Author Topic: senior citizen primitives discuss cast-iron cookware  (Read 1140 times)

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Offline franksolich

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senior citizen primitives discuss cast-iron cookware
« on: November 28, 2014, 06:28:29 PM »
http://www.democraticunderground.com/115747490

Oh my.

I wasn't aware that so many of the cooking and baking primitives are as ancient as they allege themselves to be.

By the way, no "what's for supper?" thread since last Monday.

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trof (45,673 posts)    Thu Nov 13, 2014, 07:12 PM

Granny's cast iron frying pan.

I have no idea how old it is.

Possibly 100 years plus.

I'm 73, so you can do the math from there.

I somehow wound up with it after grandpa died and she 'broke up housekeeping' and went to live with her son, my uncle.
 
It's about 10" across the bottom.

2 1/2" deep.

Way well seasoned.

Pour spouts on each side.

No manufacturer's name on the bottom.

I can remember chicken frying in that pan.

So many times.

I wonder how many, over the decades?

And cornbread.

How many hundreds, or thousands, of batches?

She baked pies in it.

Pecan, apple, peach.

I wish that pan could talk.

Tonight we're sauteing onions and spinach in it.

Hail to the cast iron frying pan!

<<<has cast-iron, glass, and copper-bottomed stainless-steel cookware, much of what's older than self.

<<<doesn't have any aluminum cookware, no way.

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cbayer (138,484 posts)    Thu Nov 13, 2014, 07:13 PM

1. A toast to your frying pan!

What a coincidence. I was just writing an ode to cast iron in another thread while you were writing this one.

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Spaldeen (211 posts)    Thu Nov 13, 2014, 07:17 PM

2. Haha, so you did!

I love my cast iron pan, too! They make the best pancakes.

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cbayer (138,484 posts)    Thu Nov 13, 2014, 07:23 PM

4. Yes, pancakes...

and corn bread and fried pork chops and mac/cheese and on and on.

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trof (45,673 posts)    Thu Nov 13, 2014, 07:34 PM

7. Oh yeah, pork chops and burgers.

And...LIVER AND ONIONS!

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cbayer (138,484 posts)    Thu Nov 13, 2014, 08:03 PM

8. And apple crisp and peach crumble!

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Galileo126 (701 posts)    Thu Nov 13, 2014, 07:21 PM

3. Mine's a youngin'

I bought mine only 30 yrs ago. I love that thing! From the stove to the campfire, it's awesome.
 
The best thing I've ever made in it was deep dish pizza.

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cbayer (138,484 posts)    Thu Nov 13, 2014, 07:24 PM

5. Do you have a recipe for that pizza?

My oven does not get hot enough to make a regular pizza very well*, but I'm thinking it might do a deep dish in cast iron.

*lives on a tiny boat, remember.

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Galileo126 (701 posts)    Thu Nov 13, 2014, 07:29 PM

6. Off hand, no.

It's been a while since I made it. I do remember it taking 30-40 mins to completely cook, given the amount of yummies inside.
 
I betcha AuntieX3 has a good one, though. She's from Chicago-way...

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Warpy (80,120 posts)    Fri Nov 14, 2014, 03:00 AM

13. I bought mine in the early 70s

One was a Lodge, the other was a Wagner. My wrists just got too bad over the years to be able to use them. My next door neighbor was a great cook and knew how to treat cast iron. She got them.
 
I'm now using a Calphalon skillet, an "everyday pan" and one thin rolled steel crepe pan. I miss my cast iron but that crepe pan is almost as well seasoned.

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Arkansas Granny (16,754 posts)    Fri Nov 14, 2014, 05:53 PM

18. My daughter now has my big cast iron skillet.

She calls it "Mom's Teflon". Like you, I got to the point that I have trouble lifting it.

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bvf (871 posts)   Thu Nov 13, 2014, 08:29 PM

9. You've got 17 years on me

but your subject line really struck a chord. Your description describes mine exactly. Got it from mom (who probably got it from hers, although I never thought to ask).
 
Here's to #10!

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awoke_in_2003 (25,677 posts)    Thu Nov 13, 2014, 09:50 PM

10. Never, never, never...

wash it with soap and water. Soap destroys the seasoning (that makes it non-stick). Just wipe it out while still hot. If there is anything stubborn on it (doubtful- that thing should be seasoned beautifully) use a little kosher salt and water. My cast iron (8 in, 10 in, 12 in pans and 4.5 quart Dutch oven- all Lodge) are a little over a year old and are finally developing a good seasoning (I cleaned out the factory seasoning- those are usually junk)

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CottonBear (16,766 posts)    Fri Nov 14, 2014, 07:08 PM

19. I bought a $149 Lodge Hibachi for $1 @ a yard sale!

It is awesome! I have Lodge pans & my grandmother's cast iron corn bread pan too!

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awoke_in_2003 (25,677 posts)    Fri Nov 14, 2014, 07:11 PM

20. You can find good deals...

on cast iron. People think they are old fashioned, not as good as the teflon coated crap that is so prevalent today. Griswold is another name to look out for in thrift stores, etc. I LOVE cast iron corn bread. Put the pan in a 400 degree oven to heat it up, mix up the batter, put in hot pan, then back in the oven. It makes for a moist interior and a slightly crisp crust.

