Showing posts with label digital cooking thermometer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label digital cooking thermometer. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Maverick CT-03 Digital Oil & Candy Thermomter Review

Maverick CT-03 Digital Oil and Candy Thermomter
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This seems to be a well made product, and if not for one tremendous flaw I could somewhat recommend it.

The manufacturer got a the hardware design and functionally right. The temperature readings are very accurate. The view-screen tilts for easy reading, even on pots with sloping sides. And having the 14 most common candy and oil temperatures stored in the unit for easy selection is a nice addition, unfortunately it's also the Maverick's Achilles heel.
Because if you ever want to cook something at a temperature 'other' than those 14 presets, you may as well use a cheap analog thermometer. Unlike any other digital thermometer I've ever used, the Maverick does not permit setting of custom temperature alarms. You'll either use their 14 alarm presets or nothing at all.
Certainly the unit will display whatever temperature it is currently reading, but so can any $3 analog candy thermometer. In my mind, the primary purpose of a digital thermometer is to alert a cook when a specific temperature is reached. Not allowing the cook to set alarms at their chosen temperatures is a ridiculous and fatal defect.

The unit does have some issues even aside from that major flaw. The 14 available temperatures are selected from an LCD display, unfortunately the text on the display is very tiny it's awfully difficult to read. I have good eyesight, those suffering even moderate nearsightedness will be unable to read this display unassisted. This tiny-text problem seems also to a consequence of those 14 presets. If this thermometer worked like most other digital thermometers, the display would be more than big enough show 3 digit temperatures in huge lettering. But those 14 presets have too much text to be displayed at anything other than a tiny size on the unit's screen.
This product also misses the mark in catering to the needs of cooks. In candy making, knowing when candy has dropped to a certain temperature is just as important as knowing the highest temperature reached. This unit has no function for setting alarms at cooling temperatures.
This product shares it's reason for failure with many other failed electronic products. It has good hardware but very poorly designed software (firmware). The fixes should be simple by software standards. The designers need to ditch 14 presets, allow setting of alarms for any user-defined high and low temperature, and increase the text size. Those few changes would turn this lemon into an amazing kitchen tool. But if it remains as it is, it will be just another piece of kitchen junk to clutter your drawer.

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Digital Candy & Oil Thermometer

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Saturday, October 15, 2011

Comark Digital Thermometer PDT300 Review

Comark Digital Thermometer PDT300
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I was moved to provide a review after seeing an unfavorable review for a product I know very well. I do not want a shopper to miss a great product. (I have no relationship with the Comark company and know nothing about them or their practices.)
I have used the Comark 300 for over eight years, I have broken the pocket tang off a couple (they still work) and dropped one onto a tile floor (it did not like that at all) one just died one day after a year of daily use and I have also had to change the batteries in a few.
I am a certified executive chef and a Serve Safe instructor/examiner, my full time job is as a chef instructor at a nationally recognized professional culinary program.
It is my responsibility to know my stuff and I have naturally used and field tested many styles and makes of pocket thermometers: CDN, Taylor, FMP, Polder, MUI, even Pampered Chef and Harbor Freight. I have also tested many types: Probe, Remote thermocouple, Contact bi-coil grill and oven, alcohol and, of course, Infrared non-contact. I own and use a lot of these regularly as part of my instructional role.
I think you get the idea....
Thermapen at $90.00 is probably one of the best and fastest pro thermometers -ask your friendly health inspector- but it doesn't fit in my sleeve...
Taylor is an industry leader and CDN is right up there with them, but my preference is for the lesser known brand to the general public, the '300, because of the way it fits in the chefs sleeve pocket, its response time-3 to 6 seconds, its accuracy- plus/minus 2 degrees f. and of course, reliability, it takes a beating and keeps on working..
The reason I an on Amazon was because our vendor put the price up to $28.00 and I am looking for a less expensive source for my students and colleagues...
Oh, don't put any digital thermometers over a direct source of heat like a grill or in an oven, they don't work afterward. Move the food out of the heat source or to the edge of the grill to probe and don't leave the thermometer in the food while cooking....


Click Here to see more reviews about: Comark Digital Thermometer PDT300



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