Glass plates, chilled, are great for salads.
Even amongst glazed pottery plates there is considerable variance in durability. Earthenware can be quite porous and fragile. Stoneware is tough as nails. Porcelain is also quite tough.
Ah, yes. They won’t break as easily as ceramic/porcelain, but when they do break, it’s into horrific long razor-edged shards.
I’ve picked up my share of broken tableware and glasses, and the only ones I ever cut my fingers on doing so were Corelle and a Corning cake pan.
Yes. They are like 3 layers of special glass under high internal tension, I suspect. That’s why they explode into sharp shards when they do break - it just isn’t as easy to break them.
I dropped a corelle bowl with very hot mashed potatoes, and it virtually disintegrated.
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We’ve had Fiestaware ceramic plates and bowls for over 20 years. In all of that time, we’ve broken exactly one plate. The surface also wears very well; none of the plates are substantially scratched or marred by all of that contact with utensils.
Neither my lovely bride nor I are exactly blessed with high dexterity, so our plates get dropped and bounced regularly, with no harm. Yeah, if you dropped one from five feet up, it’d probably break, but short drops happen all the time, and the plates don’t break.
It’s a conspiracy by archeologists. They have thousands and thousands of years of pottery shards to work with and don’t want to deprive archeologists thousands and thousands of years in the future of the same bounty.
Same experience here…except the one broken piece I’ve experienced actually arrived in the mail. I knocked a small Fiestaware vase off of a shelf once; it hit the floor with a sort of rolling motion, and didn’t break or chip. Scuffed the floor a bit though.
What condition are they in? My parents donated their '70s stoneware (see here) to a shelter that was in need of durable kitchen furnishings.
Metal dishes are really popular in the Indian subcontinent for hygienic & historical reasons.
I’ll make it easy:
Have been a slob bachelor beating on a set for 30 years and still haven’t even dinged one.
Put in oven, drop on tile floor, swat flies (OK, last one was stretching it).
Damned near indestructible and look like (plain white) china. Has the same heft as well.
Just slightly chipped. Interesting idea, I’ll keep that in mind. We donate most of our used stuff already.
Thanks for the responses. Yes, I do have some Corelle plates now that I look a little more carefully and they do hold up fairly well. It is the older antique plates that I inherited that have been broken most often on me