Your cart is empty.
Your cart is empty.This professional weight formed metal bakeware is a wonderful addition to any kitchen. PFOA-free non-stick coating allows for easy release and effortless clean up. Fragile foods are easy to unmold with removal band and sturdy buckle. Designed for cheesecakes and other desserts the smooth locking mechanism and tight seal make this pan simple to use. Reliable and long lasting with a 10 Cup capacity. The 9-inch springform accommodates standard size recipes.
Hannah
Reviewed in Canada on September 9, 2024
Good quality non stick cheesecake pan.
Steven Oshry
Reviewed in Australia on March 20, 2024
You pay for it, but great quality
Kelley
Reviewed in the United States on November 28, 2024
This pan makes beautiful gluten free cakes and the arm makes it super easy to open the pan and remove the cake flawlessly.This is my first spring form pan and it works great! Highly recommend this product.
Meera Girija Tadimeti
Reviewed in India on November 26, 2024
Strange to see no branding on the pan. Usually it comes with brand logo. Quality is decent
Arijit N.
Reviewed in India on January 26, 2024
Received a product which was probably damaged in transit or defective product was shipped by seller. The pan looks to be of good quality though.
D. PENCE
Reviewed in the United States on September 8, 2018
Original review (October 2018): "This Nordic Ware 9" springform pan is well constructed of good material. It's sturdy, but light. The nonstick coating has never allowed food to stick, and I have used it to bake a couple of cheesecakes, a regular pastry cake, and I even tried the Black Bean Tortilla Pie recipe posted by reviewer Cassidy V. K.(it was very good!). The latching mechanism is easy to open and close, and the seal around the bottom edge is as tight and impervious as can be expected. I experienced no leakage when cooking the black bean dish and pastry cake. Had some seepage (from inside to outside) when baking the cheesecakes. And if I am investing the the time and effort required when making a cheesecake, I am wrapping my spring form pan, any brand, in foil to ensure that I don't end up having the water bath leaking through, thereby ruining the product. It takes but a minute or so, and is time well spent.UPDATE (November 2019): Sadly, after 13 months of owning and using this NordicWare pan, the nonstick coating has begun flaking off of the inside surface of the latching side piece only. I have been the pan's sole user, and I have been meticulously gentle when baking, washing, and storing. I've used it no more than twenty times, and have never used a sharp metallic utensil in contact with any of its surfaces. In consideration of the price I paid (@ twelve bucks), which was in line with most quality pans of similar size and type, and the high level of care I used with the pan, I am lowering my rating from 5 stars to 3 stars. It was great while it lasted, but it should have been much more durable.
Cassidy K.V.
Reviewed in the United States on September 10, 2017
Like I'm sure many of you who are reading this review are intending, I bought two of these specifically to make layered cakes with. While they accomplish that task with ease (and at a fantastic price for such a high quality product), I'd be doing these pans a disservice to write them off as merely "cake pans". I use them far more regularly for meals I can whip together in the morning and bake for lunch or dinner than I use them for cakes! The tall, round shape allows you to create dishes as convenient and simple as a casserole, but which look quite a bit more visually exciting. While I love a good casserole as much as the next, the sort of creations you can put together in a springform pan are decidedly more appetizing to the eye, while looking deceptively more complex than they really are.Most recently, I've been using these to make black bean tortilla pie. It's sort of like a Mexican-inspired "lasagna", but unlike traditional lasagna dishes, it serves beautifully and sets up pretty firm, so it's minimally messy while still rich in flavour. I've attached some pictures; doesn't that look delicious?It's really quite simple to make, too. I just cut 4 tortillas to fit inside the pan (you can stack the base of the pan on top of the tortillas and trace a knife around it, to ensure they fit perfectly) then I cook up a diced onion, about 6 cloves minced garlic, a minced jalapeno, and a minced chipotle in adobo in olive oil and a bit of butter over medium/medium-high heat until they're softened. Then you can throw in about a teaspoon or so of cumin, as well as some salt and pepper. Once the cumin has sizzled and incorporated, about a minute or two, you add a can of drained diced tomatoes, cook those for about 3-5 minutes to soften, and then throw in two cans of drained and rinsed black beans with a scant cup of vegetarian chicken stock, raise heat to a simmer, and cook down until almost all of the liquid is evaporated, about 10 minutes (I just use hot water and about a half-teaspoon of ). In the last minute, add some corn (about half a can, give or take). Once the liquid is mostly cooked off, remove from heat, mix in some cilantro (I use 1/3 cup, but you could do more or less or skip it entirely if someone you're serving can't eat it), and then add the juice of about 3/4th a lime (I use the last 1/4th of the lime on top, after it's out of the oven).To assemble the pie, layer it like so: tortilla, 1/4th of the veggie & bean filling, about a half-cup of cheese (enough to cover well), repeat until you're out of tortillas and filling, and put some extra cheese on top. I use a mixture of extra sharp white cheddar and some yellow cheddar, but just about anything will come out tasty, so feel free to experiment. Bake it at 400 for about 23 minutes, sit it on a wire rack to cool, and unfasten the form, giving it about 10 or 15 minutes before to slice into it, so it sets up beautifully and doesn't mush too much when you go to cut into it. Top it with sour cream or pico de gallo or salsa, or all three, whatever your preference; I usually sit some of each out in a little bowl, so guests can top to their preference, as not everyone likes sour cream (I myself enjoy a great big dollop).Could you make something like this in a regular casserole dish? Oh, I'm certain you could. However, if you're looking for it to cook up into something that's beautiful to slice and serve, you really can't get the same result without a springform pan. This one is outrageously affordable and, most importantly (to me) - easy to clean! So if you're looking for another dish to add to your kitchen, I can say that I firmly recommend this one.
