Cast Iron ???

Last post 07-21-2008 6:21 PM by becca5775. 36 replies.
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  • 04-19-2008 1:42 PM In reply to

    Re: Cast Iron ???

    glorianne:
    I'm quite new to this forum......in fact, just a few minutes.

    Welcome to the forum. You'll find lots of good information and sharing here.

    One thing cast iron pans do is give you a chance to strengthen your arm muscles!!  Just don't drop a pan on your foot!  And also, a cast iron pan CAN crack.  I have one that was cracked and my BIL welded it somehow before I inherited it from him.  It still is going strong.  If you get a very large pan, it's helpful if it has one handle of regular length and another small "grab handle" on the opposite side.

    I don't think anyone said it before but iron pans are healthy as they are supposed to give you a little iron when you cook in them.  Old wives' tale?  

  • 04-19-2008 7:55 PM In reply to

    Re: Cast Iron ???

    Viloab B,

     

    Here is the recipe: It's a Paula Deen recipe.

    Oven Baked, Dutch Apple Pancakes

    2 cans apple pie filling
    2 tablespoons butter
    1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
    3 eggs
    1/2 cup milk
    1/2 cup all-purpose flour
    1 tablespoon sour cream
    1 teaspoon lemon zest
    1/4 teaspoon salt
    Confectioners' sugar, for dusting

     

    Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

    In a 10-inch cast iron skillet, warm the apple pie filling, butter, cinnamon.

     In a bowl, beat the eggs until frothy.

    Add the milk, flour, sour cream, lemon zest, and salt.

     Beat just until batter is smooth.

    Pour over the hot apple mixture in the skillet, and immediately put the pan in the oven.

    Bake for 20 to 25 minutes, or until the pancake is puffed up and golden brown.

     Using a small, fine sieve, lightly dust the top of the pancake with confectioners' sugar. Serve warm.

    Susan

  • 04-21-2008 6:09 PM In reply to

    • LOLA5
    • Not Ranked
    • Joined on 04-21-2008
    • Posts 4

    Re: Cast Iron ???

    I LOVE THE CAST IRON THAT I HAVE, AND USE THEM  OFTEN...HAVE BEEN COLLECTING THEM FOR A FEW YEARS AND MAYBE HAVE ABOUT 30 PANS NOW OF DIFFERENT SIZES.  SO IF YOU SEE ONE, DO NOT PASS IT UP...HOWEVER I AM NOT TALKING ABOUT THE PANS THAT ARE MADE IN CHINA OR SOME OTHER COUNTRY...AS THEY DO NOT SEEN TO BE AS WELL MADE AS THE OLD PANS.  

    L.

  • 04-21-2008 8:49 PM In reply to

    Re: Cast Iron ???

    My Mom has a bunch of cast iron  that use to be Grandma's. So I'm going to try and get a few of them.

     

    Susan

  • 04-25-2008 12:11 AM In reply to

    Re: Cast Iron ???

    My cast iron is about 80 years old -- was my grandmom's, and I'm retired on disability now.  When my mom got the cornbread pans, they were rusty and really icky.  She scoured them in hot water with a rust remover and then lots of soap.  Then she heated them in the oven with oil and rubbed the oil into the iron with salt and paper towels.  That was a good 45 years ago and they're still fine.  When I use them, I wash them with hot water and soap, and then just go over them with a little warm oil on a paper towel.  Same with my skillet.  You DO get some iron in your diet from cooking in cast iron but only, I think, if you cook something more acidic, like something with tomatoes.

  • 05-07-2008 10:33 AM In reply to

    • EdsML
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    • Joined on 01-06-2006
    • Posts 8

    Re: Cast Iron ???

    I usually burn mine after I have filled it (2/3 full) with water.  Let the water heat over med heat to loosen food buts, then drain and put right back on the burner.  Works for me!

  • 05-07-2008 10:34 AM In reply to

    • EdsML
    • Not Ranked
    • Joined on 01-06-2006
    • Posts 8

    Re: Cast Iron ???

    just saw my typo ~ that's food BITS ! LOL

  • 05-11-2008 2:27 PM In reply to

    Re: Cast Iron ???

