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Finding Revere Ware on Ebay

A couple of years ago we started a website that collects all Revere Ware related listings on Ebay and separates them out by type, size, etc.  For example, if you are looking for a 7 inch lid, you can see all currently available lids on Ebay sorted by size.  We update the listings every 30 minutes so it always has up-do-date listings.

It wasn’t the prettiest of websites, but it worked well.  We recently did a complete overhaul of the site which makes it both more attractive and more effective.  For example, we offer a grid view and a list view.

If you are looking for vintage Revere Ware cookware, this is arguably the easiest way to find what you want.

We’ve also been tracking the number of listings of Revere Ware related items on Ebay and it continues to grow and grow, meaning there is more and more items available to select from. Here is the graph of the number of items listed since May 2009.

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Letters from customers

We get a lot of sweet letters from long time Revere Ware users.  Here is the one we received recently:

Dear Sir,

I thought you might be interested in this.  In 1949 I was 16 yrs old.  I bought from a traveling salesman a 4 piece set of Revere Ware.  It was a Dutch oven, a 2 qt. sauce pan with lid, a 10 inch frying pan with lid, and a 6 cup coffee pot.

They are still being used nearly every day.  I married in June 1951.  My husband to be payed off the pans.

They look great.  I keep them with Cameo Copper & Brass cleaner.   The Patent # is 2272609.  The made under process patent is 2272609.  These pans have been used for 62 yrs and are still going strong.  The Dutch oven gets used a lot.  I make lots of soups, chile, etc.; things that can be frozen.  That way I eat healthy.

Thank you for a wonderful set of cooking ware.

At 16 yrs in a family of 8 children and my mom, I had a job and could make payments.  My family was 4 children.

– Marie

What a wonderful window into another era.  This highlights just how much a part of everyday life a product like Revere Ware was back then, and still is for many people.  While we aren’t the makers of the cookware (but people still refuse to believe it, perhaps because we are only ones that provide parts, information, and customer service these days) the storied nature of the product is what motivated us to do what we do.

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Handle repair options

We often get asked how to repair handles when the metal part that is attached to the pan body starts separating or has completely come off.  We aren’t aware of any services where you can send your cookware in to get repaired.

Brazing

The surest way is to find a local welder that can either spot weld (typically how they were usually attached in the first place) or braze the pieces back together.  Brazing is similar to soldering, where a metal filler is heated up such that it flows in the space between the two parts.  I’ve seen one estimate for $35 for repairing a handle in this way, which is more than the typical Revere Ware vintage piece is worth.  But for sentimental hand-me-down items, cost may not be an option.

I also investigated using an epoxy to repair a handle.  By all indications, on a gas stove, the cookware can reach very high temperatures, perhaps as high as 500 or more degrees.  JB Weld, a product well known for bonding metal together, does offer a high heat formula, but it is rated only up to 500 degrees.  Another product is stainless steel putty, which is rated food grade and is often used to repair stainless steel food processing equipment.  Unfortunately this is only rated to 250 degrees.

A third option is to drill small holes and use stainless steel hardware to reattach the handle.  This is perhaps the most unsightly option.

I recently came across this DIY option that involves the use of a propane torch and silver solder rods.

I’d love to hear if anyone has tried this method or has had success repairing broken handles any other way.

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Revere Ware Q&A

We receive about 300-500 Revere Ware related questions through our contact form every year and do our best to answer every one.

We are always happy to answer questions about Revere Ware care, help finding the correct size handle, or even help identifying an oddball piece of cookware, so feel free to contact us.

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PC-806 electric pressure cooker parts

PC-806

A customer asks:

I have a PC-806 pressure cooker, the pressure regular is missing (probably got lost during removal-and-cleaning, is there a replacement part I can buy

It is almost certain those pressure cookers were not actually made by Revere but were re-branded units made by another company, like Cuisinart.  You might try calling them.  You also might try looking/asking at Miss Vickie’s, a forum and recipe website for pressure cookers.

Also, this supplier in Australia has the best selection of pressure cooker parts we’ve seen.

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Pressure cookers are back in vogue

Those of us who have been using our Vintage or other Revere Ware pressure cookers for years know how useful they are.  I find them much better at cooking artichokes than simple steaming.  My mother still makes (what she calls) Spanish rice in her pressure cooker (54 years old) that is fantastic.

It looks like the culinary set is taking notice of the lowly pressure cooker (once again) as evidenced by an article in the Weekend Edition of the Wall Street Journal (The Pressure Cooker is On).

CHEFS ARE EMBRACING a green technology that makes cooking faster, flavors more intense, braised meats more tender, stocks richer, whole grains easier to handle and root vegetables more flavorful. The good news for home cooks: This transformational piece of equipment is not a pricey Pacojet nor a complex sous-vide setup. It’s a common, relatively inexpensive and easy-to-use pressure cooker.

