Add in the older one- and three-notch Lodges and the BSR's (Red Mountain and Century series)
I need something to grind Griswald into one of my pansCanyonAg77 said:
A coworker of my wife was thrilled the other day that he found a Griswald #13. He paid $1100 for it. The guy he bought it from paid $6 at a garage sale.
Your wife's co-worker is a moron. I'll sell him all of my stuff for $500 each.CanyonAg77 said:
A coworker of my wife was thrilled the other day that he found a Griswald #13. He paid $1100 for it. The guy he bought it from paid $6 at a garage sale.
I was working on seasoning one of my pans the other day and when I took it out of the oven, it had a tacky residue. What did I do wrong?Bighamp03 said:OilAggie said:
Do I have to use flaxseed oil? Can I use peanut oil?
Yes, you can use peanut oil. Canola, vegetable, coconut, whatever. Just bake it at 450-500f.
I got flaxseed oil after reading that article, but a lot of people have issues with it flaking and say Crisco is better. As long as you put a decent base seasoning on and just cook with it it will be fine.
schmellba99 said:Your wife's co-worker is a moron. I'll sell him all of my stuff for $500 each.CanyonAg77 said:
A coworker of my wife was thrilled the other day that he found a Griswald #13. He paid $1100 for it. The guy he bought it from paid $6 at a garage sale.
What BC007 said.Vernada said:I was working on seasoning one of my pans the other day and when I took it out of the oven, it had a tacky residue. What did I do wrong?Bighamp03 said:OilAggie said:
Do I have to use flaxseed oil? Can I use peanut oil?
Yes, you can use peanut oil. Canola, vegetable, coconut, whatever. Just bake it at 450-500f.
I got flaxseed oil after reading that article, but a lot of people have issues with it flaking and say Crisco is better. As long as you put a decent base seasoning on and just cook with it it will be fine.
BCO07 said:
Too much oil. You should wipe off as much as possible, only a very thin layer will be left
When I did that, I ended up with little "bumps" where the oil dripped from the upside down skillet. How do you avoid that?hot_rod_9384 said:OilAggie said:
Do I have to use flaxseed oil? Can I use peanut oil?
I use crisco. Put the pan in upside down with a pan under to catch the drips
BCO07 said:
Use less oil/crisco
heat up the skillet until the crisco melts, wipe away the excess, then put in the oven upside downHumbleAg said:When I did that, I ended up with little "bumps" where the oil dripped from the upside down skillet. How do you avoid that?hot_rod_9384 said:OilAggie said:
Do I have to use flaxseed oil? Can I use peanut oil?
I use crisco. Put the pan in upside down with a pan under to catch the drips
Log said:
Birmingham Stove & Range, size 5, mold L, Red Mountain series.
The sharp ridge on the bottom of the handle that goes all the way up to the body of the pan is a BSR giveaway.
Yep. That's what I was guessing, but it's hard to tell with no markings. Don't really care too much, it's a good pan that I use near daily and brand doesn't mean a whole lot.Log said:
Large pour spouts & flat bottom (no heat ring)? Might be a Wagner. They tended to put the number on the top of the handle near the body of the pan.
I went the power tool route. Quick and easy. Dirty, but quick and easy. Used a stiff wire wheel on my 4-1/2" angle grinder. Had it down to bare metal in just a few minutes. A quick sand with some 120, 180 and 220 in my orbital sander to smooth the cooking surface out and in the oven with flax seed oil to get the seasoning surface established. Relatively easy and didn't take all that long.91AggieLawyer said:
The lodge pre-seasoning is junk but I like the original finish pan I have. So, I'm going to get a Lodge pan that is preseasoned -- only thing you can get now -- and just strip the inside of the pan.
Will steel wool do the job or do I need a power tool?
As far as seasoning goes, I don't think you can beat lard or bacon fat. We normally fry bacon on the George Foreman grill but I'd do it in a new pan. The pan I have has been used mostly for cornbread and seasoned nicely over the years.
sanding smooths the surface. If the surface is smooth you can skip the sanding step91AggieLawyer said:
I got a new pan and did the easy off thing. The factory stuff appeared to just wash right off. Is sanding necessary?