Taylor Digital Cooking Thermometer/Timer
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| List Price: | $25.99 |
| Price: | $17.29 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
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Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
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Average customer review:Product Description
Professional combination thermometer with timer. Lets you cook food to exact tempratures without opening the ovendoor. Durable Stainless Steel Meat Probe On-off Switch For Long Battery Life (Battery Included) Magnetic Back To Stick To Oven Door Or Grill Leg Easy-To-Read Digital Display Precision Performance
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #577 in Kitchen & Housewares
- Brand: Taylor
- Model: 1470
- Dimensions: 2.00" h x 4.00" w x 4.00" l, .40 pounds
Features
- Remotely displays food's temperatures and time elapsed while it's cooking
- Programmable control panel for cooking by precise temperature or time
- Alarm sounds when cooking time or desired temperature reached
- Stainless-steel probe goes into food, 4-foot cord leads to thermometer
- Folds flat for compact storage; magnetic back for mounting on metal surface
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Opening the oven to check on a food's temperature means wasting the cook's time and losing oven temperature and moisture--not to mention a face full of steam. This thermometer prevents those problems. Insert the instrument's 6-inch stainless-steel probe into a roast beef or turkey and monitor the time and temperature (from 32 to 392 degrees F) on the thermometer's large digital display, which connects to the probe with a 4-foot cord. The control panel sets cooking time and temperature, and an alarm sounds when either is reached. Fully opened, the thermometer/timer is 5 inches high, but it folds flat for compact storage. Magnets on the back permit it to be temporarily mounted on a metal surface. --Fred Brack
Customer Reviews
Second thoughts after several more years of use
I've been using this item for ten years now, and wish I could find something more reliable. I'm now on my third unit, and fourth probe. I still use it almost daily, but I've found it to be just not very durable. Even worse: I can't trust it.
The probes, always short-lived, can be damaged by heat greater than 350F. That is just too low - there are many times when hotter ovens are necessary. When a probe goes bad, there is no indication until an expensive roast gets carbonized. This, of course, always seems to happen when guests are present.
I regret giving such an enthusiastic first review. I wish I could reduce the number of stars I awarded. However, most of what I wrote still applies, so here it is in full:
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This is the best of the corded remote thermometers. Take it as a given that it is fairly short-lived. Now, don't hold that against it -- it has a hard job to do, it does it very well, and (what none of the other reviewers seem to realize) it does come with a lifetime guarantee. If you take care to not expose the probe to temperatures above 350 F, it should last.
My first one lasted four years, and I was completely at a loss when it broke. Once you've cooked with a remote thermometer, you will not willingly go back to "guess-n-estimate," or supposed "instant read" thermometers that actually take 15 seconds while the oven quickly cools down and your wrist-hairs start to singe and curl.
I used to be anxiously uncertain about making roast beef. Now, I bring it home, trim a little fat off, stick the probe in the center. Two minutes elapsed time, and I can kick back until it's time to make the pan gravy. Perfect (let me emphasize that) PERFECT every time.
(Amazon used to stock the Maverick twin-probe cordless thermometer that monitors two temperatures and comes with a belt-clip pager. Ridiculous gadget overkill? Not if you have another life beside cooking, like (say) children. Hopefully they'll stock it again.)
The buttons are well-made; the display is bright and clear; Setting time and/or temperature is a snap; battery life is about 1 1/2 years when left on all the time. I covered mine in olive oil/flour/fish sauce/raw ground beef/balsamic vinegar/whatever and it still worked (hint: the buttons are not water-resistant, so turn it upside down and wipe with a soapy sponge, then rinse the same way).
You can calibrate your unit by sticking the probe in melting ice (for 32 F) and briskly-boiling water (for 212 F), but both of mine were spot-on, so you might skip this step.
Uses you might not think of: Putting the probe in a big pot of water you're boiling for pasta. You can relax, knowing you'll be buzzed when it's finally boiling.
Sticking the probe out of a closed window in the late Fall to warn you to harvest your last tomatoes.
Sticking the probe in the middle of a swordfish steak, setting it for 125-130 F, and knowing that you will get utterly PERFECT swordfish by the time it is served.
Sticking it in the middle of the largest meatball you are simmering in sauce -- you will feel completely secure that they are safe to feed to your children.
When I'm cooking at a friend's house, I bring my big shop apron, my knives, my pastry scraper, and this thermometer.
One last piece of advice: Stay away from the Polder models -- very poor design, engineering, and quality control.
Wonderful product, short lived :-(
Even when directions are followed rigorously, the probes on these guys are prone to melting down. I've purchased one from all the major distributors, and they all work the same. Taylor or somebody needs to sell a 10-pak of probes, instead of me buying a whole new unit every 4 months... They do work great though. I use an older gas oven that has trouble maintaining proper cooking temperature. The secondary dial that I've installed inside can read as much as 50 degrees different from the digital dial on the oven. Because of this, I prefer to probe and track the cooking temp of the food instead so that I can provide a perfectly cooked product. I also use this for making tea, as 212 is too hot for good tea, and 185 to 195 is a better temperature.
Still, the probe does melt down as other have said. I typically get about 30 to 50 uses before I need to purchase another. The problem occurs mostly when the oven temp exceeds 350, as I lose most probes when baking breads. Still, I can't live without it, I just wish Taylor would start selling a package of probes for my dozen `timers' that I have sitting around the kitchen. It would be 5 stars if the probes didn't die.
Replacment probes for this great product
Use this all the time, but be careful on Gas Grill as the probe can get cooked, Happened to me, and No On-line parts manual, but company did respond to e-mail with purchase and replacment info, Recommend buying a repalcment probes.
Parts INFO------
Taylor Model #1470 additional probes are available at the listed price of
$5.00 each. Taylor does not take credit cards or Cod, personal check or
money order will do. Please when ordering please write the part number
(#1470RP) somewhere on the check or money order. Please make out to the
following;
Taylor Precision Products
2220 Entrada del Sol
Las Cruces, NM 88001
Attn: E. Salas
