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Not Running => Food => Topic started by: Rochey on January 06, 2017, 09:47:17 AM

Title: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Rochey on January 06, 2017, 09:47:17 AM
So far I hate it.

It's messy, it's heavy, it's hard to clean.

My sister, who's damn near a gourmet chef, basically only uses hers.  She made the best hamburgers not too long ago and I tried to replicate.  They tasted good, but my house was full of smoke, grease got everywhere, and they seemed to take forever to cook.  I looked online to see if maybe i cooked them too high....every recipe said to use medium-high heat and that it should only take 2 minutes per side!  What?

Help.  Tell me your success stories before I donate this hunk of metal.

Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: BonitaApplebum on January 06, 2017, 09:52:52 AM
Where is OBH?   :obh:

I love mine, but it takes time to get it where you want it, and cooking with it is different than cooking with other pans -- it conducts heat differently.

Seasoning is key, of course. I have had the best success with flaxseed oil and a hot oven. The more seasoned your pan is, the easier it is too cook in it.

For cleaning: I usually boil a little water in the pan just to get the worst of the mess off. Then (after it cools) I have a dedicated scrubber I use for it, that never gets soap. If I need a little more grit to get stuff off, I'll use a tablespoon of salt. After it's clean and dry I always wipe it with a paper towel that's been moistened with a bit of flaxseed oil.





Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: hally on January 06, 2017, 11:51:36 AM
Are you using an electric stove? Cause I would think that would not work so good.

And....does sister have gas?
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Rochey on January 06, 2017, 11:59:54 AM
Are you using an electric stove? Cause I would think that would not work so good.

And....does sister have gas?

Yes and no.  she just has some special voodoo cooking magic it seems.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: BonitaApplebum on January 06, 2017, 12:25:22 PM
I have an electric stove, as does my BFF (who is a wizard with cast iron), so I don't think that's a problem.

This piece is pretty good: http://www.bonappetit.com/test-kitchen/cooking-tips/article/how-to-use-a-cast-iron-skillet (http://www.bonappetit.com/test-kitchen/cooking-tips/article/how-to-use-a-cast-iron-skillet)

I think the key takeaway is get that pan hot before you do anything with it.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: duckgeek on January 06, 2017, 01:05:18 PM
We use it regularly for just about everything.  When it is properly cared for it is probably the easiest pan in the house to keep clean.   Never skimp on oil until it is really well seasoned.

(https://scontent.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/10678548_10102303364570846_2574691363211627403_n.jpg?oh=76e74ff90e98c20ced24a7e4a8c6ac60&oe=58E282E6)
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: BonitaApplebum on January 06, 2017, 01:07:34 PM
Oooh yeah deep dish pizza in the cast iron pan. YUM!

I have a new pan to season, just need to get around to it...
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: duckgeek on January 06, 2017, 01:33:38 PM
Oooh yeah deep dish pizza in the cast iron pan. YUM!

I have a new pan to season, just need to get around to it...

I didn't know the secret to this until recently.  Put slices of mozzarella on top of the dough to keep the sauce from soaking in before adding in the other layers of stuff.  Makes a world of difference. 
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: The Turtle Whisperer on January 06, 2017, 02:31:38 PM
Not much you can do about the smoke and grease, but you can get it to not be a mess.  Repeated use and heat and oil.  Season again and keep using.

If the bottom is rough, consider getting an abrasive grinder for the drill and smooth it out. 

Try the Alton Brown cast iron steak method.  Lots of smoke, but worth it. 
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: duckgeek on January 06, 2017, 03:10:35 PM
You can also use your outdoor grill to season if you don't want the smoke in the house.
Title: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Chasing Amy on January 06, 2017, 04:04:16 PM
Not much you can do about the smoke and grease, but you can get it to not be a mess.  Repeated use and heat and oil.  Season again and keep using.

If the bottom is rough, consider getting an abrasive grinder for the drill and smooth it out. 
 


I put my 60+ year old skillet (belonged to my grandma) in the oven and turned on the clean cycle. Burned all the old gunk off (make sure the kitchen is well ventilated).
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: caribougrrl on January 07, 2017, 03:10:04 PM
we use ours so often it stays out on top of the range, never put away

here's why you will love it:
stovetop to oven dishes such as pan-roasted pork tenderloin, pan-roasted chicken , pan-seared steak finished in the oven, frittata
pan-fried duck breast (this is an excellent one to help with seasoning the pan)
corn bread
dutch baby pancakes

be generous with fats and oils especially the first several times you use it
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: ihop on January 10, 2017, 09:45:02 AM
I have two and love them but it does take a while to get used to.

