
Can Your Nonstick Pan Make You Sick? We'll Explain
CNET
Last year, the US saw an increase in reported cases of "Teflon flu." If that raises questions in your mind, you're not alone. Several Reddit users expressed the same concerns, with some wondering whether inhaling Teflon fumes while cooking is dangerous. The good news is that if your cookware was made after a certain year and you use it properly, you should be in the clear. But there's also a bit more to the story. Here's what you need to know about Teflon flu and using your nonstick kitchenware without health worries.
Read more: Never Raise Your Air Fryer Above This Temperature
What is Teflon flu?
Air fryer baskets are often made with a synthetic nonstick coating.
David Watsky/CNET
The chemical polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), found in Teflon and similar nonstick surfaces, is common in air fryers, pots and pans and other kitchen appliances. When these materials overheat, they can release synthetic compounds that pose health risks.
Polymer fume fever, or Teflon flu, has reignited a debate about nonstick cookware safety. The illness occurs when fumes from an overheated Teflon or nonstick pan are inhaled. Nonstick pans are made with polytetrafluoroethylene (also known as PTFE). PTFEs are known as "forever chemicals" because they take decades or sometimes even hundreds of years to break down.
Read more: I Upgraded to This PFAS-Free Glass Fryer and You Should, Too
Under normal use, PTFEs aren't thought to cause a health risk, but when heated to above 500 degrees Fahrenheit, there are increased emissions and the resulting polymer fume fever. Polymer fume fever causes a range of reported symptoms including fever, chills, muscle tension and headache. Symptoms of Teflon flu are temporary and generally start within 12 hours of exposure but can take up to 24 hours to take hold.
How to avoid Teflon flu
Teflon and nonstick cookware are easy to use, clean and maintain, but it should be used only for low to medium heat cooking. Never heat your nonstick cookware over high heat or medium heat for long periods of time. Try to keep the surface temperature at or below 450 degrees Fahrenheit, or emissions from the PTFE coating are likely to increase.
What is Teflon and does it cause cancer?
Nonstick or Teflon is a popular choice for home cooks. The biggest advantage is that food won't stick to pots and pans coated with Teflon the way it does to other metal materials, so it's easy to flip a pancake or remove a cooked egg. Nonstick is also very easy to clean, generally taking no more than a few seconds to wash by hand.
Teflon is a brand name for a synthetic chemical called polytetrafluoroethylene that's used in many household products, from wire coatings to fabric protectors and kitchen cookware. The knock on Teflon is that it's unsafe if consumed or absorbed into the body and can increase the chances of cancer and other diseases. Studies have shown some connections (more on that below), but Teflon still exists and is used to make cookware, and the safety concerns around Teflon are mostly a thing of the past.
I stress mostly. Here's why…
The brand Teflon may be associated with a risk of cancer, but it's actually a chemical formerly used in the making of Teflon called PFOA that's to blame. According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, perfluorooctanoic acid is a manufactured perfluorochemical developed in the 1930s and used to make fluoropolymer coatings and products that resist heat, oil, stains, grease and water.
Thanks to a federal ban, all Teflon and nonstick cookware made after 2013 should be free of harmful PFOA. Europe enacted the same ban in 2008.
All-Clad
What are the negative effects of PFOA?
In some studies, PFOA has been linked to cancer, immune deficiency and a host of other medical problems. It has also been shown to affect growth and development and injure the liver in laboratory animals.
As recently as 2017, chemical giant Dupont settled a lawsuit for more than $670 million for its role in contaminating drinking water with PFOA (also referred to as C-8) in the mid-Ohio Valley. A previous class-action suit from 2004 in the same area led to a study that found PFOA was linked to cancer and compromised immune function, even in small doses.
Teflon cookware made before 2013 may be toxic
All that was enough for most manufacturers to halt the production of nonstick coatings using PFOA around 2002. Teflon using PFOA wasn't officially banned in the United States until 2014. Europe banned it in 2008. That means if you own Teflon nonstick cookware from 2013 or earlier, there's a chance it contains PFOA. Nine years is typically longer than the average lifespan of a nonstick pan, but if you're not sure, it's probably best to replace any Teflon-coated pots or pans.
If you're concerned, look for PFOA-free cookware
Because of the ban, all nonstick cookware made in the US should be PFOA-free, but you'd be wise to make sure. Be extra cautious about buying cheap or off-brand cookware, especially if it's not produced in a country with an active PFOA ban. PFOA is still produced elsewhere, largely in China, and used to make consumer products.
The good news is that PFOA-free nonstick cookware is cheap, so there's no reason to risk it with anything that might contain the chemical. You can nab a 10-inch skillet from a trusted cookware brand like Misen for $99 or Tramontina for about $30. Luxury cookware brand All-Clad makes a two-piece nonstick cookware set for $60.
The Always Pan is a nonstick ceramic alternative to Teflon cookware.
Our Place
The best natural nonstick cookware alternatives
If you're ready to ditch Teflon and chemical-based nonstick pots and pans, there are plenty of more natural nonstick alternatives.
The most nonstick of the bunch is ceramic cookware, which has seen a boom in popularity since concerns about Teflon first surfaced. A few popular ceramic cookware options include The Always Pan (read my full review here), Caraway and Greenpan.
