This was posted 3 months 16 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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Tramontina Professional Cookware Set, 7Pc, Stainless Steel $329.95 Delivered @ Tramontina

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On the verge of buying our first home, my wife has already started looking to renew everything we have. Coincidentally, we came across this deal. We have a knife set from them, and their quality is outstanding.

It's a high-quality brand made in Brazil, and it comes with a great discount.

1x 20cm Frying Pan
1x 24cm Frying Pan
1x 24cm Covered Deep Sauté Pan with Tempered Glass Lid
1x 1.4L Covered Sauce Pan with Tempered Glass Lid
1x 2.8L Covered Sauce Pan with Tempered Glass Lid
1x 5.6L Covered Sauce Pot with Tempered Glass Lid
1x Steamer (Fits 2.8L Sauce Pan)

Lifetime guarantee against manufacturing defects.

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Tramontina Australia
Tramontina Australia

closed Comments

  • +4

    So that's a clad bottom and not multi-ply construction for the whole thing.

  • +2

    Above comment is correct, the Tramontina Professional series is only clad bottom, while the Tramontina Grano series has a full tri-ply clad body. I've got the grano and it's a fantastic frypan.

    • how can normally i tell if something is full tri-ply clad body or not?

      • +3

        See the giant disc on the base of the pans.

      • +1

        Typically it'll be in the description. These are the two 30cm Tramontina frypans (Professional vs Grano), and it'll either state "Tri-ply base" or "Tri-ply body". As for other brands, research is your best bet. I know with the tramontina, you can see on the professional the hard line where it goes from base to side, as opposed to the grano which is a uniform piece of metal for the entire thing.

        https://tramontinaaustralia.com.au/products/tramontina-profe…

        https://tramontinaaustralia.com.au/products/tramontina-grano…

      • +1

        The easiest way to spot them is there's usually a separate line that's basically a seam that separates the main body to the bottom of the pan. That's usually your sign of a clad bottom.

        A multi-ply one piece construction has no seam, it'll just be smooth one piece all the way through.

    • Agreed I have the Tramontina Grano 30cm 5.6L fry pan, not the shallow one, cost a bit, but it's my go to for any batch cooking + weekly meal prep, it's great!

  • +1

    Is there anything better compared to the Scanpan Impact 7 Piece Cookware Set?
    https://www.appliancesonline.com.au/product/scanpan-impact-7…

    • I'm wanting to get rid of my old non stick pots and pans and move to stainless. These look great for the price. Anyone had any experience with them?

      • I was planning to get these to replace my non stick as well. I did a deep dive on ChatGPT about the differences between stainless steel pots and pans and learnt that these disc base stainless cookware options are pretty shit. (Read comments above about disc base vs full tri-ply.) The whole point of buying stainless is to buy for life so, and with tri-ply pans on sale being only a little bit more expensive than Scanpan Impact, I definitely would not recommend these.

    • I'm not sure but i didn't like the impact, I'm sure it's fine, but I went for the STS range which seemed a bit better built with smoothed out all the handles etc, maybe personal preference.

    • +1

      Had the impact replaced everything with Cuisinart Multiclad for things i needed. Hated the Impact. Buy once buy right

      • Cuisinart looks solid but double price :(

        • Wait for Tramontina Grana range on sale. Will be more expensive than Scanpan Impact but not double. Refer to my other comment above.

  • Can anyone recommend a good stainless steel pan? I started watching reviews and ended up on a few brands like heston, all clad, demeyere but they don't seem to sell directly in Australia?

    Amazon prices are super expensive ($400+ or if they are within my $200 ish budget, it's for a tiny pan that cooks 1 toast).

    Basically after a 26 cm SS pan that is fully clad, fully bonded, not crappy attachment of the handle around $250 ish that i can basically use for life (20y). Is that too much to ask?

    My research reached a stalemate too - professional reviews seem to only care about selling pans, everyday reviews are written by people may not properly heat the pan tl the right temperature and complain about sticking issues.

    • +1

      I was pretty surprised by how limited the fully clad options are here in Aus. Myer and Kitchen Warehouse both stock Tramontina Grana. 30cm is $100. There is a 26cm but I think it's only in a set and currently sold out. Personally I'm waiting for a better price on Merten and Storck which is rivetless - easier to clean but you might consider it 'crappy attachment' so probably not for you. Kirkland (Costco) apparently makes an All Clad dupe which was highly rated but not available year round.

      • Yeah I’ve been trying to find a decent saute pan for the last month and god damn our choices suck here. Especially for my annoying as shit 23cm induction.

    • +1

      Have you looked at SolidTeknics? I really want to upgrade to Stainless Steel pans and one day when I have convinced myself, I will probably buy a set from them. Aus made and all solid and they have a few different thicknesses too. Seem to be good quality.

      • Thanks, I didn't know SolidTeknics exist. I had a look at their noni line and it looks good.

        My only issues is that it's a pure stainless steel piece (I am unsure how it will perform with heat distribution). There is also a lack of reviews from independent professionals.

        For the 31cm it's $380 which is a bit pricey to take gamble for me.

        I ended up with a Tramontina Grano 30cm and 26cm from the official au website that came to just over $200 for both pans. It's half my budget but there was nothing apart from tramontina grano that didn't cost too crazy, has pretty popular independent review.

        Cuisinart didn't have the sizes I wanted.

        It's a stepping stone for me to stop using non-stick.

        Maybe I'll wait a few years before I jump on the SolidTeknics noni pan

  • +1

    Maybe Essteele
    https://www.essteele.com.au/products/essteele-eternita-clad-…

    Or check out Solidteknics stainless line

    Or go Cuisinart
    https://amzn.asia/d/9eaNZNM

  • Can anyone tell me if these will work on an induction cooktop? Very keen but last thing i need is for it to not work :(

    • yes, it is induction stove compatible.

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