I've got a lodge Dutch oven, a Wagner skillet, a couple Griswald waffle makers, one I use and one that needs to be cleaned up, and a couple of antique donut makers.
I have. Felt it was better at cleaning the gunk. Warm water and an sos pad can handle minor rust.Chipotlemonger said:
What's the best way to get minor rust off after the gunk? Anyone try the salt and potato method?
The bottoms warp with the heat ove ruse - milling them will be a temporary fix. When you mill, you thin the base metal out and it will be subject to additional and upredictable warping after the fact.Bradley.Kohr.II said:
Anyone tried milling the bottoms flat, so it can be used on a glass top range?
schmellba99 said:The bottoms warp with the heat ove ruse - milling them will be a temporary fix. When you mill, you thin the base metal out and it will be subject to additional and upredictable warping after the fact.Bradley.Kohr.II said:
Anyone tried milling the bottoms flat, so it can be used on a glass top range?
I used mine on a glasstop stove. Just had to be careful when setting it down more than anything. I hated that stove with a passion too.
old school cast iron needed to be 'cured' before use, we just call it seasoning now. It was only recently that cast iron started coming pre-seasoned.BrazosDog02 said:
I wonder if this "procedure" for cleaning and seasoning cast iron is like everything else we do that is overworked and overthought? I have a ton of cast iron stuff and use a handful of it regularly and it's like glass and hasn't been seasoned since my great grandparents had it. I can gaurantee you there was no seasoning involved outside of just using the damn thing. Is all that stuff really necessary? I kinda feel like if I could go back in time and explain how to season their cookware they would use it as a bludgeon on my head.
Yes, and no.BrazosDog02 said:
I wonder if this "procedure" for cleaning and seasoning cast iron is like everything else we do that is overworked and overthought? I have a ton of cast iron stuff and use a handful of it regularly and it's like glass and hasn't been seasoned since my great grandparents had it. I can gaurantee you there was no seasoning involved outside of just using the damn thing. Is all that stuff really necessary? I kinda feel like if I could go back in time and explain how to season their cookware they would use it as a bludgeon on my head.
I have the same thing with flax seed. Not sure if its from not baking hot enough (oven only goes to 500*) or if its a normal thing with that type of oil.BCO07 said:
Got a piece of lodge cast iron that had a really bad seasoning job. I used a wire brush to get it all off and it turned silver in color. I then used flaxseed oil to season rather than the usual crisco. The seasoning turned out much redder than my other stuff. I guess that's the flax seed oil? I have never completely stripped cast iron before, so I have no clue if this is normal
hotter oven? better oven? more layers? what is your secret?Duncan Idaho said:
I only use flax seed oil and all my stuff is as black as my soul
works great.BCO07 said:
I also got that non stick you're all done semi gloss sheen after just one coat. I've gone ahead and done 3. How's yours performing?
p-wonk01 said:
I know a while back I was reading something about the Lodge ones and how you have to take the coating off to make them smooth like the old school cast iron. Is there a running list of the older ones that are best to pick up if you ever happen to find them...like brands and such?