Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
Gray Squirrel Hey, what are you doing?
Brown Squirrel I'm grillin' my nuts!
CJ's! We'll sell you a great grill! What you cook on it is your business.
Today, on CJ's TV: Ceramic glass is so heat-resistant that it's often used to make fireplace doors. So today we're going to cook on it!
CJ's Home Decor & Fireplaces, located in scenic Warren, Pennsylvania, is one of America's leading distributers of fireplace doors -- but that's not all we sell...
We're currently working towards marketing our ceramic glass as a grill accessory.
Let's take a more in-depth look at ceramic glass:
Ceramic glass is manufactured in a two-step process.
In the first step, it is manufactured just like regular glass,
but in the second step, the glass is cooled and reheated, and special nucleation agents are introduced.
The resulting ceramic glass is crystallized and has fewer pores than regular glass,
making it more resistant to heat and physical stress.
We've placed a pane of ceramic glass on our BroilKing grill, and heated the grill to 385 degrees.
We've cut the gas and opened the lid.
After the initial heat had left the grill, we took a temperature measurement.
Even after heating up for over twenty minutes, the glass is still about 100 degrees cooler than the grill.
As you can see, over time the ceramic class takes longer to cool off than the metal inside the grill.
Though it takes longer to prepare, this means more even heat on the glass -- and on your food!
Now that it's cooled down, we'll get to the practical test!
Though ceramic glass is smooth and not porous, it can still stick to food, so we're adding vegetable oil to the glass to make it a little harder for the food to stick.
Now we heat the oven to 350 degrees.
For our next experiement, we're adding some ready-made cookie dough to the glass.
After about 20 minutes, these are looking really gooey and good!
After a brief cleaning, we're going to cook our entree: Italian sausage and frozen pizza.
It's been about 15 minutes, and that sausage is starting to sizzle nicely.
Looks like our first pizza is done, so we're going to put another one on.
But... the onions and peppers are completely blackened.
Looks like we should have put them on a little later. Our bad.
So that's our first video on cooking with ceramic glass.
So how did it turn out? Let's ask Sarah:
She really seems to be enjoying that.
Find ceramic glass and so much more at CJ's Home Decor & Fireplaces!
Be sure to check us out online. See ya next time!
Ugh. It's like... French onion soup!