, do you have to stand there and 
> drain the pasta for a long time?  I usually pour the pasta into the 
> colander, shake it around for a little while,  and then walk off and 
> do something else while I wait for it to finish draining.
>
> Once you have learned to use a colander in the sink, it is very safe. 
> The main thing is that you have to feel the inside curve of the 
> colander with the outside curve of the pot you are pouring the pasta 
> from.  That sounds complicated, but it really is not.  Imagine putting 
> a small cup or bowl upside down into a larger one without touching the one
on the bottom.
>
> If I needed to learn to use a colander today, I would do it in the 
> sink with just cold water.  Then I would put something in the pot of 
> cold water that would not hurt the drain too much, cereal, rice, or 
> some non-food items, as long as you are sure that you won't get things 
> down the drain that don't belong there.  Maybe even use pasta.  Then I 
> would practice pouring the liquid from the pot into the colander and 
> then checking to make sure that all the objects landed in the 
> colander.  I would practice until I was fairly confident that the objects
all go in the colander  all or most of the time.
> Finally, I would practice with real boiling water and then I would go 
> ahead and just cook the pasta and drain it.  You can take your time 
> positioning the edge of the pot over the lip of the colander, using 
> oven mitts if you need to.
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Cookinginthedark  On 
> Behalf Of Regina Marie via Cookinginthedark
> Sent: Sunday, August 23, 2020 7:22 PM
> To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
> Cc: Regina Marie 
> Subject: Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan
>
> Hi Debbie. I bought mine from Walmart. Check on
>
> https://www.walmart.com/search/?query=locking%20lid%20pasta%20pot
> With Warm Regards:
> Regina Brink
> President, ACB Capital Chapter of California Council of the Blind Find 
> me
> at: https://facebook.com/reginamarie Follow me on:
> https//:www.twitter.com/mamaraquel
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Cookinginthedark  On 
> Behalf Of Deborah Armstrong via Cookinginthedark
> Sent: Sunday, August 23, 2020 2:11 PM
> To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
> Cc: Deborah Armstrong 
> Subject: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan
>
> When I was a teen, forty years ago, the AFB aids and appliances 
> catalog sold a lock-lid saucepan.
>
> It was about six quarts and had a handle. What made it unique was the 
> tiny holes along the top rim on the opposite side of the handle, 
> around 5 of them.
>
> The lid locked in to place when you pressed down.
>
> Steam escaped out of those tiny holes.
>
> But the best part was when you cooked pasta, you could simply lock on 
> that lid, take it to the sink and pour. No strainer was necessary.
>
> I'm really wanting one of these again.
>
> When I moved out and went to college, I let my dad keep mine because 
> he used it every night. When my dad passed away, my mom who doesn't 
> cook gave it to a thrift store.
>
> Anyone know where I can find such a pot?
>
>
> --Debee
>
>

Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

2020-08-24 Thread Linda S. via Cookinginthedark

Happy Monday:


I love the suggestion of practicing these skills. I've used oth methods 
and and comfortable doing them both.


One thing to watch is if you are using boiling water to fill the 
colendar turn your head to the side a little so that the steam doesn't 
come un in to your face.


On another note, my husband bought the locklid pan from Walmart. 
Although it is a full likd, half of it is open so that the holes just go 
on one half of the pan. I do not like this pan. He said that our old 
good locklid was getting old, so he used it to plant something. Brat 
that he is! I love him so much, but sometimes ...!


Anyway, there is my two cents. (smile)

Everyone have a nice week.

On 8/24/2020 9:18 AM, meward1954--- via Cookinginthedark wrote:

We used to have lock lid pasta pots at my old job in rehab.  But they were
very thin.  I didn't recommend them because, to tell the truth, I didn't
feel safe using them.  They looked to me like they were just asking to tump
over when I put the top on.  Very flimsy.  Maybe these ones you guys have
are better.  Also, do you have to stand there and drain the pasta for a long
time?  I usually pour the pasta into the colander, shake it around for a
little while,  and then walk off and do something else while I wait for it
to finish draining.