Cast iron is another cookware material that develops a natural nonstick coating over time, especially if you season it well and care for it properly. It won't likely ever become as nonstick as Teflon, but cast iron has loads of other culinary benefits that are worthy of a few extra seconds of scrubbing in the sink after use. Lodge is a tried-and-true cast-iron cookware producer: You can scoop up a 10-inch skillet for as little as $20.
Cast iron develops a nonstick patina over time and is a natural alternative to Teflon.
Angela Lang/CNET
Carbon steel is yet another option and functions similarly to cast-iron cookware, although it's not quite as heavy, slightly more sensitive to corrosion, and typically more expensive. Carbon steel hasn't really popped off here in the US but is a favorite of professional chefs, as well as yours truly. Cookware startup Made In produces some excellent carbon steel cookware with prices starting around $89, but there are cheaper options out there.
FAQs
Should I worry about buying Teflon nonstick cookware?
The Teflon brand stopped using PFOA, the offending chemical behind Teflon flu, in 2013. That means that it should be safe to use new Teflon cookware any way you see fit -- although it couldn't hurt to continue being cautious when using new nonstick cookware.
Can I only catch Teflon flu from Teflon products?
No. The name Teflon flu originates from the Teflon brand because they famously used PFOA chemicals in the process of creating its cookware before 2013. However, that doesn't mean your cookware is PFOA-free. If your cookware is created in the US, it should be free of harmful chemicals. But cheap companies and off-brands that create cookware in countries without PFOA bans often still use the chemical in their products, and those might still wind up in your hands.
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Instagram is a torture device that makes you want things you can't have. That influencer's abs. Those Loewe shoes. That Amalfi vacation. I care about none of those things. It's high-end interior design that torments me. Specifically, Lucy Doswell's library in the 2023 Kips Bay Decorator Show House in Palm Beach. Summer Thornton's master bedroom in her Sayulita project. Literally anything Rita Konig touches. You haven't known pain until you've realized the Christopher Farr fabric on the sofa in Isabella Worsley's latest seaside escape will cost you around $223 a yard—and you need 24 yards. For the past few years, I've devoted myself to decorating my San Francisco one-bedroom apartment in the style of something you might find in Architectural Digest—or better yet, the bible of eclectic British decor, House & Garden. Did I mention it's a modest rental? That I don't have an unlimited budget? No matter. Thanks to the intimacy of Instagram, the interiors I covet feel almost within reach. 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For smaller items that pack up easily like draperies, lamps and cushions, widen your search nationwide. I like to plug in the zip codes where people with deep pockets and good taste are known to live—think Rye, N.Y., Greenwich, Conn., or Winnetka, Ill. Then I use search terms like 'custom' or 'designer.' Feeling ambitious? Bid on larger items and find someone on a service like uShip to deliver it to you. That's how my cousin got an Ilve range from Atlanta to Chicago and how I landed a vintage rug from a designer in Los Angeles who purchased it from A-list fave Nickey Kehoe. Every once in a while you hit the jackpot. For me that was stumbling on a Redmond Aldrich Design client who was downsizing and tasked their personal assistant with selling stuff, as one does. I scored a room-size rug usually available only to the trade and, for $450, a bed upholstered in a Christopher Farr silk ikat (new: around $6,000). But, beware: An incredible value can give you the design equivalent of beer goggles. That steal of a bed? After living with it for a while, I found the scale of the print on the headboard a bit too large. I think about recovering it all the time. Some designers tag everything from furniture to fabric swatches in their posts, making it easy to track down what you like. Many don't. When that happens, take a screenshot and run it through a Google image search. That should give you the language you need to hunt down a similar version. For instance, not long ago I became fixated on a dining table posted by designer Heidi Caillier, who has a cult following among the grandmillenial set. A Google image search revealed it was a French wine-tasting table. Caillier's was custom—but I found a near-dupe at an antique shop in Sonoma. If you fall in love with textiles that are sold to the trade but you don't have a designer on retainer, use image search to learn the pattern's name, then search for remnants on eBay, Chairish or other auction sites. My beloved burl ottomans are upholstered in Wicker, a $286-a-yard linen fabric by Fermoie; I found remnants on eBay and a U.K. discount-fabric site for one-third of that price. The downside: Random bits may not be identical. Because I purchased the fabric from different places, one seat is slightly lighter than the other. Design services are getting more democratized. On the online platform the Expert, prices for 55-minute consultations range from a few hundred dollars for lesser-known names to $3,600 for 115 minutes with my girl Rita Konig. But in my experience, the better route is to find a designer in your area who's open to small projects and sells hourly blocks. I worked with Alexis Smith, who runs an interior design studio and a lethally charming boutique, Shoshin, in Carmel-by-the-Sea, Calif. Smith saved me a bananas amount of money by vetoing items that would have been mistakes, paying attention to scale and dimensions and sharing her knowledge of things like fabric durability. She also picked out one of my favorite pieces, a bone-inlay settee that sits in my bay window. This brings me to my last piece of advice: If you're planning to invest real money in your space—and thanks to a weakness for expensive lighting and designer fabrics, I did—there's no substitute for a little professional help. You can have great taste and be skilled at picking out individual items but the ability to envision how fabrics, furniture and finishes all work together (or won't!) is where Smith earned every dollar I paid her. Amateurs make mistakes and mistakes can be costly in the form of regret or actual dollars—both, more often than not. My next mission: Decide on a new sofa fabric. Because the other thing I've learned in this process is that you're never done decorating.