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trof (45,673 posts)    Fri Nov 14, 2014, 07:29 PM

22. Unless something gets caked on I just wipe with a paper towel.

Caked on I can usually dislodge with a metal spatula and lots of scraping.

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Luminous Animal (22,598 posts)    Fri Nov 14, 2014, 12:49 AM

11. So sweet! I love my cast iron pans.

i have 10 of them. From my little chocolate heater/warmer to my big old camp oven that I can set right on the coals and make an amazing one pot dinner.

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trof (45,673 posts)   Fri Nov 14, 2014, 07:27 PM

21. I also have her griddle.

Round cast iron with a handle, 9 or 10 inches wide.

Very shallow sides.

I remember pancakes in it.

And grilled cheese sandwiches.

Too shallow for frying anything.

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sir pball (2,070 posts)   Fri Nov 14, 2014, 01:12 AM

12. Cheers!

I have all my grandma's pans but in her later, demented years she let the coating go...they've all been stripped and are just waiting for a new seasoning!

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trof (45,673 posts)    Fri Nov 14, 2014, 08:42 AM

15. On Sunday mornings it was 'grandpa's pan'.

It was a family tradition that grandpa fixed Sunday breakfast.

He usually made buttered 'oven' toast, fried sausage patties, and sunny-side up eggs in the sausage grease.

Oh, they were good.

He showed me how to 'baste' the eggs with a tablespoon and the sausage grease so the whites weren't runny and the yolks were set just so.
 
We called 'em 'sop-eggs' because we sopped up the yolks with toast.

I just made myself hungry.

Our stove looked a lot like this one.

after which a picture of a perhaps-1920s stove

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Alameda (1,793 posts)   Sat Nov 15, 2014, 10:14 PM

23. congratulations!

I've been cooking on Cast iron for about 50 years and love it. When I find nice old pieces I get them and reseason them for my younger friends. Many times one can find them rusted and for only a few dollars because they have gotten rusty because people just don't know how to season them.

I have quite a few, but my most important ones are my two smallish fry pans. I can put one on top of the other and make a little oven out of them, then I have a 6 quart Dutch oven that is great for so many things. I have two Lodge square fry pans that are great for kimchi pancakes. The pancake just slides out so nicely.

You know the seasoning should be backed on, not just grease spread over the pan.

I use coconut oil in a thin layer, bake it in the oven until it's like an enamel.

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DonnaM (15 posts)    Sun Nov 16, 2014, 03:03 AM

24. This is great advice, Alameda

I have a cast iron pan that is relatively new and have put oil in it and spread it around the bottom and sides and baked, but it never ends up looking like an enamel - perhaps I'm not baking it long enough? I will definitely try the coconut oil!

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HeiressofBickworth (1,826 posts)    Fri Nov 28, 2014, 04:58 AM

28. I have my great-grandmother's cast iron

I'm just days short of 69 and she died in 1933 so I know they are old. I have a griddle (long and narrow with handles at each end), pot (narrow bottom, wide top, with a two-point handle) and a square frying pan. I can't use them on top of my glass-top stove, but I could use them in the oven, if I ever did any baking. I don't bake anymore, so they just sit there, looking interesting.
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Offline BattleHymn

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Re: senior citizen primitives discuss cast-iron cookware
« Reply #1 on: November 28, 2014, 06:36:09 PM »
Good grief.  I can smell the dust and see the wrinkles from here. 

Offline DefiantSix

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Re: senior citizen primitives discuss cast-iron cookware
« Reply #2 on: November 28, 2014, 07:02:54 PM »
I cook almost exclusively in cast iron (and blue enameled steel, where my sauce pans and stock pot are concerned), DUmbasses. None of it is more than 10 years old, nor especially difficult to get a hold of. Forgive me if I don't look upon you as a speshul widdle snowflake because you have one too: my guess is that your cooking tastes like shit no matter what you cook it in (the skillet is cast iron, not ****in' magic, after all). :whatever:
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Offline GOBUCKS

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Re: senior citizen primitives discuss cast-iron cookware
« Reply #3 on: November 28, 2014, 07:03:31 PM »
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She baked pies in it.

Pecan, apple, peach.

???
Maybe, if she was travelling in a wagon train, or living in a sod house.

Online Carl

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Re: senior citizen primitives discuss cast-iron cookware
« Reply #4 on: November 28, 2014, 07:34:16 PM »
???
Maybe, if she was travelling in a wagon train, or living in a sod house.

Or her momma had to dance for the money they`d throw.

Offline I_B_Perky

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Re: senior citizen primitives discuss cast-iron cookware
« Reply #5 on: November 28, 2014, 08:52:55 PM »
Or her momma had to dance for the money they`d throw.

You pretty much just dated yourself, Carl. Me too I guess cause I know the song that came from. I saw her sing it on TV when they had their own TV show. 

Damn I feel old now.   :argh:
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