Once you have learned to use a colander in the sink, it is very safe. The
main thing is that you have to feel the inside curve of the colander with
the outside curve of the pot you are pouring the pasta from.  That sounds
complicated, but it really is not.  Imagine putting a small cup or bowl
upside down into a larger one without touching the one on the bottom.

If I needed to learn to use a colander today, I would do it in the sink with
just cold water.  Then I would put something in the pot of cold water that
would not hurt the drain too much, cereal, rice, or some non-food items, as
long as you are sure that you won't get things down the drain that don't
belong there.  Maybe even use pasta.  Then I would practice pouring the
liquid from the pot into the colander and then checking to make sure that
all the objects landed in the colander.  I would practice until I was fairly
confident that the objects all go in the colander  all or most of the time.
Finally, I would practice with real boiling water and then I would go ahead
and just cook the pasta and drain it.  You can take your time positioning
the edge of the pot over the lip of the colander, using oven mitts if you
need to.

-Original Message-
From: Cookinginthedark  On Behalf Of
Regina Marie via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Sunday, August 23, 2020 7:22 PM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: Regina Marie 
Subject: Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

Hi Debbie. I bought mine from Walmart. Check on

https://www.walmart.com/search/?query=locking%20lid%20pasta%20pot
With Warm Regards:
Regina Brink
President, ACB Capital Chapter of California Council of the Blind Find me
at: https://facebook.com/reginamarie Follow me on:
https//:www.twitter.com/mamaraquel

-Original Message-
From: Cookinginthedark  On Behalf Of
Deborah Armstrong via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Sunday, August 23, 2020 2:11 PM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: Deborah Armstrong 
Subject: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

When I was a teen, forty years ago, the AFB aids and appliances catalog sold
a lock-lid saucepan.

It was about six quarts and had a handle. What made it unique was the tiny
holes along the top rim on the opposite side of the handle, around 5 of
them.

The lid locked in to place when you pressed down.

Steam escaped out of those tiny holes.

But the best part was when you cooked pasta, you could simply lock on that
lid, take it to the sink and pour. No strainer was necessary.

I'm really wanting one of these again.

When I moved out and went to college, I let my dad keep mine because he used
it every night. When my dad passed away, my mom who doesn't cook gave it to
a thrift store.

Anyone know where I can find such a pot?


--Debee

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Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

2020-08-24 Thread meward1954--- via Cookinginthedark
We used to have lock lid pasta pots at my old job in rehab.  But they were
very thin.  I didn't recommend them because, to tell the truth, I didn't
feel safe using them.  They looked to me like they were just asking to tump
over when I put the top on.  Very flimsy.  Maybe these ones you guys have
are better.  Also, do you have to stand there and drain the pasta for a long
time?  I usually pour the pasta into the colander, shake it around for a
little while,  and then walk off and do something else while I wait for it
to finish draining.  

Once you have learned to use a colander in the sink, it is very safe. The
main thing is that you have to feel the inside curve of the colander with
the outside curve of the pot you are pouring the pasta from.  That sounds
complicated, but it really is not.  Imagine putting a small cup or bowl
upside down into a larger one without touching the one on the bottom.  

If I needed to learn to use a colander today, I would do it in the sink with
just cold water.  Then I would put something in the pot of cold water that
would not hurt the drain too much, cereal, rice, or some non-food items, as
long as you are sure that you won't get things down the drain that don't
belong there.  Maybe even use pasta.  Then I would practice pouring the
liquid from the pot into the colander and then checking to make sure that
all the objects landed in the colander.  I would practice until I was fairly
confident that the objects all go in the colander  all or most of the time.
Finally, I would practice with real boiling water and then I would go ahead
and just cook the pasta and drain it.  You can take your time positioning
the edge of the pot over the lip of the colander, using oven mitts if you
need to.

