A pie in an orange silicon pan, with a coffee pot and glass behind it - K.Kargona/Shutterstock As we enter the heart of baking season (which, weirdly enough, lines up almost perfectly with the holiday ...
Researchers find a specific type of bakeware may leach compounds into your food. A recent study found that silicone bakeware compounds may also get into the air while baking. More research is needed ...
Researchers tested silicone baking molds and found that siloxane compounds can migrate into food and indoor air. The good news? There’s an easy fix. Researchers from Environment and Climate Change ...
A study published in the Journal of Hazardous Materials found that synthetic chemicals called siloxanes can leak into both the air and the food when baking with silicone bakeware. Researchers detected ...
IF IT WAS a beauty contest, silicone bakeware would win the prize in any kitchen. It’s soft and cute, floppy and fun and downright pretty when you stack it all together. Pink bundt pans, baby blue ...
The popular bakeware releases "understudied" chemicals into the air that have been linked to reproductive and liver toxicity Getty Siloxanes — chemicals in silicone — are “understudied” but have been ...
We've all heard of silicone oven mitts. Now there are silicone baking pans. They're flexible and rubbery, and feel like they'd melt. They don't. But do they work well enough you'd pay $25 for one?
As we enter the heart of baking season (which, weirdly enough, lines up almost perfectly with the holiday season), many home bakers are assessing their cake tins, loaf pans, and molds, and realizing ...
Researchers from Environment and Climate Change Canada found that silicone bakeware can release cyclic siloxanes — chemicals formed during manufacturing — into food and indoor air. The study ...