Fast Learner
First Post
Cool, not trying to change your mind. Just saying that I still think that's a solid buy.
Amazon actually had a bunch of Lodge cast iron items for $15-$35 range, but I saw a lot of reviews of cracked pans or people saying you have to heat them slowly, not put cold items in a hot pot or hot items in a cold pot, needing to regularly season them, and assorted other things that made Lodge look like more effort than lazy old me's willing to give.![]()
For example... When I say "add cold oil and food to a hot pan to avoid sticking", what I mean is, "use room-temperature oil and food". You don't want to put the oil and food in while the pan (any pan) is cold, and then heat it up -- that's a sure-fire way to get the food to stick to the pan, no matter how non-stick it is.
For a cast iron pan, you don't want to take a very hot pan and put it under cold (as in the coldest your tap water can get) water. It'll crack in half, the same way glass cookware will under the same condition. So, don't go throwing a frozen steak in a cast iron pan -- you might break the pan from the sudden heat differential.
Needing to season them often usually happens because people clean them with soap, stripping the non-stick seasoning. Just wipe it out with a cloth a little bit of vegetable oil. If you have stuck on stuff, then boil a little water in the pan until it loosens up, and then wipe it out with that oily cloth..
Cast iron cookware really isn't that difficult to take care of. You just need to take the time to learn how.
I'm...not comfortable cleaning a dish or pan without soap.
It must be way better using cast iron in some way that I just don't understand in order to make that kind of care worthwhile.