    Hi, SOF,

    GRiswold may have stopped production in 57 but the company that bought the name/imprint made cast aluminum cookware with the name Griswold on the bottom until the early 70s.

    I had a heavy cast aluminum s 1 1/2 qrt auce pan with a Mandarin  red enamelled lid. It broght a good price on Ebay 3 yrs ago.

    Needless to say I love my OLD Griswold Dutch oven and 3 skillets plus 2 old Wagnerware  but the most used are two very small and very old "Favorite" (6.5").

    Wish I had known you in 85*** when I got rid of my other 14  old Griswold pieces, among them  two large chicken fryers,  one 18" monster skillet, a 12"  omelt skilet and an oblong and a round pancake griddle.

    Every now and than I bake Basque Sheepherders Bread in the Dutch oven, a huge round loaf, you bake with the lid on until the dough has lifted the lid 1/2", then take off the lid and finsh baking. The top of the bread has the design from the inside of the lid imprinted. A loaf like that makea a great holiday gift for a large family.

    *** maybe you were too young to have appreciated them even at the low prices I sold them for.

  • 05-26-2008 6:51 PM In reply to

    Re: Cast Iron ???

    I have all of my Grandmother's cast iron.  It was bought in the early 1900's and is still cooking up a storm.  It was all made by a company that's located near Sweetwater Tn and I don't know if they are still in business, but they sure knew what they were doing!

    She always seasoned hers with lard in the oven.  Two of them (larger ones) have some rust on them, and it's time to "geterdone" and back into use.

    There's nothing better than a hot pan of cornbread, butter and molassas!

     

  • 05-28-2008 1:51 PM In reply to

    • Senee
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    • Joined on 05-28-2008
    • Posts 2

    Re: Cast Iron ???

    I began using cast iron cookware a few years ago. I remembered my Aunt cooking the best pizza ever in hers & decided, when my nonstick cookware wore out, to replace it with cast iron. I have never looked back. It has been the best cookware I have ever used. I cook everything I can in these skillets. I've recently thought about purchasing a griddle as well & a kettle.

    I wash our cookware with soapy water, then reseason , after it is thoroughly dried, with lard, olive oil, or coconut oil. Sometimes I just fry organic bacon in the skillets to season the cookware. It works very well. I hang our skillets on hooks beside our stove, in the doorway. It works very well. My family bought me the largest skillet by Lodge, this past winter. It's huge! I can fry chicken in one super large skillet now or make a larger pizza as well.

    Our children love cornbread made in these skillets. I cook tomatoes in ours & they taste fine. I think once the skillets are truly seasoned, tomatoes do well in them.

    Your pie should taste great!

    The right word may be effective, but no word was ever as effective as a rightly timed pause.
    Mark Twain
  • 06-04-2008 5:50 PM In reply to

    Re: Cast Iron ???

     Hi All,

    I was wondering if anyone uses the enameled cast iron by Le Creuset? I'm looking at investing into cookware that will outlast me and possiably be passed on to my kids. I'm thinking the down falls to the enamel coating is you don't actully get any added iron benifits or the seasoning. But the up side looks really good to me being no rust and easier washing as I'm a sterile freak Embarrassed and am really not that crazy about not using some kind of cleaning agent on the regular cast ironware. I do notice that on the Food Network a lot of the cooks do use a heavy large enameled cast iron looking skillet or pot. Any thoughts or opions would be greatly appreciated before I make such an investment as this particular cookware is very exspensive!

    Liz in Summerville SC 

  • 06-04-2008 8:21 PM In reply to

    Re: Cast Iron ???

    I've never owned Le Creuset but I have seen plenty of it at sales, -  gray, scratched, crazed.  I don't know if this is from owner-absuse or what.  I still would not trade my cast iron for any Le Creuset no matter how pretty the colors are.  My cast iron has been handed down for three generations and is still going strong.

     

    "Cast Iron King" who posts here will convert you to good old-fashioned cast iron!!