DH cooked steaks in one and set off the smoke alarms.  I wasn't home by DD told me all about it.   :D

I also find that if a recipe calls for medium heat, I really need medium low if using a cast iron pan.

Cleaning with kosher salt is super easy.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: merigayle on January 10, 2017, 10:09:24 AM
I made a big cookie in mine. That is what it is best for :D
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: teetime on January 10, 2017, 02:03:58 PM
Rochey, I can not do it. My husband is all about his cast iron. My sister too. And all I do is burn crap and make a mess and feel annoyed I didn't just use my non stick pans. So  :buttpat:
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Rochey on January 21, 2017, 08:35:37 AM
Ok I'm trying it again and have it on low heat. Making bacon and hash browns for the kids...so far does not appear I'll be setting off the smoke alarms.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: The Turtle Whisperer on January 27, 2017, 06:16:32 PM
Well?   :grr:
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Rochey on January 29, 2017, 12:44:29 PM
I've used it pretty much every time I need to fry, brown, or simmer something and it's growing on me. It's super easy to clean. The key is to not let it get too hot.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: radial on January 29, 2017, 02:04:58 PM
I generally use my cast iron ware when I'm cooking something that involves both time on the stove top and time in the oven.  Otherwise, I'm really liking the T-fal fry pan I picked up at the local kitchenware store.  It supposedly has a tougher ceramic non-stick coating, but I'm skeptical after so many false claims about durable non-stickiness.  So far, so good.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: The Turtle Whisperer on January 30, 2017, 10:10:41 AM
I've used it pretty much every time I need to fry, brown, or simmer something and it's growing on me. It's super easy to clean. The key is to not let it get too hot.

Yes, they aren't any where near as temperature consistent as most claim. The generally accepted canon on cast iron is all myth.  Get away from that and it's all good!
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Rochey on January 30, 2017, 01:21:18 PM
Yes, they aren't any where near as temperature consistent as most claim. The generally accepted canon on cast iron is all myth.  Get away from that and it's all good!

Yes!  I was teaching Mason how to make a grilled cheese sandwich and one side of the bread was hardly cooked while the other was brown.  Part of it may have been positioning on the glass stovetop, but it wasn't what I was led to believe. 
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Honey Badger on January 31, 2017, 05:07:34 PM
I got one of these things to scrub any burnt on guck off.  Works great.
(https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/61EDp3v9V0L._SL1000_.jpg)

Amazon "The Ringer"
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: monster2 on February 17, 2017, 11:51:34 PM
I got one of these things to scrub any burnt on guck off.  Works great.
(https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/61EDp3v9V0L._SL1000_.jpg)

Amazon "The Ringer"
This is now on my list!

Sent from my SM-G900T1 using Tapatalk

Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: radial on February 17, 2017, 11:56:32 PM
I thought the goal with cast iron was to cultivate a nicely seasoned coating that bonded with the iron and filled in the irregularities to give you a glassy smooth cooking surface.  Not sure how scrubbing everything down with those chain mail thingies would be helpful. 
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: The Turtle Whisperer on February 18, 2017, 08:59:51 AM
I thought the goal with cast iron was to cultivate a nicely seasoned coating that bonded with the iron and filled in the irregularities to give you a glassy smooth cooking surface.  Not sure how scrubbing everything down with those chain mail thingies would be helpful. 

You got to knock off the big bits with something.  That thing will leave some marks, though.  You wouldn't use it on much else you cook with. 

These days most cast iron needs some help from the grinder to get a glass finish.  It's why the older stuff still brings more money.  Way smoother bottoms from the factory. 
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: BonitaApplebum on February 18, 2017, 10:07:36 AM
Ugh, I had a perfectly seasoned pan and I wrecked it the other day. I have to reseason it entirely. It's the worst mess I've ever made of a pan, and I've been cooking on cast iron all my life.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: radial on February 18, 2017, 10:56:38 AM
The Recipe for Perfect Cast Iron Seasoning

The basic idea is this: Smear a food-grade drying oil onto a cast iron pan, and then bake it above the oil’s smoke point. This will initiate the release of free radicals and polymerization. The more drying the oil, the harder the polymer. So start with the right oil.

