Burnt_Toast
Assistant Cook
- Joined
- Nov 2, 2004
- Messages
- 34
What the does it do exactly?
You are soooo right there, Robo! I never knew how amazing these things can be until I got a really good, high-capacity vent hood last year. I never have any kitchen smells anywhere else in the house when I use it and it cuts the amount of grease that finds it's way around the kitchen down to almost nothing! I have open shelving now for my appliances and my cookware and even rarely used items require nothing more than a dust-off before use. Totally awesome!Proper ventilation is perhaps the most important tool in your kitchen. I now cook many things I never cooked before I got proper outdraft ventilation. Food odors and grease do not linger in the air, and the smoke alarm does not go off just because I'm frying bacon!
But you'd be surprised what passes for a range hood these days.
When we were looking for a new (used) house 4 years ago, we went into one very nice remodeled place that we really liked.
When I went into the kitchen, I noticed the gas range was against an interior wall, and there was a combination microwave-range hood above the stove.
Because there was a bedroom on the floor immediately above the kitchen, I began wondering how the stove vented. I opened the cabinets above the microwave-range hood and confirmed my suspicion -- there was no vent to the outside.
I turned the vent on and discovered it had a fan to suck up all the hot air, CO2, carbon monoxide, and cooking fumes and blow them back into the room, right into the face of anyone standing in front of the stove! What a novel concept! How useful is that?
I asked the real estate agent who was sitting on the house about it, and she explained that it was a "recirculating vent." Un huh, right!
So I sez to her, "So you mean the fan sucks all the hot air and gases off the stove and blows it back in my face?" "Well, yes, that's the way it works," she answered, rather indignantly, as if I were the idiot in the room.
What's next, a garbage disposal that recirculates food scraps onto the kitchen floor?
The most important reason for having a good hood that vents to the outside, is that it gets rid of the carbon monoxide left over from your gas stove or oven. If you are using electric, it also gets rid of smells and smoke.
But you'd be surprised what passes for a range hood these days.
When we were looking for a new (used) house 4 years ago, we went into one very nice remodeled place that we really liked.
When I went into the kitchen, I noticed the gas range was against an interior wall, and there was a combination microwave-range hood above the stove.
Because there was a bedroom on the floor immediately above the kitchen, I began wondering how the stove vented. I opened the cabinets above the microwave-range hood and confirmed my suspicion -- there was no vent to the outside.
I turned the vent on and discovered it had a fan to suck up all the hot air, CO2, carbon monoxide, and cooking fumes and blow them back into the room, right into the face of anyone standing in front of the stove! What a novel concept! How useful is that?
I asked the real estate agent who was sitting on the house about it, and she explained that it was a "recirculating vent." Un huh, right!
So I sez to her, "So you mean the fan sucks all the hot air and gases off the stove and blows it back in my face?" "Well, yes, that's the way it works," she answered, rather indignantly, as if I were the idiot in the room.
What's next, a garbage disposal that recirculates food scraps onto the kitchen floor?