Editor’s Note: We have since reviewed the updated version of this pan, the Always Pan 2.0 (8/10, WIRED Recommends).
My wife Elisabeth and I own a fancy All-Clad pan and, for the life of us, we can't remember how it ended up in our kitchen. As far as we're concerned, it just appeared there one day. Did one of us inherit it from an ex? Did I steal it from my mom? (Hi, Mom!) Seriously, no idea.
At first, the design of this pan felt funny. With a bit of research, I learned it's called a d5 Stainless-Steel Essential Pan, a $179 All-Clad model available only through Williams-Sonoma. (All-Clad also makes a $200 "Weeknight Pan" that's very similar.) It's sort of like a 12-inch sauté pan with sidewalls that are taller than normal—tall enough that you can put four quarts of liquid in it. Over the course of the last couple of years, I've come to use it more and more. You can sear or braise in there and it's big enough to make soup, but not as heavy as a cast-iron pan or Dutch oven. Also, that extra sidewall height keeps hot oil from splattering onto the stovetop when sautéing in it.
When news reached me about a new pan from a company called Our Place—the Always Pan—I was curious. It was smaller but had the same basic shape as my All-Clad, plus a particularly high-domed lid and an intriguing square handle. It felt like a nice excuse to do a deeper dive on the basic design. Is it "essential"? The answer, especially the comparison between the two pans, surprised me.



