It's also very important to note that Hestan is partnering with several stove manufacturers who will use Hestan's tech (and pans) and some of those offer app-free control. For instance, the induction stoves in GE's Café line allow you to dial by degree, right from the stovetop.
That said, if you're down with some tapping, and I know app dependence to run a kitchen appliance doesn't bother everybody, the guided cooking options are abundant and expert.
This is possible because Hestan employs the accomplished chef Philip Tessier and a skilled kitchen crew who have created a broad selection of quality recipes, backed up with an app worth its salt. It's hard to overstate how much better the user experience is when recipes have been tailored by a professional crew as opposed to crowdsourced unreliably, as some apps and manufacturers do.
That omelette, for instance, is divided into steps, and everything from whisking eggs to melting butter to washing the pan is made easier with an accompanying description and short video. This is great if you get stuck wondering how fine you're supposed to dice something or how to roll that omelette into a lovely torpedo shape. (Hint: Start rolling with the spatula while the pan's still horizontal.)
I gobbled my lovely omelette and sped on, following Hestan's version of clams with chorizo, substituting mussels for clams and reveling in the well-thought-out recipe. I wasn't really hungry after the eggs, but the mussels, tinted yellowy-red from paprika, took on meaty undertones from the chorizo and I took a lunch break, watched tugboats go down the canal, and inhaled two pounds of pillowy bivalves.
Pressing on, I made near-perfect brioche French toast and some lovely poached pears, noting that I probably wouldn't have tried the latter without the boost of assurance that Hestan's setup gave me. I made fajitas, roasted peaches with a hazelnut vinaigrette, and pan-seared both a steak and some salmon. Cleverly, you enter the thickness of the protein before you drop it in the pan, which tells the setup how hard and long to cook to dial in your desired doneness.
Well Done
The Hestan Smart Induction Cooktop certainly has its imperfections. The app was ever-so-slightly buggy, though it's a safe bet that much of that will get ironed out with app and firmware updates once people begin using it en masse. I would love to see the equivalent of the "a little longer" option that we see on some toasters, allowing, say, some extra-crispy edges on that French toast. That update-ability is also a bonus, allowing the product to get better over time, so maybe I'll get my wish. The big whiff, though, is not being able to dial up temperature control direct from the stove, phone free.
Hestan's cooktop is an important and exciting step forward in cooking. Guided cooking, especially when it's as well-done as this, is an excellent use of the smart kitchen. But the biggest long-term gain with this stovetop is the ability to cook to the degree. It's particularly exciting to think of recipes being written with exact stovetop temperatures, à la "set your burner to 400 degrees/medium-high." While we're beginning to see and hear about other companies' similar setups, I hope every one of them follows suit—this degree of control will make better cooks of us all.