  • 06-05-2008 9:46 PM In reply to

    Re: Cast Iron ???

    Lizanne, both enameled and "bare" iron offer the same heat retention properties that make for excellent cookware.  But it really all depends on the type of cooking you intend to do.   While bare iron can be adapted to multiple cooking methods, enameled iron is really only suitable for long, slow cooking over low heat.  The higher temperatures that bare iron is famous for withstanding will eventually cause the staining and darkening of the enamel that JerseyGal noted.  While this can be brightened with good non-abrasive cleansers (like Barkeeper's Friend), I don't think it ever regains it's initial beauty.

    All ironware is slow to heat.  When you consider that adding layers of enamel to the iron, plus the fact that you cannot use extremely high heat on the enameled iron, you're looking at even longer heating time.   

    One thing you might want to consider about bare cast iron, as you say you are a sterile freak:    detergents alone do not sterilize your dishes.  Most detergents merely break down the surface cohesion of oils and water so that water can more easily penetrate and lift food particles and break down oils so they rinse away easily, but they do not sterilize your cookware.  However, heating your cookware after washing, as is the preferred way of drying bare iron, DOES sterilize the cookware. So, even though most cooks do not use detergents to clean their bare iron, it is probably more "sterile" than your other cookware washed in detergent and towel dried or left in a rack.  Just something to think about.  As well, there are tons of fine cooks on these boards who will tell you that they wash their bare iron with detergent to no detrimental effect.  Others, myself included, believe that detergents penetrate the seasoning and add a chalky, soapy taste to foods cooked in the bare iron later.  

    Another consideration is just how well you treat your cookware.  Even the most careful cook is going to drop a dish now and then.  When you consider the extreme expense of enameled iron and the fact that if you chip it, you've damaged it irreparably, in the long run it doesn't always seem like such a good investment.  

    Bare iron, seasoned properly, not only lasts the lifetime that you're looking for when you're considering heirloom cookware to pass on to your children, but what's more, unlike enameled iron, which can become dingy over time,  bare iron actually grows more beautiful with age and use, as the seasoning builds into that rich, shiny black patina that is the mark of fine cast iron.  Throw in the fact that the initial investment is just a fraction of the cost of enameled iron yet will give you a lifetime and more of excellent service, and I have to say, bare iron is the way to go.  

    If you are still convinced that enameled iron is the way you want to go, may I suggest you look toward the American-made Lodge brand, rather than the LeCreuset?  LeCreuset is a d@mn fine product, to be sure, and the Lodge line does not offer as many varied pieces as LeCreuset, but what it does offer is comparable (I particularly like the apple pots--clever design!) and significantly less expensive.  

  • 06-05-2008 10:15 PM In reply to

    Re: Cast Iron ???

    Shhh... secret...... if you go to www.shopgoodwill.com and look under cookware.. they usually have cast iron pans for sale there.. its like ebay....but cheaper unless someone really wants what youre bidding on....I have gotten a few pans there... Griswold and Wagner.....havent been disappointed yet.

    Tina

  • 06-06-2008 10:54 AM In reply to

    Re: Cast Iron ???

    My mother used cast iron, so it was natural for me to use it too.  I've been using it for almost 40 years so I didn't know it left to make a comeback.  My adult daughters have their favorite cast iron pans, and are delighted to find them for little money at garage sales (rejected because the owners didn't know how to use them).  The trick to keep food from sticking to cast iron is to keep it well seasoned (instructions with your new cast iron will tell you how to "season" the pan).  High acid foods, like tomato sauce, simmered in cast iron will require you to reseason your pan after use.  My daughter gives her pan a quick spray of PAM after cleaning and drying.  If my pan needs reseasoning, I put a little cooking oil in the pan then heat something on high heat, like tortillas.  Cast iron makes the best corn bread, and a great pan for pineapple upside down cake.  I also use it for roasts in the oven, and any time I need a frying pan.  It is a wonderful heat conductor so you get even heat every time.  Never put the pan in the dishwasher.  And it will rust if not dried well, so I dry mine on a hot stove burner after washing & rinsing.

    Val

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