Amy McCarthy is a former reporter at Eater, focusing on pop culture, policy and labor, and only the weirdest online trends. As pandemic restrictions that required mask-wearing and limited capacity for ...
There was a time when no respectable casserole or Jell-O salad was served in anything but a brightly colored piece of Pyrex glassware — and every cupboard was stacked high with the functional mixing ...
After a Le Creuset-loving Gen Z home chef posted a viral TikTok of her pricey stoneware cracking open on the hob, an article claimed that young people who love the vintage brand have no idea how to ...
You've definitely seen those old-fashioned Pyrex dishes somewhere. The brightly hued containers — often decorated with floral motifs — can be found at yard sales, grandparents' homes or even your own ...
A reader wrote in because he set his Pyrex bowl on the stove top to reduce some broth, and the bowl promptly “exploded.” It appears, through googling (and You Tubing), that a great many people do not ...
On 30 November 2016, the Facebook page "Punk Rock Homesteading" shared a report that vintage Pyrex dishes contain unsafe levels of lead. The linked article was published by Creative Green Living in ...
In 1915, an advertisement proclaiming, "Bake in a glass!" appeared in the pages of Good Housekeeping. Corning Glass Works in New York had created a product that allowed food to be mixed, baked and ...
All products featured here are independently selected by our editors and writers. If you buy something through links on our site, Gizmodo may earn an affiliate commission. Reading time 9 minutes Clear ...
The story of Pyrex glass began like most inventions do: with a problem. Bessie Littleton's earthenware casserole dish had cracked. It was 1914 and Littleton's husband, Jesse, was working as a ...