Haven't tried it yet, but keep meaning to:
http://vicariousfoodie.blogspot.com/...ato-pizza.html
But yah, I use my cast iron for everything. My favorite is the crust you can make on a hunk of blackened salmon. NOM.
-- gnat!
Haven't tried it yet, but keep meaning to:
http://vicariousfoodie.blogspot.com/...ato-pizza.html
But yah, I use my cast iron for everything. My favorite is the crust you can make on a hunk of blackened salmon. NOM.
-- gnat!
Oh, good idea! I haven't done salmon in ours yet but I will now!
I have quite a bit of cast iron but just a few weeks ago bought a cast iron ebelskiver pan and it is SOOO MUCH FUN! I love playing around with different ingredients from sweet to savory. And every single time I turn one, I marvel at how cool they are.![]()
My new non-farm blog: Finding Freedom
Yum! I just made this Monday and it's delicious!
http://thepioneerwoman.com/cooking/2...-iron-skillet/
My new non-farm blog: Finding Freedom
Holy crap - 3 sticks of butter and 1/2 a cup of sour cream.......
I have 2 cast iron skillets. One picked up at an Amish farmers market and one from my mother in law, who never seasoned it properly (and so hated it as everything would stick). I also have carbon steel wok (at least I think it must be.... it will rust if you leave it wet, but it certainly isn't iron... would be too thick and heavy). I impressed my Chinese co-workers with that one. It is well seasoned and well used. Nothing sticks to it anymore. All I have to do after cooking is rinse it and put it on the stove to dry. I think they'd never seen a white person with a proper wok....
I don't cook acidic things in my cast iron. I like the the condition of them too much at the moment to want to start again... I specifically like them for pancakes, fried potatoes, frittata - love them for frittata, directly from the stove to the oven and out again, no problem and all I have to do is turn the pan over to plate it. I still prefer a small pan with curved sides for fried eggs though.
Last edited by Eden; 01-21-2010 at 01:05 PM.
"Sharing the road means getting along, not getting ahead" - 1994 Washington State Driver's Guide
visit my flickr stream http://flic.kr/ps/MMu5N
Ok, time to ask the experts: What is the best way to season cast iron cookware? I know enough not to use soap when I wash it, and I was told spray it with PAM or drizzle some olive oil on it afterwards. I wouldn't say it's at the non-stick level, but I can see some kind of layer developing. Am I doing it correctly?
You coat it with oil all over, front and back and handle and put it in the oven at about 250* for an hour or so. Put something on the rack below it to catch the drippings. Wipe it off, and, if you really want to do it up good, repeat the process.
If the pot is brand new, you should wash it with soap and water first, then dry it well before you add the oil, because there is usually wax on it to keep it from rusting while it sells.
Karen
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
insidious ungovernable cardboard
This works good - just make sure you put it upside down in the oven, or you end up with a sticky varnish like coating... I did that once. Took some time to get the pan back to it's normal self.
The other thing that helps is cooking lots of naturally fatty foods in it.
What I do after I cook in it is scrape the excess food out under running water (I use a hard nylon spatula or one of those handy little square scrapers that Pampered Chef sends with their stoneware), wipe it with paper towels, and put it on a burner on high for about 5 minutes. When it's good and hot, I remove the skillet from the burner, spray a wad of paper towels with cooking spray and wipe the inside of the skillet. It'll be hot. Be careful! My skillet has a permanent home on my stovetop.![]()
Five minutes is great to refresh and protect the season after you wash a pan, but initially seasoning it will take longer. I've had better luck on the stovetop (where I can control excess oil by periodic wiping) than in the oven. My experience is that if oil pools, it will not varnish and season the pan. Because of the curved bottom, it was extremely difficult to season my cast iron wok (it's getting there though, finally).
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
not only my desk but my computer are now soaked. I can see I am going to have to break diet restrictions for a day and try this. OMG
I'm going to have to try this. I'm really tired of my "non stick" cookware that really doesn't last. I'm going to find one this weekend and try some of these recipes. Not PW though. Can't imagine where my cholesterol would go with her stuff.
Claudia
2009 Trek 7.6fx
2013 Jamis Satellite
2014 Terry Burlington
Non-stick pots and pans are made of some really nasty stuff, apparently. I used to have a parrot, and was told by the avian vet to never use non-stick cookware because it releases fumes that can kill birds. Not a good sign.
Just put some olive oil in a cast iron skillet (or butter if you're making something sweet). Keeps things from sticking.