Chef John Currence of City Grocery in Oxford, Miss., said he once disdained pressure cookers as emblematic of “the great culinary shame” of the 1960s and ’70s, the era of canned food and quick casseroles. But now he uses a pressure cooker to braise pork roasts, short ribs and beef blade roasts, and considers it essential for maintaining the shape and texture of legumes. “The greatest upside of the pressure cooker is the intensity of flavor,” said Mr. Currence.

Jason Fox of San Francisco’s Commonwealth uses a pressure cooker to infuse lemon verbena into plums and to make a roasted chicken broth in just 30 minutes. “Under pressure, everything stays in there, it’s not evaporating,” Mr. Fox said.

“Modernist Cuisine,” a five-volume work on innovative cooking published by former Microsoft executive Nathan Myhrvold in 2011, boldly states that pressure cookers are the best equipment for making stocks—a cornerstone of classical cuisine—because they can cook at high temperature without boiling, which causes fats to emulsify and makes stocks cloudy. Phillip Lopez of Root in New Orleans said he read “Modernist Cuisine” voraciously and was surprised by its endorsement of a piece of equipment he considered fit only for canning. Soon after, at an International Culinary Center conference in New York, Mr. Lopez found he wasn’t alone. “Everyone was talking about them,” he said.

Mr. Lopez soon developed a method for infusing Japanese dashi broth with the aroma of burned hickory wood by cooking it under high pressure for an hour. He also tosses in a small amount of expensive or exotic ingredients, such as star anise and black cardamom, and uses them to turn veal shanks and other tough cuts of meat into luxurious, potently spiced dishes.

Kuhn Rikon, a Swiss maker of high-quality pressure cookers, reports that sales have increased by about 25% since 2000. In the past five years, a multitude of pressure cooker cookbooks have hit the market, including a 2009 reprint of Lorna Sass’s definitive “Cooking Under Pressure.” Several websites, including the encyclopedic missvickie.com, offer recipes and tips.

Often confused with slow cookers, which cook at low temperatures over lengthy periods to allow for unattended cooking, pressure cookers actually function in the opposite way. They work by creating an environment in which water boils at a higher temperature than in a conventional pot. Steam inside the cooker forces its way through the food, cooking quickly and at high heat. Because there is no heat loss during cooking, and because food cooks so much faster, pressure cookers require far less energy than conventional cooking. Stews and braises that might require three hours in an oven take as little as 15 to 30 minutes; risotto takes about five.

Sang Yoon, chef of Father’s Office and Lukshon in Los Angeles, says he is puzzled that even more cooks haven’t come around. “The pressure cooker is an awesome thing because you can literally beat the laws of physics,” he said. “It is a simple device that modifies atmosphere, which means you can do all sorts of playful things.”

From the list of pressure cookers they’ve reviewed in their test kitchen, you’ll pay anywhere from $50 to almost $300 for a pressure cooker, or, you could just get a used vintage Revere Ware pressure cooker from Ebay for a little as 20 bucks.

Incidentally, the electric model by Cuisinart they’ve reviewed is strikingly similar to one Revere sold in the last decade, and obviously something they simply branded from another company, probably Cuisinart.  I’ve got one but have yet to try it.  The combination of electric and pressure cooker is very appealing as perhaps a better Crock Pot (yes, I’ve got a vintage one of those too).

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Mystery pressure cooker insert

Customer Kathy inherited a pressure cooker with some interesting inserts.  Does anyone have an idea if they belong to the vintage pressure cooker (they don’t appear in the manual) and what they might be for?

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More and more Revere Ware on Ebay

It is hard to say whether the amount of Revere Ware on Ebay keeps growing because there are more people interested in Revere Ware or more people are using Ebay overall.  Our tracking continues to show the amount of Revere Ware related listings on Ebay increasing steadily.

Looking at Ebay’s revenue growth does offer some clues:

 

In the last 3 1/2 years, Ebay’s revenue has increased about 50%.  Clearly people are using Ebay more and more and a rising tide usually affects all boats.  But Revere Ware listings have increased by about 200%, clearly outpacing the growth of Ebay sales.  It seems likely that an overall trend of increasing participation in Ebay is helping the Revere Ware listing growth, but it also appears that people are listing more Revere Ware overall.

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New vs Vintage Revere Ware

A call to our customer service line highlights the quality difference between vintage Revere Ware and the new stuff nicely.

Vintage:  You are using the cookware that your grandmother used, was used by your mother, and is now yours.  Other than a new handle, it still works great.

New: You lift a pot off the stove.  Part of the bottom of the pot sticks to the stove (melted).  Part of it falls off onto your linoleum floor and catches the floor on fire.

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