-Original Message-
From: Cookinginthedark  On Behalf Of
Regina Marie via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Sunday, August 23, 2020 7:22 PM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: Regina Marie 
Subject: Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

Hi Debbie. I bought mine from Walmart. Check on 

https://www.walmart.com/search/?query=locking%20lid%20pasta%20pot
With Warm Regards:
Regina Brink
President, ACB Capital Chapter of California Council of the Blind Find me
at: https://facebook.com/reginamarie Follow me on:
https//:www.twitter.com/mamaraquel

-Original Message-
From: Cookinginthedark  On Behalf Of
Deborah Armstrong via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Sunday, August 23, 2020 2:11 PM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: Deborah Armstrong 
Subject: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

When I was a teen, forty years ago, the AFB aids and appliances catalog sold
a lock-lid saucepan.

It was about six quarts and had a handle. What made it unique was the tiny
holes along the top rim on the opposite side of the handle, around 5 of
them.

The lid locked in to place when you pressed down.

Steam escaped out of those tiny holes.

But the best part was when you cooked pasta, you could simply lock on that
lid, take it to the sink and pour. No strainer was necessary.

I'm really wanting one of these again.

When I moved out and went to college, I let my dad keep mine because he used
it every night. When my dad passed away, my mom who doesn't cook gave it to
a thrift store.

Anyone know where I can find such a pot?


--Debee

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Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

2020-08-23 Thread Kathy Brandt via Cookinginthedark
I got mine years ago from QVC. I think it’s 4 quarts. They called it a pasta 
pot. It has loop handles on either side, which are really nice.

On Aug 23, 2020, at 8:22 PM, Regina Marie via Cookinginthedark 
 wrote:

Hi Debbie. I bought mine from Walmart. Check on 

https://www.walmart.com/search/?query=locking%20lid%20pasta%20pot
With Warm Regards:
Regina Brink
President, ACB Capital Chapter of California Council of the Blind
Find me at: https://facebook.com/reginamarie
Follow me on: https//:www.twitter.com/mamaraquel

-Original Message-
From: Cookinginthedark  On Behalf Of
Deborah Armstrong via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Sunday, August 23, 2020 2:11 PM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: Deborah Armstrong 
Subject: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

When I was a teen, forty years ago, the AFB aids and appliances catalog sold
a lock-lid saucepan.

It was about six quarts and had a handle. What made it unique was the tiny
holes along the top rim on the opposite side of the handle, around 5 of
them.

The lid locked in to place when you pressed down.

Steam escaped out of those tiny holes.

But the best part was when you cooked pasta, you could simply lock on that
lid, take it to the sink and pour. No strainer was necessary.

I'm really wanting one of these again.

When I moved out and went to college, I let my dad keep mine because he used
it every night. When my dad passed away, my mom who doesn't cook gave it to
a thrift store.

Anyone know where I can find such a pot?


--Debee

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Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

2020-08-23 Thread Regina Marie via Cookinginthedark
Hi Debbie. I bought mine from Walmart. Check on 

https://www.walmart.com/search/?query=locking%20lid%20pasta%20pot
With Warm Regards:
Regina Brink
President, ACB Capital Chapter of California Council of the Blind
Find me at: https://facebook.com/reginamarie
Follow me on: https//:www.twitter.com/mamaraquel

-Original Message-
From: Cookinginthedark  On Behalf Of
Deborah Armstrong via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Sunday, August 23, 2020 2:11 PM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: Deborah Armstrong 
Subject: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

When I was a teen, forty years ago, the AFB aids and appliances catalog sold
a lock-lid saucepan.

It was about six quarts and had a handle. What made it unique was the tiny
holes along the top rim on the opposite side of the handle, around 5 of
them.

The lid locked in to place when you pressed down.

Steam escaped out of those tiny holes.

But the best part was when you cooked pasta, you could simply lock on that
lid, take it to the sink and pour. No strainer was necessary.

I'm really wanting one of these again.

When I moved out and went to college, I let my dad keep mine because he used
it every night. When my dad passed away, my mom who doesn't cook gave it to
a thrift store.

Anyone know where I can find such a pot?


--Debee

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Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

2020-08-23 Thread Pamela Fairchild via Cookinginthedark
Call and ask Dale to describe the over the sink colander, and ask if he has
the locking lid pot as well. He has had a set of two in the past so probably
still does.   

