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Etsy Finds: Vintage Enamelware

Did you find yourself drooling over Lisa's Cathrineholm collection in today's House Tour? You're not alone. The shelves of colorful enamelware inspired us to do a little Etsy hunt in order to recreate the look...

 
 

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cookware, pillows, decorative & office accessories, dansk, vintage cookware, cathrineholm

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Comments (9)

Love the colors and graphics... those canisters are dreamy.

posted by mirandabee on August 25th 2009 at 7:51pm
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Can anyone tell me anything about cooking with enamelware? I have been eyeing similar brightly colored pots and pans at the thrift stores, as the Rachel Ray set my Grandmother bought me a less than a year ago is not going to last much longer. However, I know nothing about cooking with them, pros, cons, etc.

posted by rebeldress on August 25th 2009 at 8:16pm
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Ugh, sorry, but enough Etsy already.

posted by ilgps on August 25th 2009 at 8:44pm
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They are really pretty. I was lucky enough to find a set of Catherineholm enamel bowls in a dumpster once.

Rebeldress, I have some enamel pans. My enamel on aluminum stockpot (from a thrift shop) is really light and thin, and that one is mostly just good for boiling water for corn or pasta. It's too thin to really cook with. I also have an enamel on steel that's a heavier pan, and I use it just like a stainless steel pan. My enamel on cast iron dutch oven (mine is by Lodge, much cheaper than Le Creuset) weighs a ton. It's good for long simmering foods and looks good as a serving piece, too. Enamel cookware has such a cheerful, retro look, I love it. I wouldn't want a whole set of it, but a few pieces are nice.

posted by MansardRoof on August 26th 2009 at 1:49am
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I have a Le Creuset enamel stockpot, and I love it.

posted by jooly on August 26th 2009 at 10:03am
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Those prices are a little up there... I think I'll stick to snagging great finds at the antique stores in small towns that I love.

posted by LSUgrad03 on August 26th 2009 at 12:35pm
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Last year I replaced all of my department store xmas sale non-stick cookware set pots and pans with vintage Dansk Kobenstyle and Catherineholm lotus enamelware, they are so much better (though now I'm working out a budget to replace with new investment pans as they wear out, sometimes vintage has it's downsides like when the external enamel on the bottom of your dansk dutch over melts onto the electric hob while you're boiling water)

My advice is don't look for vintage enamelware on etsy it's almost universally over-priced. I've seen most of the pieces I picked up via ebay on etsy for much more than I ended up paying. I'd watch ebay and hunt for deals over a longer time period. The same stuff comes up again and again and even though some weeks everything is selling for $50 or more a piece the next week you can score the same item for like $10. I'd at least see what the etsy piece's market value is first on ebay before you just give up and pay the $60 they are likely asking for it.

posted by bonjourmiette on August 26th 2009 at 1:00pm
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MansardRoof, thank you for the advice!

posted by rebeldress on August 26th 2009 at 2:28pm
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I would agree that for any kind of cooking that thin pots of any kind will not work well for anything but boiling water or for reheating at lower temps.

If you intend to braise, saute or anything else requiring more heat they will simply not do - especially of cheap cookware for they simply don't hold up over time and the thin bottoms will cause stuff to burn much more easily and may not conduct heat well, aluminum, while a good conductor of heat will warp much easier than stainless steel or cast iron but even cast iron should not be used on high heat for any length of time.

Stick to quality stainless steel cookware or ones that are stainless but have non stick coatings inside with solid, thick bottoms will serve you much better than just about anything else out there IMO.

Heck if you find thick walled sautee pans of "restaurant quality", they can be quite good too. I have some wearever ones of that type and they've held up really well, but my 10" saute pan is now over 10 years old and the non stick coating doesn't do as well as it once did so time to replace that.

So I'd buy and just use for decorative purposes only or simply for serving and that'd be it.

posted by ciddyguy on August 26th 2009 at 5:45pm
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