Dear Christine,
Thank you for the link to frequently asked questions regarding silicone pans. It was very helpful. Thanks, too, for sharing your experiences.
Dear Foodelf,
Thanks for letting me know you put your silicone right on your pizza stone. It helps me feel confident that I can do it, too. I also appreciate that you shared your experiences with silicone baking.
One aside to leaving a stone in the oven full time... Last year, I made a batch of scones. I already had my cooling rack out so I placed a sheet of parchment on top of the cooling rack. As I cut the individual scones, I lifted them onto the parchment on top of the rack. (This particular cooling rack is the kind with little squares.) My intention was to slide the scones and parchment off the cooling rack in one motion. But for some reason, I placed the whole thing, cooling rack, parchment, and scones right on top of the Baking stone. When they were done, I removed the whole thing. The scones turned out more delicious than ever and I've done it that way ever since. It saves my arms from having to reach in, over and over, to place individual scones on the stone. Since then, I've also cooked cookies the same way. I'm only guessing, but perhaps the reason these baked goods seem nicer is that there is more air flow because the cooling rack raises the scones and cookies off the stone. I'm thinking that I may do the same technique with silicone molds.
Dear robm,
Thanks for the advice on where to get the pans reasonably priced. I appreciate your comments.