Go to your local health food store or organic grocery and buy a bottle of flaxseed oil. It’s sold as an omega-3 supplement and it’s in the refrigeration section because it goes rancid so easily. Check the expiration date to make sure it’s not already rancid. Buy an organic flaxseed oil. You don’t want to burn toxic chemicals into your cookware to leach out forever more. It’s a fairly expensive oil. I paid $17 for a 17 ounce bottle of cold-pressed, unrefined, organic flaxseed oil. As it says on the bottle, shake it before you use it.

Strip your pan down to the iron using the techniques I describe in my popover post (http://sherylcanter.com/wordpress/2010/01/perfect-popovers-and-how-to-clean-reseason-cast-iron/). Heat the pan in a 200°F oven to be sure it’s bone dry and to open the pores of the iron a little. Then put it on a paper towel, pour a little flaxseed oil on it (don’t forget to shake the bottle), and rub the oil all over the pan with your hands, making sure to get into every nook and cranny. Your hands and the pan will be nice and oily.

Now rub it all off. Yup – all. All. Rub it off with paper towels or a cotton cloth until it looks like there is nothing left on the surface. There actually is oil left on the surface, it’s just very thin. The pan should look dry, not glistening with oil. Put the pan upside down in a cold oven. Most instructions say to put aluminum foil under it to catch any drips, but if your oil coating is as thin as it should be, there won’t be any drips.

Turn the oven to a baking temperature of 500°F (or as high as your oven goes – mine only goes to 450°F) and let the pan preheat with the oven. When it reaches temperature, set the timer for an hour. After an hour, turn off the oven but do not open the oven door. Let it cool off with the pan inside for two hours, at which point it’s cool enough to handle.

The pan will come out of the oven a little darker, but matte in texture – not the semi-gloss you’re aiming for. It needs more coats. In fact, it needs at least six coats. So again rub on the oil, wipe it off, put it in the cold oven, let it preheat, bake for an hour, and let it cool in the oven for two hours. The picture above was taken after six coats of seasoning. At that point it starts to develop a bit of a sheen and the pan is ready for use.

If you try this, you will be tempted to use a thicker coat of oil to speed up the process. Don’t do it. It just gets you an uneven surface – or worse, baked on drips. Been there, done that. You can’t speed up the process. If you try, you’ll mess up the pan and have to start over.

The reason for the very hot oven is to be sure the temperature is above the oil’s smoke point, and to maximally accelerate the release of free radicals. Unrefined flaxseed oil actually has the lowest smoke point of any oil (see this table). But the higher the temperature the more it will smoke, and that’s good for seasoning (though bad for eating – do not let oils smoke during cooking).

I mentioned earlier there’s a myth floating around that vegetable oils leave a sticky residue. If the pan comes out of the oven sticky, the cause is one of three things:
It’s possible to use a suboptimal oil for seasoning, like Crisco or bacon drippings, and still end up with a usable pan. Many (most) people do this. But the seasoning will be relatively soft, not as nonstick, and will tend to wear off. If you want the hardest, slickest seasoning possible, use the right oil: flaxseed oil.

http://sherylcanter.com/wordpress/2010/01/a-science-based-technique-for-seasoning-cast-iron/ (http://sherylcanter.com/wordpress/2010/01/a-science-based-technique-for-seasoning-cast-iron/)
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: BonitaApplebum on February 18, 2017, 11:55:57 AM
Thanks. That's basically my technique, with the flaxseed oil. It gives a better finish than anything else I've tried.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Chasing Amy on March 12, 2017, 02:35:52 PM
I tried the flaxseed seasoning method - six coats. Tossed a marinated chicken breast in there and it got unbelievably stuck. Huge mess. What the hell?
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: BonitaApplebum on March 12, 2017, 06:51:33 PM
The only thing I can think is that you are treating cast iron like teflon? As great as cast iron is, it's NOT 100% nonstick. You need to use butter or oil with it, especially with less fatty foods. Scrambled eggs, for example, will pretty much always stick in a cast iron pan IMO.

Are you using any oil in the pan?
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Chasing Amy on March 12, 2017, 11:52:48 PM
The only thing I can think is that you are treating cast iron like teflon? As great as cast iron is, it's NOT 100% nonstick. You need to use butter or oil with it, especially with less fatty foods. Scrambled eggs, for example, will pretty much always stick in a cast iron pan IMO.

Are you using any oil in the pan?

Of course. There was a generous coat of olive oil in there.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: hally on March 13, 2017, 09:54:14 AM
Of course. There was a generous coat of olive oil in there.

Did you get it really hot before you threw in the chicken?
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: The Turtle Whisperer on March 13, 2017, 12:56:44 PM
Of course. There was a generous coat of olive oil in there.

