There are some Reddit threads saying that digital thermometers can go haywire because of the strong magnetic fields. That's not surprising to me - thermocouples generally only put out a few mV, so if you've got gigantic magnetic fields varying along the thermocouple wires, the induced voltages may dominate over the thermal voltage.
Something that might work would be if you could find a cooktop with each "burner" having a pyrometer underneath to see the temperature of the pan. I don't know if such a thing exists. It would probably be expensive if it does.
Here's a Houzz thread where someone says you want controls with lots of increments (21 for a Bosch something or other).
Could you use an old-fashioned glass "candy" thermometer and tweak things yourself?
No personal experience with these things, but I'm strongly considering induction when we finally redo our kitchen... Let us know what you decide!
HTH a little.
Cheers,
Scott.
Something that might work would be if you could find a cooktop with each "burner" having a pyrometer underneath to see the temperature of the pan. I don't know if such a thing exists. It would probably be expensive if it does.
Here's a Houzz thread where someone says you want controls with lots of increments (21 for a Bosch something or other).
Could you use an old-fashioned glass "candy" thermometer and tweak things yourself?
No personal experience with these things, but I'm strongly considering induction when we finally redo our kitchen... Let us know what you decide!
HTH a little.
Cheers,
Scott.