What to Use When You Can't Find a Pot Lid

Silver saucepan with a hand grasping the lid handle. Pan sits on gas stove.
Alison Bickel

We've all been there. Is there any piece of kitchen equipment as hard to find as the right pot lid? Even if you've found a storage solution that makes sense for your lids, it is a real pain to fumble around in a cabinet for the top to your stockpot or pan when you need to cover it. Besides, some pans (like skillets) usually don't come with their own lids.

You might be lucky enough to own a universal lid and also know where it is at all times, but for those of those of us who dread the lid scramble, try using other things you already have handy.

A Frying Pan

a nonstock frying pan
Made In

You can easily grab a frying pan of roughly the same size and put it over the pot. It's not going to give you a particularly tight-fitting seal (so it won't be good for, say, steaming rice), but if that's not crucial to whatever dish you're working on, don't worry about it too much.

A Baking Sheet

An empty baking sheet on a striped linen.
Alison Bickel

Got a sheet pan handy? Just put it on top of the pot. It's a little bit bulkier than a regular pot lid, but it'll do the trick. It's an old test kitchen and restaurant secret for when the right-sized lid isn't available or doesn't exist.

A Round Pizza Pan

Cornmeal Sprinkled onto a Pizza Pan
Simply Recipes / Marta Rivera

Those round pizza pans aren't just for baking pizza! Since it's round and a baking sheet is not, a pizza pan can be a less cumbersome lid in a pinch.

Foil

cover dutch oven with foil for panade
Elise Bauer

A double sheet of foil works well as a lid when you need a closer fit than a sheet pan or a frying pan would provide. It's a little more difficult to manipulate than a lid, but it traps heat and moisture just as effectively.

Parchment Paper

How to line a cake pan with parchment paper
Simply Recipes / Mark Beahm

Even if you already have a lid, parchment paper is useful to have around to ensure a close fit. Basically you can cut a circle of parchment paper and put it on top of the dish you're trying to keep covered—it works particularly well with sweating vegetables. You can put the same circle under a normal pot lid to minimize moisture escaping from your dish as it cooks, like during a long braise in the oven.

Another Lid

Matzo Balls being boiled in a pot with glass lid on top
Coco Morante

Is this too obvious? Sometimes the lid of one pan can double as another. It's fine for your cookware to share lid custody. If that's troublesome, maybe it's time to get a few new pieces.

A version of this article originally appeared on MyRecipes.com



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