Did you give the meat time to release on it's own, or did it just stick and burn? 
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: radial on March 13, 2017, 12:59:50 PM
Did you take the chicken out of the plastic wrap first?   :devil:
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Chasing Amy on March 14, 2017, 10:20:30 AM
Did you get it really hot before you threw in the chicken?

yes

Did you give the meat time to release on it's own, or did it just stick and burn? 

yes

Did you take the chicken out of the plastic wrap first?   :devil:

yes
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: hally on March 14, 2017, 10:44:10 AM
yes

yes

yes

Well, some things are just not meant to be for some people. Like me and the crock pot. The insert is good for soaking beans though.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Chasing Amy on March 14, 2017, 02:12:27 PM
It seemed like the seasoning was good - smooth sheen and not sticky. But the seasoning seemed to "come off" as soon as I started cooking.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: rocketgirl on March 24, 2017, 12:48:26 PM
Boyfriend just tried to re-season his pan.    I don't know what oil he put on it, but "smoke point" set off the smoke detectors. 

I re-seasoned (ish anyway) a pan my now ex husband owned.  I'm pretty sure it had been through the dishwasher.  I probably just used a vegetable oil.  I did not go to smoke point, but I think I left it in the oven for probably 4 hours.  I don't know how great is was, but it was better than it had started.

I had read they didn't recommend using cast iron on a glass stove top (damage to stove top).  If I got one, I'd probably get the porcelain enamel on the outside.  Although cast iron is heavier than I want to deal with as it is and that makes it heavier.  Maybe one with two handles would be manageable, but then I'd have to store it somewhere.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Honey Badger on March 26, 2017, 06:19:47 PM
Ugh, I had a perfectly seasoned pan and I wrecked it the other day. I have to reseason it entirely. It's the worst mess I've ever made of a pan, and I've been cooking on cast iron all my life.
How did you wreck it? I'm curious as after I move I'll be cooking with gas again and would like to start using my cast iron more.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: BonitaApplebum on March 26, 2017, 08:28:55 PM
How did you wreck it? I'm curious as after I move I'll be cooking with gas again and would like to start using my cast iron more.

By being an idiot!

I put some water in the pan to cook off some cooked on food. And then I walked off and forgot about it, and all the water cooked out. Idiot!!!
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: ihop on March 27, 2017, 04:13:17 PM
Ooph.  That sucks.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Newt on March 31, 2017, 12:33:42 AM
I only have a deep cast iron pan that I use for all my stews. I like the way it heats up....perfect for risottos.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Chasing Amy on April 15, 2017, 09:11:23 PM
I don't know what else to do. This cast iron skillet is 60+ years old (it was my grandmother's) and no matter how much I season it, no matter how much I baby it, I end up with a giant stuck on mess. Even when I cook with so much oil that the food ends up greasy and inedible.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: BonitaApplebum on April 16, 2017, 09:06:54 AM
I've heard of people sanding them down to get a smoother finish. I am pretty sure OBH did it. Seems like a lot of work, though.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: wombleatwimbledon on April 16, 2017, 04:19:04 PM
I don't know what else to do. This cast iron skillet is 60+ years old (it was my grandmother's) and no matter how much I season it, no matter how much I baby it, I end up with a giant stuck on mess. Even when I cook with so much oil that the food ends up greasy and inedible.

How hot are you using it? This may not be relevant but mine seem to work better at a lower heat than I would normally use for a non stick.. the hotter they are the more stuff sticks..
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: merigayle on April 16, 2017, 08:35:02 PM
I've heard of people sanding them down to get a smoother finish. I am pretty sure OBH did it. Seems like a lot of work, though.
We had to do this once and start over. It did help.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: radial on April 16, 2017, 10:18:23 PM
I'm going to try this with the Lodge pan.  It's pretty useless with the current orange peel finish.  You can season that thing 'til the cows come home and it's still gonna grab onto everything like velcro. 

How to smooth the rough cooking surface of a modern Lodge cast iron skillet. (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pf_gnyxyKKw#)
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Chasing Amy on April 17, 2017, 02:34:56 PM
It already has a smooth finish. And the last thing I plan to do is sand that thing!

I can't figure out what I'm doing wrong. My grandma used and abused that thing successfully for decades.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Natasha on April 17, 2017, 04:00:04 PM
It already has a smooth finish. And the last thing I plan to do is sand that thing!

