danemodsandy
Well-known member
I was beginning to wonder if I was ever going to own one of these, because they're HTF, plus they fetch a fairly good price on eBay, and then there's shipping....
It is a Farberware twelve-inch, five-quart saute pan - a very large size that was not common in the '80s when this item was made. This is an aluminum-clad piece, made like most Farberware was until recently.
Since Farberware always took a "modular" approach to its aluminum-clad line, the pan uses the stick handle and helper handle from the electric skillet; the regular Farberware handle would not have been strong enough to support this pan when full. I have seen it with both the high dome lid and the flat regular lid.
I found it for next to nothing, and I thought at first maybe that was too high a price, because it was in really, really bad shape. It was missing the stick handle, it was absolutely filthy, and it had a dent.
Well, one stick handle (from my Farberware parts stash), a half-can of oven cleaner, some straightening and a lot of elbow grease later, here it is! It is now very clean and quite presentable. My parts stash also had the flat regular lid, so I have both lids for it; the high-dome lid is not needed for everything and it's a bit harder to clean.
By next week, I should have time to do a braised pork roast in it, something I have not been able to do since moving to Waterloo. I'll let everyone know how it turns out.
This was a real find!





It is a Farberware twelve-inch, five-quart saute pan - a very large size that was not common in the '80s when this item was made. This is an aluminum-clad piece, made like most Farberware was until recently.
Since Farberware always took a "modular" approach to its aluminum-clad line, the pan uses the stick handle and helper handle from the electric skillet; the regular Farberware handle would not have been strong enough to support this pan when full. I have seen it with both the high dome lid and the flat regular lid.
I found it for next to nothing, and I thought at first maybe that was too high a price, because it was in really, really bad shape. It was missing the stick handle, it was absolutely filthy, and it had a dent.
Well, one stick handle (from my Farberware parts stash), a half-can of oven cleaner, some straightening and a lot of elbow grease later, here it is! It is now very clean and quite presentable. My parts stash also had the flat regular lid, so I have both lids for it; the high-dome lid is not needed for everything and it's a bit harder to clean.
By next week, I should have time to do a braised pork roast in it, something I have not been able to do since moving to Waterloo. I'll let everyone know how it turns out.
This was a real find!