Andreea Popoviciu
Reviewed in Germany on August 5, 2015
Diese Springfrom ist von Kaiser hergestellt, nicht von Nordicware. Ich hab' mir extra Mühe gegeben um etwas anderes und besseres zu finden. Niergendwo stand es, dass die Form nur eine ganz normale Kaiserform ist. Nordiware ist bloß ein resaler von Kaiser, wenn es um die Springforms geht.Darüber hinaus hab' ich 25 euro dafür bezahlt, obwohl man durch Amazon ein 4-teiliger Kaiser Set für 10 euro kaufen kann...und solche Formen sind überall zu finden (Karstadt, Galeria, etc).Dann musste ich DREI Wochen lang warten bis sie angekommen ist. Sie sieht auch nicht wie im Foto dargestellt. Sie is einfach GRAU!Die Lieferdienst hat das Paket einfach im Gang abgestellt. Keine Notiz hinterlassen und auch keine Email geschickt, dass es abgestellt worden ist. Ich glaube sie haben nicht mal geklingelt! Mein Freund war den ganzen Tag zuhause.Ich war nur neugierig als ich die Packung untem im Gang sah, sonst hätte ich gar nicht gewusst, dass es angekommen ist.Da nach drei Wochen das Rückrufrecht schon vorbei ist konnte ich die Form nicht zurück senden (nicht das ich noch dazu bezahlen wollte, um das in Deutschland hegestellte Produkt in den USA zurückzuschicken).Jetzt ein bisschen über die Qualität: nichts besonderes! Ich hab' sie ein Mal benutzt um einen Schoko-Kirsch Kuchen zu backen. Die Form habe ich mit Oel gefettet und der Teig klebte trotzdem an die Form. Es war nicht besonders leicht die Form abzuspülen.Der Kuchen war aber gut und die Form ist soweit ich weiß dicht.
XkandakeX
Reviewed in the United States on April 21, 2015
For years I'd been using an old aluminum springform pan that I had acquired from culinary school ages ago (I bought it for $1.00 when they sold off a ton of their old stock). It's a huge beast of a pan - 16" diameter by 3.5" deep - and ALWAYS leaked unless you lined everything with parchment inside and foil outside. Well one day, the clasp on it gave out completely, and the pan lost its function. Off to the recycling it went.Finally my husband and I decided to "spring" for this modestly sized pan. Size was important since we were a bit fed up with making giant triple-recipe volume cheesecakes!When we first used this springform I just about cried. It seals incredibly well and my NY cheesecake was just perfect. I have never had a leak with this pan, even when my dear husband (who also went to culinary school) made a graham cracker crust with far, far too much butter in it, resulting in a lovely pool of liquefied butter floating around the edges of the cake while baking. Despite this excess butter being totally liquid and bubbling up everywhere, not a drop of it leaked from the pan's seams. We've also tested it with a water bath and did not have any water leak into the pan from the outside.I will say that the coating inside does seem to be non-stick, but when you make a cheesecake that may be more delicate in texture, such as a creamier/fluffier citrus one, you must be very gentle and slow when opening the pan up. Otherwise it can pull on your cake and cause cracks or chunks to come off the edges. A strip of parchment around the inside, adhered to the ring with a little butter, will prevent this. However I have not had a problem with a crust sticking to the bottom plate. Be warned though, do NOT use a knife or metal cake server on this pan, because the coating scratches very easily. I end up using a plastic lettuce knife for cutting and serving.
Recommended Products