I can't figure out what I'm doing wrong. My grandma used and abused that thing successfully for decades.

Maybe you're not using enough oil?
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Chasing Amy on April 17, 2017, 04:14:21 PM
Maybe you're not using enough oil?

 >:(
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: radial on April 19, 2017, 11:05:43 PM
Lookie what arrived in the mail today.

(https://c1.staticflickr.com/3/2939/33339100003_3106d234ff_b.jpg)

This weekend I'm gonna chuck that thing into my drill and smooth out the orange peel surface of my crappy Lodge pan.  Will report back after seasoning and a few cooking trials. 

This is my plan B as far as ferrous cooking surfaces are concerned.  It also arrived in the mail today.

(https://c1.staticflickr.com/3/2815/33339099373_3d637b8cb1_o.jpg)

Other crazy people looking for great cooking surfaces recommended it.  The pan is made in France where they seem to know a bit about cooking and it's entirely constructed of carbon steel.  And it's hefty!  I'm sure it will get even better with seasoning, but I'm impatient, so I just oiled it up and fried some eggs.  Viola!  Right out of the box, this thing works better than my most seasoned cast iron pan.  I'm very impressed. 
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Natasha on April 20, 2017, 09:41:17 PM
Hey! I've got the de Buyer skillet. I was advised to fry potato peels in it first, did you do that?

I do love it. It is one of the few items that made the cut when we sold the house and downsized. But so did one cast-iron skillet. They are good for different tasks.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: radial on April 20, 2017, 09:50:01 PM
Hey! I've got the de Buyer skillet. I was advised to fry potato peels in it first, did you do that?

I do love it. It is one of the few items that made the cut when we sold the house and downsized. But so did one cast-iron skillet. They are good for different tasks.

Nah, I'm breaking all the rules with this one.  Just cooking stuff in it and hoping for the best.  So far so good, and if it goes wonky on me, I'll just run it through an oven cleaning cycle and do the traditional seasoning thing. 
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Natasha on April 20, 2017, 10:29:16 PM
Nah, I'm breaking all the rules with this one.  Just cooking stuff in it and hoping for the best.  So far so good, and if it goes wonky on me, I'll just run it through an oven cleaning cycle and do the traditional seasoning thing. 

Not much to it, took less than 5 minutes.

I also dremeled my cast iron skillet the same time that OBH did his. Several sandpaper bits, then some steel wool. It did help. But it took a couple hours. And it never was as good as my inherited skillet.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: radial on April 20, 2017, 10:33:01 PM
Not much to it, took less than 5 minutes.

What's the science behind the potato peel frying? 
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Natasha on April 21, 2017, 12:42:09 AM
What's the science behind the potato peel frying? 

I have no idea. I've had that pan for years and can't remember what I read, just that I did it.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: radial on April 23, 2017, 10:43:03 PM
It already has a smooth finish. And the last thing I plan to do is sand that thing!

I can't figure out what I'm doing wrong. My grandma used and abused that thing successfully for decades.

Well, it sounds like you've got an heirloom pan.  They were hand-made back then and the cooking surface was ground smooth.  The only thing I can think is that you might have missed a step or two in the seasoning process.  Can you post a picture of the cooking surface? 

I speak from experience about the seasoning process.  I paid a pretty penny for an old Griswold pan that someone was selling online.  The seller burned off all the crud, so I just had to season it.  I tried, but I left way too much oil on the thing between cycles, and it came out lumpy and sticky.  Pretty much the opposite of non-stick. 

This weekend I did some work on the pans.  I have a small Lodge pan that has never worked very well.  As you probably know, the Lodge manufacturing process produces a pan with a very rough surface.  First I ran it through an oven cleaning cycle to burn off my previous failed attempts at seasoning.  Then I used an abrasive wheel on the drill to smooth down the pebbly finish as much as possible. 

It took a while, and it didn't eliminate the deepest pitting, but the surface was a lot smoother after the grinding.  Then I put it through 5 oven cycles using very thin coats of flaxseed oil and burning each one in at 400 to 500 degrees.  Remains to be seen whether I did it right this time, but it certainly looks/feels good. 

In hindsight, I think it's critical to make the oil layers as thin as possible which basically involves rubbing off every bit of oil you can soak up with paper towels before baking on a new layer.  In previous efforts, I left a lot more oil on the pan thinking more would be better.  Not so.

I also ran the new carbon steel pan through the same process.  It went from silver to ebony and looks super smooth.  Can't wait to try these guys out with the proverbial fried egg.


