Propane cooking appliances provide convenience, sharp design, and excellent performance in any kitchen — from starter homes to high-end custom projects. An attractive, stainless-steel gas range that combines a propane cooktop and oven is perfect for space-challenged homeowners, while propane also offers commercial-grade ranges, indoor grills and cooktops, in-wall double ovens, and other gas cooking applications in luxurious custom kitchens. In all cases, propane gives the homeowner ample cooking performance and precise temperature control in a wide variety of product designs.
High-performance gas ranges, cooktops, and ovens are preferred by a majority of professional chefs and designers, for their own use as well as for their clients. Why? Propane ranges, cooktops, and ovens allow for greater control of heat levels. Instant-on burners allow cooking to start right away. Propane burners are also instant-off. This capability provides a safety feature not found in electric cooktops, which can remain dangerously hot for a few minutes after they’ve been turned off. A propane burner’s instant-off feature also allows the food to start cooling immediately and prevents overcooking.
Beyond these core benefits of propane burners in ranges, cooktops, and even indoor grills, propane kitchen appliances also offer:
Propane ranges, ovens, and other cooking appliances will have wide variations in energy use and costs — depending primarily on frequency of use. Homeowners who use their range and/or oven daily will use more energy, while infrequent chefs will have low usage rates. A general annual estimate for propane use in the kitchen is 25 gallons per year.
Cooking appliances are generally not a major energy end-use in the home, and residential cooking appliances are not labeled by the Energy Star program. In many parts of the country, however, the benefits of gas and propane cooking go to a much higher level. In regions like California, where peak demand period on the electric grid often occurs in the late afternoons of hot summer days, electric cooking is a major load. In fact, the energy factor of electric cooking — which compares its overall energy use to its energy use in peak demand times — makes it the second-most significant load in the home, behind air-conditioning. For this reason, switching to propane cooking can ease peak load issues with the electric grid and reduce electric bills in the process.
Propane cooking results in lower CO2 emissions than electric cooking. This is true because a significant portion of electricity production comes from coal or oil-fired generation plants which release CO2 emissions as part of the generation process. Based on typical cooking usage levels and the emissions which electricity generation creates, propane cooking has roughly 30 percent fewer CO2 emissions.
Check out the Propane Education & Research Council website for more information.
ProGas
(Zelienople) 724-452-7262
ProGas
(Aliquippa) 724-375-0001
Summit Propane
(White Haven) 570-636-1959
CMP Energy
(Philipsburg) 814-342-3620
CMP Energy
(Northern Cambria) 814-948-7510
Sullivan Heating and Cooling
(Bath) 888-815-8384
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Liberty Propane (Ottsville) 610-847-6000
Liberty Propane (Allentown) 610-439-9000
WOC Energy (Towanda) 570-265-6673
WOC Energy (Mansfield) 570-662-2329
ProGas (Zelienople) 724-452-7262
ProGas (Aliquippa) 724-375-0001
CMP Energy (Philipsburg) 814-342-3620
CMP Energy (Northern Cambria) 814-948-7510
© Copyright 2023 Pennsylvania Propane. All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy | Website by LPGI.