Of course as excited as you might be for these new toys, there are a few tricks you should know about teflon-based cookware.
First, and most importantly, that wonderful non-stick coating on the pan means that cleaning up the pan is a hundred or so more times easier to clean. But this doesn't mean you can skip adding lubricants to the pan to cook things. Dry cooking in the pan is the quickest way to burn up the coating on the pan, aka ruining it. So at the very minimum you will need to add some non-stick spray or a little bit of oil to the pan when you use it.
Next thing is never rapidly cooling off the pan in the sink after getting it really hot. Time to play with basic science, materials have different properties when you heat and cool them. They expand and contract at different rates, which means when you layer non-stick coating on metal that the two properties expand and contract at different rates. This isn't noticeable with the naked eye, but when the pan is cooled at an accelerated rate the two materials will slowly begin to pull apart. This isn't going to happen by doing it just once or twice, but if you repeatedly do this with the pan you can cause damage. (The same can also apply to the really nice composite pans that use aluminum and copper together, the metals can slowly come apart as you use them.)
One of the most abusive environments you can place your new pan is the dishwasher. Seriously, it is highly abusive! Leave it out of there! Don't do it! Most major cleaning solutions used for the dishwasher are based around silica. If you don't know what silica is, it is the same stuff that sand is made from. So of course over multiple washings you will be scratching the coating literally off of your pan. Hand wash the pan in hot water with a soft wash cloth, never with a scratch pad or metal wire. If you do burn something onto the pan, just pour some water into the pan and let it soak. If the non-stick is working correctly, the burned food will lift out of the pan.
Why is it important to keep the coating on your new non-stick pan? Well for one thing, the stuff is toxic when it flakes off. The last thing we want is to add more poisons to our bodies than we can handle (and no comments about my coffee consumption here!) Also when the non-stick becomes damaged, food will start to stick to the pan, of course that defeats the entire purpose of getting a non-stick pan.
Anyways, until next time.
Bien Camino!