Title: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Dagstag v 2.0 on April 24, 2017, 12:00:29 AM
I saw this video come up on Facebook. SO apparently takes shit care of his cast iron pan. I want to get a smaller one that I don't have trouble lifting.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=KLGSLCaksdY
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Natasha on April 25, 2017, 01:44:57 PM
I saw this video come up on Facebook. SO apparently takes shit care of his cast iron pan. I want to get a smaller one that I don't have trouble lifting.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=KLGSLCaksdY

Good video. When they started washing the skillet, I swear I could smell it! That weird combo of rancid oil and dish soap.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: diablita on April 25, 2017, 08:06:28 PM
This was in the magazine rack at Whole Foods today and I thought of you:

https://americastestkitchen.buysub.com/america-s-test-kitchen-special-magazine-issues/america-s-test-kitchen-the-cook-it-in-cast-iron-2017-bookazine.html
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: radial on April 25, 2017, 10:44:04 PM
So, yesterday I tried to fry a couple of eggs in the carbon steel pan and it was an unmitigated disaster.  Maybe the heat was too high, but those eggs stuck to the surface like it was fly paper.  Back to the drawing board on that pan.

Tonight I put the Lodge pan to the test.  This is the one I smoothed out with the abrasive wheel, but I put it through exactly the same seasoning process as the carbon steel pan, so I wasn't expecting too much.  What a difference!  Just a little loosening up with the spatula and those eggs were sliding around the pan like ice dancers.  Too bad about the carbon steel pan, but the cast iron pan was as slick as any surface I've ever cooked on.  I'll give the carbon steel pan a few more coats and see it that makes a difference.

https://youtu.be/qzcgcrTeqBw
Title: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: BonitaApplebum on April 26, 2017, 12:47:23 AM
Eggs are the true test of a nonstick surface! Nicely done.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: LilyLily on August 03, 2017, 04:09:33 PM
HB - I use kosher salt to get bits that are stuck on my cast iron. Just toss it in there and scrub with a paper towel and it's done. Another thing I try to do is if stuff is stuck on there while the pan is still hot, I'll de-glaze it with water which, often, makes anything else other than a ring un-necessary.
Title: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: glwestcott on August 14, 2017, 02:50:17 PM
Our two cast iron pans belonged to my wife's great grandmother who used them during the Alaska gold rush and then brought them back to Oroville to a timber camp where she was the cook most of the rest of her life.Those pans are so seasoned at this point that I swear you could ice skate on them if they were a little bit bigger and it wouldn't mar them up at all. We can actually wash them with detergent and it doesn't do a damn thing to them.  My advice is keep an eye out at fleamarkets for a really old and well used cast-iron pan.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: BonitaApplebum on August 14, 2017, 02:52:27 PM
who used them during the Alaska gold rush and then brought them back to Oroville to a timber camp where she was the cook most of the rest of her life

 :heartbeat:

I love this story!!
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Chasing Amy on October 15, 2017, 11:59:25 AM
(https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20171015/1c061a2dbd3266cbc801ae9810571dae.jpg)

Trying again. So no matter how well I season the pan, no matter how well I try to care for it, I always end up with this sticky residue that food sticks to. How do I get rid of it? Why does my pan grab onto everything and burn it?

And before responding, please see my other responses in this thread to see what I've previously done.


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Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: radial on October 15, 2017, 08:25:13 PM
That pan looks really rough.  All those ridges.  I don't think that one is going to work very well unless you can get the surface smoother. 
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: BonitaApplebum on October 16, 2017, 08:02:03 AM
Maybe you need to be a little... grosser? I'm just wondering if you're cleaning it *too* much and not letting the seasoning build up enough, if that makes any sense.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Chasing Amy on October 16, 2017, 11:53:16 AM
That pan looks really rough.  All those ridges.  I don't think that one is going to work very well unless you can get the surface smoother. 

My grandma used it for years without a problem. 

Maybe you need to be a little... grosser? I'm just wondering if you're cleaning it *too* much and not letting the seasoning build up enough, if that makes any sense.

I've followed the recommendations I've read for cleaning and it seems plenty gross. :D
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: radial on October 16, 2017, 01:24:33 PM
My grandma used it for years without a problem. 

