Or, In the Kitchen with Joe the Cookware Geek.
While emptying the dishwasher, I happened to hold a small CorningWare Pyroceram dish up to the light coming in through the kitchen window. The inside bottom glowed with an amber tint, exactly the same tint as VISIONS amber cookware. Curious, I rounded up various white vitreous cookware and bakeware, and substituted a bright white LED flashlight for the sun.
Clockwise from the upper right burner: CorningWare SimplyLite Vitrelle baking dish, white Pyrex "Colonial" dish, CorningWare French White Pyroceram casserole (among the last made in the USA by Corning, Inc.), and CorningWare Pyroceram 1.5L dish (made in France for World Kitchen, Inc.).
The 14-LED flashlight is switched on to full brightness and each piece is carefully balanced over the lens. The results: surprising and perhaps a way to test if an unmarked dish or casserole is stovetop safe.
The Pyrex and SimplyLite don't change the color of the flashlight, while both the French- and USA-made Pyroceram produce the amber VISIONS tint. Both pieces were made in the same time period as VISIONS which might explain why a pre-VISIONS CorningWare pie plate is completely opaque.
And now, world, it's your turn, especially if you have some non-Corning cookware like Arcoflam, Pyroflam and Pyrosil. Try the same test and let's see YOUR results!

While emptying the dishwasher, I happened to hold a small CorningWare Pyroceram dish up to the light coming in through the kitchen window. The inside bottom glowed with an amber tint, exactly the same tint as VISIONS amber cookware. Curious, I rounded up various white vitreous cookware and bakeware, and substituted a bright white LED flashlight for the sun.
Clockwise from the upper right burner: CorningWare SimplyLite Vitrelle baking dish, white Pyrex "Colonial" dish, CorningWare French White Pyroceram casserole (among the last made in the USA by Corning, Inc.), and CorningWare Pyroceram 1.5L dish (made in France for World Kitchen, Inc.).
The 14-LED flashlight is switched on to full brightness and each piece is carefully balanced over the lens. The results: surprising and perhaps a way to test if an unmarked dish or casserole is stovetop safe.
The Pyrex and SimplyLite don't change the color of the flashlight, while both the French- and USA-made Pyroceram produce the amber VISIONS tint. Both pieces were made in the same time period as VISIONS which might explain why a pre-VISIONS CorningWare pie plate is completely opaque.
And now, world, it's your turn, especially if you have some non-Corning cookware like Arcoflam, Pyroflam and Pyrosil. Try the same test and let's see YOUR results!
