IMUSA 14in Carbon Metal Wok with Wooden Handles
$24.99
Worth: $24.99
(as of Feb 20, 2025 23:15:29 UTC – Particulars)
The IMUSA Carbon Metal Pure Wok is a must have for these embarking on an thrilling culinary journey into the world of Asian delicacies. This Wok is fabricated from carbon metal and is coated with a pure end that seasons over time. Its elegant exterior matches completely match any kitchen, and its flat base is designed to suit most cooking surfaces. The IMUSA Carbon Metal Pure Wok is available in a dimension of 14”. This wok has a wooden deal with and helper deal with that ensures a snug grip, permitting you to maneuver it effortlessly as you create culinary masterpieces. Whether or not you might be stir-frying, frying rice, noodles, meat, poultry, or sautéing meat, the IMUSA Carbon Metal Pure Wok delivers distinctive outcomes every time. Belief the IMUSA Carbon Metal Pure Wok for balanced, home-cooked meals. It would absolutely turn out to be your kitchen’s beloved companion, uniting custom, and innovation in each delectable creation and elevating your culinary expertise.
COOKING SURFACE: With a dimension of 14 inches, this wok supplies ample cooking house for versatile meal preparation
NATURAL INTERIOR SURFACE: Crafted from sturdy carbon metal, this wok incorporates a pure end with a pure wooden deal with, making certain sturdiness and including rustic allure
EFFICIENT LIGHTWEIGHT DESIGN: This wok heats rapidly, is light-weight, boast a cool-touch wooden deal with and helper deal with, develops seasoning over time and incorporates a flat base to suit most cooking surfaces
VERSATILE: Good for stir-frying, fried rice, noodles, meat, fish, greens, poultry, rice, and extra, offering ample cooking choices for all kinds of scrumptious dishes
ADAPTABLE AND HANDY: Fitted to an in depth vary of conventional dishes, fast preparations, and selling wholesome cooking practices, this versatile wok is a kitchen must-have
Prospects say
Prospects discover the wok purposeful and good for cooking. They admire its worth for cash. Nevertheless, some prospects report points with rust resistance and coating. Opinions differ on construct high quality, ease of cleansing, weight, and seasoning course of.
AI-generated from the textual content of buyer critiques
mangodrink –
My first wok, inexpensive to learn on but seems plenty good for daily use
I dont remember if it said anywhere, but the listing and packaging should make it clear that the wooden outer handle can be removed by unscrewing the metal loop. This is my first wok and I took the initial preseason removal by fire too far and scorched the wood.Fortunately it is pretty inexpensive, and I’ve been learning on it and find the wok easy to cook with after getting the first seasoning done (rub in tiny bit of oil, heat wok to smoking, cool). I burned enough of the handle thay it is now a little wobbly and needs a retighten every cook but I blame myself and carry on.Now, while the outer handle can be removed, the side wooden handle cannot, and worse, the metal it covers is not a full metal handle, there is a gap, so it feels really cheap there when it wobbles, which it does more now again because I scorched it during seasoning. Avoid getting that handle near open flame, and be careful letting the wok on high heat without any food to dump that heat into.Fortunately I haven’t found much need to use that side handle, it is light enough that for reasonably sized batches I can either carry it one or two handed on the long handle. I’ve even been able to practice pan toss-flipping one handed, but this is definitely becoming a forearm workout.Besides that I still like this as my first wok, but my second will probably have no nonremovable wood, although the next priced seems to be the Babish wok. My seasoning did not end up looking anywhere as clean as pro videos online, but it left a pretty low stick finish when heated and oiled properly before applying food.
Roland P. –
Release the breath of a dragon!
The carbon steel really does an awesome job with heat as long as you season it properly.Seasoning a wok literally means burning the steel to create carbon to make it harder and stronger.We call that trapping the breath of a dragon!PROS: – You get a great wok for a small chunk of change. – Works better than more expensive alternatives. – Non-stick gets better with more usage. – Food tastes better when cooked with carbon steel. – The more you use it, the better the food tastes as the “wok hei” develops complexities in flavor. – No need for any special utensils, feel free to use steel ones.CONS: – Not as easy cleanup as regular pots and pans. You will need to get used to cleaning it up after each use. – Have to season it well to take advantage of it’s full capabilities, and will need to be re-seasoned periodically. – Is a bit on the heavy side and is barely manageable with one hand. – Flat bottom is wider and would have been better if it was a bit narrower; that would make tossing stir-fry more efficient.RECOMMENDATION: – Get it, you won’t regret it as long as you follow some simple requirements of this wok! – You’re friends and family would be amazed on how good the food is cooked in this wok.