Maybe it's not as rough as it looks.  When you run your fingernail over those grooves, can you them?  Also, just out of curiosity, what brand of pan is it?  What do the markings on the bottom look like? 
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: caribougrrl on October 23, 2017, 08:34:47 AM
Maybe you need to be a little... grosser? I'm just wondering if you're cleaning it *too* much and not letting the seasoning build up enough, if that makes any sense.

that's what I was thinking... that pan looks way too clean to me.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Chasing Amy on October 30, 2017, 11:12:54 AM
I was doing a bit of research and my pan was "made in Taiwan" which is apparently a very bad thing according to cast iron enthusiasts.

Anyhow, I made a stove top to oven chicken dish this weekend and while I didn't have issues with sticking (used lots of olive oil), I noticed that the seasoning had come off in certain sections. This has happened to me before and not because I've washed the pan. It comes off during cooking. Anyone else had this happen?
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Rochey on November 01, 2017, 01:27:54 PM
I've been using my pan more and more and it's growing on me.  Maybe it's because the last thing I cooked was greasy bacon and eggs.  :-D
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Chasing Amy on January 10, 2018, 10:39:38 AM
I've pretty much concluded that I'll love this pan because it was Grandma's, but I don't think I'm going to get much use out of it. I much prefer cooking with my enamel cast iron skillets.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: merigayle on January 10, 2018, 10:43:47 AM
I've pretty much concluded that I'll love this pan because it was Grandma's, but I don't think I'm going to get much use out of it. I much prefer cooking with my enamel cast iron skillets.
can you hang it on the wall as kitchen decor? :D
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Chasing Amy on January 10, 2018, 11:36:39 AM
can you hang it on the wall as kitchen decor? :D

 :!:
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: BonitaApplebum on April 08, 2018, 11:35:00 AM
I thought of something else, Amy. Are you cooking acidic foods, like tomatoes, in your cast iron pan? (I remembered this because I used tomatoes in mine and thought of this thread.)

Unless your pan is already extremely well seasoned, you should not cook tomatoes in it, the acid will wreak havoc with the seasoning. Same for vinegar, lemon juice, wine, etc (although it's probably fine to add any of those at the finish, just don't simmer for a long time).
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Honey Badger on April 14, 2018, 06:35:43 PM
At Christmas time I bought myself a Staub enameled (emerald green) cast iron skillet.  I love it.  I know it's not the true purists type where you season it because it has a nonstick coating, but it cooks well and washes up like a breeze.  I use it daily.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Chasing Amy on April 21, 2018, 04:30:17 PM
I thought of something else, Amy. Are you cooking acidic foods, like tomatoes, in your cast iron pan? (I remembered this because I used tomatoes in mine and thought of this thread.)

Unless your pan is already extremely well seasoned, you should not cook tomatoes in it, the acid will wreak havoc with the seasoning. Same for vinegar, lemon juice, wine, etc (although it's probably fine to add any of those at the finish, just don't simmer for a long time).

No. I followed all the cardinal rules of cast iron.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: radial on April 21, 2018, 06:44:03 PM
No. I followed all the cardinal rules of cast iron.

Why do you think your Grandma's skillet didn't work?
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Chasing Amy on April 22, 2018, 05:29:21 PM
Why do you think your Grandma's skillet didn't work?

If I knew the answer to this, I wouldn't be asking all of you! I'm happy with my enameled cast iron though.
Title: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: BonitaApplebum on April 22, 2018, 06:03:22 PM
I'm irrationally adamant that we should be able to crack this mystery.

We should plan a CH camping trip, and we'll all try to cook on it. :roll:
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: radial on April 22, 2018, 06:06:23 PM
If I knew the answer to this, I wouldn't be asking all of you! I'm happy with my enameled cast iron though.

Seems like the pan had a poorly finished surface.  Some of the stuff from Taiwan is pretty rough.  So maybe that's why it didn't perform like a traditional cast iron pan.  Still, it's a mystery that it worked for your Grandma.  Maybe she used enough fat that nothing stuck to the pan because it was floating on an oil slick?  Who knows.  Anyway, glad you found something that works. 
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: radial on April 22, 2018, 06:24:37 PM
I'm irrationally adamant that we should be able to crack this mystery.

We should plan a CH camping trip, and we'll all try to cook on it. :roll:

Hey, Amy ship it to me and I'll resurface it like I did with my Lodge pans.  The process is kind of tedious, but it works. 

https://vimeo.com/214775742
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Chasing Amy on April 24, 2018, 09:29:27 PM
I'm irrationally adamant that we should be able to crack this mystery.

