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SeasoningSeasoning is the process done to new Cast Iron frying pans to help them start their life journey on the road to becoming non-stick. Describing it that way, though, as most sources do, is misleading. That is just the start of the seasoning process: it then continues as you cook with the pan. After you do the initial seasoning step, it is very important to cook the right kinds of things in the pan the first few times out (more below.) When a Cast Iron frying pan is seasoned, it will be jet black."Preseasoned" (they mean "already seasoned") pans are meant to give you a head-start on seasoning them, though they can't compare to pans that have been in use for sixty years. Cast iron with enamel surfaces (e.g. Le Creuset) don't need seasoning. The principle behind seasoning is that Cast Iron surfaces are porous with microscopic cavities in the surface. Fat fills these cavities, making the surface smooth so food has a hard time clinging to it. It also prevents water from getting in and causing it to rust. On top of that, a layer of polymerized oils forms. Some people have a very hard time getting Cast Iron frying pans seasoned and get frustrated. They get it part way there, and then the seasoning comes off again, leaving the bare metal, even when they follow the rules, and even if they don't wash it at all. It could be that, the first few times out, these people are trying to cook quite light things in it -- say a pork chop or scrambled egg -- at a time when the polymerized surface still needs reinforcement from the items being put in the pan. Some speculate that for the seasoning to really take hold, for the first few times you actually use it, you need to cook in it the traditional cast iron fare such as sausages, or bacon, etc. -- foods high in fat or grease, recipes that start off calling for "1/2 pound of lard." Or, use it for sautéing. Another reasons that seasoning can disappear is it's a young seasoning, still vulnerable to what you put in it, and if you cook something acidic in it, such as something with a lot of lemon juice, vinegar or tomatoes in it. This can cause a young, thing seasoning layer to dissolve. Before you start seasoning a pan, remove any labelling attached to the pan. Then scrub the pan to get rid of any surface coating designed to stop it rusting during shipping, storage, in the stores, etc, then make sure the pan is bone dry before you start to season it (both these stops are only necessary if the pan is "new new", as in, from the store.) There are two seasoning methods, stove top and oven. Don't season Cast Iron frying pans with wooden handles with an oven method, unless the handles come off easily (if so, then do so.) Most seasoning methods call for oil these days. This is a modern, overly health-conscious voice speaking. Old timers just say use lard or bacon fat, and it won't leave a sticky surface as oil can.
Heat pan in a 350 to 400 F (175 to 200 C) oven. Carefully remove with oven mitts, brush inside with vegetable oil, put back in oven, bake for 1 hour. Coat with grease. Put in a 350 to 400 F (175 to 200 C) oven for 15 minutes. Remove, pour out melted grease, put back in the oven, bake for 2 hours. Some say for any of this methods, bake the pan upside down.
WashingMany people say to never wash or even rinse Cast Iron with water; that you should just wipe clean with paper towel instead. Others say there's nothing wrong with a rinse of water, and that even a little detergent is fine. Some like to compromise and say rinse with hot water, scrape as needed. Many grandmothers who cooked in the Cast Iron long before anyone either side of the debate was born would have blanched at the thought of not washing their Cast Iron pans; they got washed like everything else, and with plenty of soap. It's only recently that some people have started to say not to use soap, but generations have, and got on just fine.Some people like to oil their Cast Iron pans after each use, put them on a burner of the stove, heat for a few minutes, let cool, wipe off excess oil with a paper towel, then store. But it's certain that grandmothers didn't have time to put such effort into cleaning and putting away a frying pan. They washed it, dried it, stuck it in the oven, and then checked to see where the dog and the kids had gone in the meantime. If anything does stick, and you don't want to use a detergent, you can try using table salt as a "scouring powder." Cleaning no no's that everyone agrees on: no dishwasher, no soaking, no cleaning with steel wool pads. And don't put them away until completely dry, unless you have a gas oven with a pilot light and store them in there. Black FlakingSometimes people get a Cast Iron perfectly seasoned and then someone else cooks something in it, and the black seasoning starts to flake off.The black flakes that come off aren't seasoning, they're food crud that was burnt on. It was the change in what was cooked in the pan (say, a tomato sauce) that finally dissolved the bond enough to cause them to come off. To eliminate the loosened black flakes, put a coat of oil in the pan, heat it gently till warm, let cool till you can work with it, then wipe out oil and any more black flakes with a paper towel or dish brush, trying to get off any more black flakes that are going to come off anyway. Repeat a few times if you're not satisfied yet; you can even try, when you go to clean out the oil, sprinkling in some table salt. Then reseason. Or, put the pan in then oven on high heat for 45 minutes. Turn off oven, let the pan cool in the oven. When cool enough to handle, scrape off any loose black flakes, then coat with a vegetable oil inside, then let dry. Season again before using. Rusty OnesScrub with steel wool and vegetable oil till all rust is gone, then oil with vegetable oil.A favourite place to store Cast Iron pans was inside a gas oven -- the pilot light would help them to dry thoroughly and avoid rusting. Some people still store theirs in electric ovens, just out of habit because that is what their family did. Restoring Cast Iron PansSand them with steel wool or a copper scouring pad until smooth; feel free to use scouring powder to help. Get all the burnt crud and rust off;
Some people have taken theirs to their friendly-neighbourhood monument maker, and had them sandblast the pans clean. Don't put directly in a fire for a long time; it may crack (some people have tried this as a way to clean very old ones in bad shape.)
Bittman, Mark. Ever So Humble, Cast Iron Outshines the Fancy Pans. New York: New York Times. 7 December 2005. Snow, Jane. Cast-iron tradition. Akron, Ohio: Beacon Journal. 23 February 2005. Also called: Gußgeschirr (German)
See Also:Frying PansOther entries for: PansAebleskiver Pans, Appachatti Pans, Appakarai Pans, Baking Pans, Bread Pans, Broiling Pans, Cast Iron, Chafing Dish, French Roasting Pans, Frying Pans, Kanom Krok Pans, Meat Loaf Pans, Non-Reactive Pans, Non-Stick Pans, Quiche Pans, Roasting Pans Other entries for: Cooking ToolsAlambic Stills, Apple Corer, Avocado Slicers, Baking Mats, Baking Stones, Batterie de Cuisine, Biscuit Brake, Blowtorches, Branding Iron, Bread Bins, Bread Machines, Bulb Baster, Butter Bell, Butter Muslin, Caja China, Can Openers, Canning Funnels, Cans, Chopsticks, Contact Paper, Cookware, Cooling Racks, Corkscrews, CorningWare, Cuppitiello, Dishwashers, Doughnut Cutters, Egg Cups, Esky, Fat Separators, Firkins, Flour Dredgers, Flour Duster, Food Pushers, Funnels, Girdle, Graters, Griddles, Heat Diffuser, Ice Pick, Icing Syringe, Kitchen String, Kitchen Tongs, Kneading Gloves, Knives, Measuring Cups, Melon Baller, Mesquite, Milk Cellar, Non-Electrical Rotisseries, Olive Pitter, Oshibori, Oxo Good Grips, Paraffin, Pastry Brush, Pastry Frame, Pea Sheller, Petites Marmites, Pie Plates, Pie Racks, Pizzelle Iron, Proof Box, Ramekins, Rolling Cookie Cutters, Rolling Pins, Salad Spinner, Salamanders, Scales, Spatulas, Steamers, Sugar Cutters, Sushi-oke, Tassie Cups, Tea Trappings, Thermometers, Tortilla Warmers, Treen, Tupperware, Uchiwa, Waffle Iron, Whisks |
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