ROXANN A. –
Poor quality
Cooked once and the coating all burnt off and then turned rusty. Horrible smell in pan, black stuff peeled off in food.
M –
PSA regarding this WOK – things YOU NEED to know. (TL;DR: It’s good. Takes prep.)
I wanted to write this as a sort of public service announcement regarding this wok. I purchased the UNCOATED Carbon Steel Imusa wok.When it arrived, it was mildly damaged due to being thrown in a box haphazardly with a chainsaw bar that beat the heck out of it. Amazon worked with me so that I did not need to return it but also got a partial refund for the damage. None of that was IMUSA’s fault.The FIRST THING you need to know is that THIS IS AN UNCOATED WOK, however, IT COMES WITH A PROTECTIVE COATING. This coating is in place to prevent rust. There are lots of ways they could have done it, but this is what they chose. I do not know what the coating is made of, but it appears to be something at least somewhat wax based.DO NOT USE THIS WOK BEFORE YOU PREP IT.So, how do you prep it?You need to wash it, and then take stainless steel wool to the interior and exterior until you’ve gotten most of the protective coating off. IT WILL BEGIN TO RUST IF YOU DO NOT SEASON IT AFTER SO PLEASE CONTINUE READING. This is NORMAL for Carbon Steel AND Cast Iron cookware. Rust is the fault of the user, NOT THE PRODUCT.Okay? Ok. Let’s continue.It’s going to take a lot of hard work to truly get this coating off. Lots of elbow grease. Once you’ve done the best you can do and the pan no longer “appears” coated (it will start to look more dull and less shiny) you then need to heat this puppy up.You will not be able to do this adequately on anything except a fire or a gas stove. You can try a blowtorch, we did that for certain areas near the handle. You want to blue up the carbon steel. What that means is that it will turn “blue” in a way, a shade of metallic blue.You want to get the wok very hot, all over in even distribution until it changes colors. Once the whole wok has been properly heated and is one mostly uniform color, and you are sure all of the coating is off, you can begin the seasoning process.Take a bit of oil – I use coconut – and use the thinnest coat imaginable to coat the entire thing. Then repeat the heating process described above, wiping away any excess with tongs and a paper towel.Do this over and over again until it becomes a nice, uniform dark color. It doesn’t have to be perfect the first time, as after this you will continue to season it each time you cook. Try not to use metal utensils on it until it’s taken a good solid seasoning.Your first thing you cook in it should be an egg. Just put a lot of oil in the bottom for this (you won’t want to eat this egg) and cook up the egg. Something about the egg and the oil really does wonders for a carbon steel pan’s seasoning. Don’t try to move it immediately, let it cook for a minute before you start to move it around. Then once it’s free, move it around the pan and all over the sides until thoroughly cooked. Once it’s done, take it out, empty the excess oil, wipe the whole wok down to take out any excess oil, and heat it up again continuing to wipe any drips. Wipe that oil like your life depended on you getting it out.Now your pan is ready to use. Wash with soap and water as necessary, continue to season with oil and heat periodically.This is a really great wok and while there’s room for improvement, for the price it’s great and could potentially last a lifetime. The rivets are a bit poorly set, but I am a DIYer so I don’t mind re-riveting it when the time comes.
Kenneth T Avery –
Better than expected
This wok is fantastic.It arrived on time,the instructions for use and care are easy to understand . I am a new to this style of cooking and I really enjoy that you can deep fry ,stir fry and be very comfortable using this wok.This is a very sturdy wok with a comfortable and sturdy handle .
Danielle –
Très satisfaite de mon achat.
Température trop basse pour avoir des crêpes dorées. Temps trop cuisson trop long. à oublier ðð –
Mieux que lâacier inoxydable
Huard Michel –
Excellent, je lâai culotté avec aisance.
Philippe Bujold –
Good
KM –
Ce wok donne un goût formidable aux aliments, est léger et facile à entretenir. Il faut bien le nettoyer et le culotter avant de l’utiliser pour une première fois, mais c’est assez facile à faire. Je réussis à m’en servir sur mon poêle en vitrocéramique.