We should plan a CH camping trip, and we'll all try to cook on it. :roll:

 :D I'm game!
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Chasing Amy on April 24, 2018, 09:30:12 PM
Seems like the pan had a poorly finished surface.  Some of the stuff from Taiwan is pretty rough.  So maybe that's why it didn't perform like a traditional cast iron pan.  Still, it's a mystery that it worked for your Grandma.  Maybe she used enough fat that nothing stuck to the pan because it was floating on an oil slick?  Who knows.  Anyway, glad you found something that works. 

Well, she was an Italian Grandma and Italian Grandmas can do anything.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Magic Microbe on May 02, 2018, 09:30:01 AM
There is a reason mine is now relagated to pretty much only camping. I think they seemed more awesome before actual non stick pans existed.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: witchypoo on May 17, 2018, 11:12:38 AM
i've been thinking about this thread (my life is a basket filled with excitement and intensity).

my cast iron cookware is all enameled le creuset, because i can't deal. 

i suspect this stems from my mother's insistence that we SCRUB her [conventional] cast iron cookware with steel wool and soap every time she used it.  if it was even remotely smeared with fat after a wash, she'd lose her mind.  why does she own any?  i have no idea.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: radial on May 17, 2018, 11:20:45 AM
i've been thinking about this thread (my life is a basket filled with excitement and intensity).

my cast iron cookware is all enameled le creuset, because i can't deal. 

i suspect this stems from my mother's insistence that we SCRUB her [conventional] cast iron cookware with steel wool and soap every time she used it.  if it was even remotely smeared with fat after a wash, she'd lose her mind.  why does she own any?  i have no idea.

After about 500 years, that might produce a very slick finish. 
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: BonitaApplebum on May 17, 2018, 01:15:35 PM
i've been thinking about this thread (my life is a basket filled with excitement and intensity).



I think about this thread every time I use my cast iron! I am still sad we can't get to the bottom of it.

FWIW my new (to me, but it's like 60 years old) Descoware enameled cast iron skillet is possibly my favorite thing in my kitchen right now.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: DocBuzzkill on May 19, 2018, 05:05:22 PM

my cast iron cookware is all enameled le creuset, because i can't deal. 

All the way with Le Creuset.  :rah:
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Chasing Amy on March 23, 2019, 06:43:09 PM
I feel like you should all know that I successfully made pancakes in the cast iron.


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Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: ihop on March 26, 2019, 03:58:43 PM
 :D

I thought about this thread after tossing a cast iron pan.  It worked well for years and then NOTHING worked - I couldn't get it clean without damaging the seasoning and then I couldn't ever restore the seasoning. 
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: BonitaApplebum on March 26, 2019, 04:24:44 PM
I feel like you should all know that I successfully made pancakes in the cast iron.


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 :heartbeat:

What do you think turned the corner for you and the pan?
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Chasing Amy on March 28, 2019, 07:25:52 PM
:heartbeat:

What do you think turned the corner for you and the pan?

The pan and I have negotiated a truce. I will not prepare eggs in it, it will not attract every bit of stickiness and lint within the house like a magnet.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: BonitaApplebum on March 28, 2019, 08:19:46 PM
Wise! I don’t usually make eggs in mine, either. Just too sticky.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Rochey on May 11, 2019, 09:30:23 PM
I just thought about this thread the other day. I have been using mine a lot more and love how meat turns out. We bought a half a beef and even just hamburgers cooked in it are amazing.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: radial on May 11, 2019, 09:54:17 PM
I just seared a steak in reconditioned Lodge pan.  Cleaned up fine with just hot water.  The non-stick pans work well too.  But even the most durable of them eventually wears out so you just have to accept the need to toss them every so often.
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: Rejaneration on May 26, 2019, 09:17:18 AM
Love this thread. I have learned much.
I have learned that how I use my cast iron skillet would make you guys shudder. It is not properly seasoned- no time for that! My only rule is never use soap on it. I put tomatoes and other acidic stuff in it with abandon. I love it for searing.


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Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: BonitaApplebum on May 26, 2019, 09:21:52 AM
The joy of cast iron is that it can be so many things!
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: radial on May 26, 2019, 09:33:24 AM
If you are feeling flush, check out these beauties (https://butterpatindustries.com/collections/frontpage) at Butter Pat Cast Iron Industries.  They have a Memorial Day special going on, 15% off, but only on the two smaller (8" and 10") skillets.  Discount Code: MEMORIALDAY19
Title: Re: Help me love my cast iron skillet
Post by: rocketgirl on May 31, 2019, 04:23:39 PM
The joy of cast iron is that it can be so many things!

except not heavy.