So Pyrex explodes now?
#1
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Join Date: Jun 2011
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So Pyrex explodes now?
Just read that they changed their formula in the 90s, and now it's nowhere near as resistant to temperature changes as it used to be.
I just bought a new Pyrex baking dish yesterday for casseroles. Should I return it and just get one made out of ceramic?
Anyone have an issue with this? Or am I overthinking? If I take a hot mixture and put it into the dish before going into the oven, will that cause the thing to explode on me? I've seen some pics/stories online that look pretty bad.
I just bought a new Pyrex baking dish yesterday for casseroles. Should I return it and just get one made out of ceramic?
Anyone have an issue with this? Or am I overthinking? If I take a hot mixture and put it into the dish before going into the oven, will that cause the thing to explode on me? I've seen some pics/stories online that look pretty bad.
#2
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If it’s me, I would return to exchange for a cookware product that won’t make me fear any breakage.
i don’t want to even spend 15 minutes prepping something that might just spill in the oven and force me to start the prep one more time.
i don’t want to even spend 15 minutes prepping something that might just spill in the oven and force me to start the prep one more time.
#3
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Join Date: Jun 2001
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Just read that they changed their formula in the 90s, and now it's nowhere near as resistant to temperature changes as it used to be.
I just bought a new Pyrex baking dish yesterday for casseroles. Should I return it and just get one made out of ceramic?
Anyone have an issue with this? Or am I overthinking? If I take a hot mixture and put it into the dish before going into the oven, will that cause the thing to explode on me? I've seen some pics/stories online that look pretty bad.
I just bought a new Pyrex baking dish yesterday for casseroles. Should I return it and just get one made out of ceramic?
Anyone have an issue with this? Or am I overthinking? If I take a hot mixture and put it into the dish before going into the oven, will that cause the thing to explode on me? I've seen some pics/stories online that look pretty bad.
#4
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It's been happening for 20+ years now. I have a ton of Pyrex and it's never happened to me. I wouldn't be too concerned unless your regularly moved things straight from the freezer to the oven.
#5
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Thanks. That's comforting. I'm a bit wary of glass, having cut my hand pretty badly years ago while washing dishes in the sink. I have one recipe that calls for mixing up a rice/bean/chile concoction, then pouring in boiling water, and pouring all of that into a baking dish for cooking in the oven. Does that sound like a bad idea?
#6
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Thanks. That's comforting. I'm a bit wary of glass, having cut my hand pretty badly years ago while washing dishes in the sink. I have one recipe that calls for mixing up a rice/bean/chile concoction, then pouring in boiling water, and pouring all of that into a baking dish for cooking in the oven. Does that sound like a bad idea?
#7
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https://www.discovermagazine.com/the...s-report-finds
#8




Join Date: Jul 2014
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The US Pyrex is garbage tempered glass and has been for a few decades. The EU version is still borosilicate and holds up.
https://www.pyrex.eu/collections/gla...igh-resistance
https://www.pyrex.eu/collections/gla...igh-resistance
#9
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Thanks. That's comforting. I'm a bit wary of glass, having cut my hand pretty badly years ago while washing dishes in the sink. I have one recipe that calls for mixing up a rice/bean/chile concoction, then pouring in boiling water, and pouring all of that into a baking dish for cooking in the oven. Does that sound like a bad idea?
#10
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Thanks - the pyrex our parents used is a different type of glass. While it was just about indestructible, the new version is not:
https://www.discovermagazine.com/the...s-report-finds
https://www.discovermagazine.com/the...s-report-finds
#11



Join Date: Nov 2013
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The US Pyrex is garbage tempered glass and has been for a few decades. The EU version is still borosilicate and holds up.
https://www.pyrex.eu/collections/gla...igh-resistance
https://www.pyrex.eu/collections/gla...igh-resistance
#12




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A few months ago, I set a pyrex bowl on the stovetop and didn't realize the burner was on. I noticed after a few minutes and removed it, but then while waiting for it to cool down, the bowl shattered in my hands, (the top was still cool enough to handle), The pieces were not shards though, more like roundish crystals.
#13
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A few months ago, I set a pyrex bowl on the stovetop and didn't realize the burner was on. I noticed after a few minutes and removed it, but then while waiting for it to cool down, the bowl shattered in my hands, (the top was still cool enough to handle), The pieces were not shards though, more like roundish crystals.
I'm probably overthinking this, due in large part to generalized anxiety about covid and work and life ...
#15


Join Date: Dec 2004
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Posts: 794
My experience working with Pyrex lab glassware is that it shatters under two specific circumstances- dry glassware over a direct heat source (it's totally fine if there's a liquid in the vessel since the liquid modulates the heat and prevents thermal shock) and putting a raging hot beaker of water on a cold wet countertop resulting in downshock (if you put it on a towel it's fine). Even under these conditions, Pyrex glass shatters very rarely.
And I have read that it's okay to put frozen food in a Pyrex container directly into a pre-heated oven since the food absorbs the heat transmitted into the glass. Ultimately it's about the speed and evenness of the temperature changes (not the actual temperature) that causes shattering. YMMV.
And I have read that it's okay to put frozen food in a Pyrex container directly into a pre-heated oven since the food absorbs the heat transmitted into the glass. Ultimately it's about the speed and evenness of the temperature changes (not the actual temperature) that causes shattering. YMMV.
Last edited by chococat; Nov 29, 2020 at 10:21 pm



