Most of us treat parchment paper like a harmless kitchen sidekick, never thinking twice about tossing a sheet onto a pan and cranking the oven. But the coatings that make it so convenient have limits, and your favorite high-heat roast might be pushing them. When silicone or quilon start to degrade, they don’t announce it with flames; they whisper it through strange smells, brittle edges, and invisible particles you’ll never notice on your plate.
None of this means you have to abandon easy, nonstick cooking. It just means cooking a little smarter. Save parchment for moderate temperatures, choose unbleached, quilon‑free brands, and lean on reusable silicone mats, greased pans, or oiled foil when things get really hot. With a few small swaps, you keep the magic of effortless cleanup—without wondering what else is quietly baking into your dinner.
