If you’re serious about cooking, having the best saucepan set in your kitchen is essential. No matter how experimental your cookery, you won’t be able to advance your culinary skills if you only have one pan. The best saucepan set is also one of those fundamental life investments that people make, when moving out of the family home, getting married, moving onto the housing ladder, getting divorced and so on… buying a really expensive saucepan set can cheer you up and take your mind off things in a click of a button.
What we don’t suggest is that you randomly buy the first saucepan set you see, just because it’s cheap… there are so many reasons you might buy a saucepan set but it’s an infrequent purchase so you want the best saucepans, not the cheapest.
Reading: Best stainless steel sauce pan
Remember when you moved out of home at your parents’ insistence, and you got that cheap sh*t saucepan set made of aluminium covered in ‘non-stick’ that, with hindsight, you now realise was basically some paint? Well you don’t want a pan set like that. You want one of these saucepan sets… The best saucepan sets.
If you can’t imagine having a decent kitchen setup without the best quality cookware (we can’t), have a look at the best Le Creuset deals. We also have a roundup of the best non-stick frying pans that won’t peel after one or two uses. And, of course, the best chef’s knives
The best saucepan sets to buy, in order
• In the UK the best price on this pan set is at Horwood (established 1896) (opens in new tab)
Okay, call off the search, I have found your perfect saucepan set. Or at least the best pan set if you don’t want to spend some insane amount on overpriced, and yet oh-so-enticing, Le Creuset pans.
Stellar kindly sent me this sample and I must admit I was fairly sure I had never heard of Stellar. I’m perfectly happy with the set of pans I’ve used for the last 20+ years and had no need of an upgrade. My 20-year-old pans have gone everywhere with me and been battered and misused and dishwashed thousands of times.
I bought them from an offer in a Sunday newspaper the first time I felt like I had enough cash and they have endured brilliantly ever since.
So anyway, I got these new Stellar pans home and I really liked them, but how can you tell that a pan set you like today is going to still be pleasing you 5, 10, 15 years later?
That aside, I liked them. Realistically this set has everything a first-homer or newly-wed or even a pan upgrader could want. You’ve got 2 stainless steel saucepans and a non-stick milk pan and frying pan. The quality of all of them is excellent and they all work with every type of hob.
The non-stick pans seems substantially covered in Teflon, or whatever non-stick stuff it is that they use nowadays (please don’t use them on a really high heat or dishwasher them too much; that’s not what you do with non-stick pans).
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The steel pans are great – good sizes, robust, handsome enough but not so you’re worried about whacking them about. They’re easy to clean and the lids are cunningly vented so you can drain water off without needing a colander or sieve.
All the pans heat up quickly and evenly, and the ‘Stay Cool’ handles do indeed ‘stay cool’. You know how I know that? I clumsily set fire to one of the steel pans while attempting to boil sprouts – hey, I got distracted – and came back to find the pan literally glowing, it was that hot. But I could still lift it using the handle (okay, and an oven glove to be fair). Oh, and I still am using that pan, though it has changed colour a bit.
As I say, I was perfectly happy with my hardy, 20-year-old set of pans, but using these ones did pique my curiosity. I decided I would find out who the no-name brand was that I bought a pan set from 2 decades ago, by filling in a little form in a ripped-out newspaper page and posting it off along with a cheque.
(For younger readers, a newspaper was a bit like this website, but on something called ‘paper’ and a ‘cheque’ was 1990’s answer to Bitcoin.)
It turned out those pans were made by Stellar.
So I think I can vouch for the longevity of this brand’s pans. Stellar has approximately 4 billion pan sets (opens in new tab) to choose from and I seriously doubt you’ll find a better set of saucepans for the prices they ask.
These stylish pans from Robert Welch are made from high-quality 18/10 stainless steel, and are suitable for use on any heat source. The set includes three sizes – 1.38-litres, 2.2L and 3.2L. One of the best things about Campden pans is that they’re generally taller and narrower than other saucepans of similar capacity, so they take up less room on the hob and in your hard-pressed cupboards.
Heating is fast and uniform thanks to a core of copper sandwiched between two layers of stainless steel – you can actually see the vein of copper if you hold a pan up at an angle. The stainless steel lids are beautifully styled, too, and fit perfectly, with absolutely zero wobble. If you want a top set of saucepans that will look as good as new after years of use, step right over here.
• Read our full Robert Welch Campden 3-piece saucepan set review
This three-piece suite of non-stick saucepans from Le Creuset is just fantastic. The pans feel weighty and solid without being overly heavy while Le Creuset says that the new three-layer reinforced non-stick coating is ‘four times stronger’. Given the price of this pan set, you probably want to take Le Creuset’s word for that rather than test it out with metal cooking utensils.
The set contains a 16cm, 18cm and 20cm saucepan each with solid stainless steel helper handles and glass lids, and they’re suitable for all hob types including induction. They’re also oven and dishwasher safe and they come with a lifetime guarantee.
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The metal handles look much more premium than plastic handles but we did find that in use the lid handles can get quite hot.
We love everything about these pans. The price may be a little hard to swallow, but you know what else is hard to swallow? Food that’s badly cooked due to you using a crap saucepan set. This set is discounted below its quite high recommended retail price from time to time. Today’s best prices for these pans are listed in our pricing widget above.
This 70s Habitat-style retro set has two big things in its favour: not only is it cheap, it’s also available everywhere all the time, which is not true of a lot of good quality cheap saucepan sets.
is comprised of three cauldron-shaped pans – 16, 18 and 20cm – and forms part of Tower’s Scandi range of ‘minimalism designed’ cookware and small electrical appliances. Their spherical shape doesn’t necessarily help with heat radiation but the look is appealingly countrified and, if we were to be a little disparaging, reminiscent of what grandma used on her Aga.
Available in grey or white with non-stick cream interiors, the Scandi set’s bodies are constructed out of aluminium bonded to induction-ready steel. They’re very light in the hand and a good choice for anyone with arthritis or weak wrists. The chunky dishwasher-proof ‘wood effect’ (ie: plastic) handles, meanwhile, provide excellent grip and remain cool to the touch, though the jury’s out on their waxy feel. The whole set is topped off with tempered glass lids fitted with the same wood effect lid knobs and handy steam release vents.
If you’re on a tight budget, have a country-style kitchen and like bowl-shaped cookware then these are a worthwhile choice. Seriously, just pay £50 more and get the Stellar set, though.
• Read our Tower Scandi saucepan set review
This five-piece pan set consists of a 14cm milk pan, 16cm and 18cm saucepans, and 20cm and 24cm frying pans, all coated with Circulon’s iconic, non-stick surface, which features raised circles on the inside base which are designed to increase the durability of the non-stick and allow air to flow around the food for better results.
The black anodised finish gives this pan set a classy look while the shatter resistant glass lids allow you to keep an eye on what’s cooking without lifting the lid. This is particularly useful if you have an induction hob: such hobs don’t get hot enough to cause the panic-inducing hissing noise as a pan boils over so being able to see the water rising before that happens is a bonus.
The pans’ construction is also ideal for induction hobs: the stainless steel base contains the ferrous metal needed to work on an induction hob while the aluminium sides ensure rapid conduction of heat throughout the pan.
The heat-resistant handles mean that you don’t need to reach for an oven glove or towel before you can remove the pan from a hot hob – or hurriedly thrust your hand under the cold tap when you forget.
If we had one complaint about this pan set it’s that the anodised coating does tend to wear off over time – both where the pan edges rub against each other during storage and in the base of the pans from utensils or perhaps over-enthusiastic scrubbing during cleaning.
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