Pamela Fairchild 


-Original Message-
From: Cookinginthedark On Behalf Of Deborah Armstrong via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Sunday, August 23, 2020 5:11 PM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: Deborah Armstrong 
Subject: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

When I was a teen, forty years ago, the AFB aids and appliances catalog sold
a lock-lid saucepan.

It was about six quarts and had a handle. What made it unique was the tiny
holes along the top rim on the opposite side of the handle, around 5 of
them.

The lid locked in to place when you pressed down.

Steam escaped out of those tiny holes.

But the best part was when you cooked pasta, you could simply lock on that
lid, take it to the sink and pour. No strainer was necessary.

I'm really wanting one of these again.

When I moved out and went to college, I let my dad keep mine because he used
it every night. When my dad passed away, my mom who doesn't cook gave it to
a thrift store.

Anyone know where I can find such a pot?


--Debee

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Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

2020-08-23 Thread Immigrant via Cookinginthedark
Check Independent Living Aids, they used to carry it.

-Original Message-
From: Cookinginthedark  On Behalf Of
Deborah Armstrong via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Sunday, August 23, 2020 5:11 PM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: Deborah Armstrong 
Subject: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

When I was a teen, forty years ago, the AFB aids and appliances catalog sold
a lock-lid saucepan.

It was about six quarts and had a handle. What made it unique was the tiny
holes along the top rim on the opposite side of the handle, around 5 of
them.

The lid locked in to place when you pressed down.

Steam escaped out of those tiny holes.

But the best part was when you cooked pasta, you could simply lock on that
lid, take it to the sink and pour. No strainer was necessary.

I'm really wanting one of these again.

When I moved out and went to college, I let my dad keep mine because he used
it every night. When my dad passed away, my mom who doesn't cook gave it to
a thrift store.

Anyone know where I can find such a pot?


--Debee

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Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

2020-08-23 Thread Gary Metzler via Cookinginthedark
Hi,

You can get them at blind mice mall.
I have them they have a 6 quart and 2 quart.  I love mine.

-Original Message-
From: Cookinginthedark  On Behalf Of
Deborah Armstrong via Cookinginthedark
Sent: Sunday, August 23, 2020 5:11 PM
To: cookinginthedark@acbradio.org
Cc: Deborah Armstrong 
Subject: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

When I was a teen, forty years ago, the AFB aids and appliances catalog sold
a lock-lid saucepan.

It was about six quarts and had a handle. What made it unique was the tiny
holes along the top rim on the opposite side of the handle, around 5 of
them.

The lid locked in to place when you pressed down.

Steam escaped out of those tiny holes.

But the best part was when you cooked pasta, you could simply lock on that
lid, take it to the sink and pour. No strainer was necessary.

I'm really wanting one of these again.

When I moved out and went to college, I let my dad keep mine because he used
it every night. When my dad passed away, my mom who doesn't cook gave it to
a thrift store.

Anyone know where I can find such a pot?


--Debee

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Re: [CnD] Lock-lid saucepan

2020-08-23 Thread Gerry Leary via Cookinginthedark
I think Blind my Smart has one of those. It may not be the same size though it 
might be bigger.

Sent from my iPhone this time 

On Aug 23, 2020, at 3:11 PM, Deborah Armstrong via Cookinginthedark 
 wrote:

When I was a teen, forty years ago, the AFB aids and appliances catalog sold a 
lock-lid saucepan.

It was about six quarts and had a handle. What made it unique was the tiny 
holes along the top rim on the opposite side of the handle, around 5 of them.

The lid locked in to place when you pressed down.

Steam escaped out of those tiny holes.

But the best part was when you cooked pasta, you could simply lock on that lid, 
take it to the sink and pour. No strainer was necessary.

I'm really wanting one of these again.

When I moved out and went to college, I let my dad keep mine because he used it 
every night. When my dad passed away, my mom who doesn't cook gave it to a 
thrift store.

Anyone know where I can find such a pot?


--Debee

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