cast iron cookware
Moderator: Mikey
cast iron cookware
King Crimson wrote:anytime you have a smoke tunnel and it's not Judas Priest in the mid 80's....watch out.
mvscal wrote:France totally kicks ass.
That was one of the more retarded things I've read in a while.
Here's a MUCH better and easier way to clean cast iron --
If it's summer, throw it in the campfire.
If it's winter, throw it in the woodstove.
Wipe it off and oil it after the fire goes out.
Duh.
Rocket surgery.
Here's a MUCH better and easier way to clean cast iron --
If it's summer, throw it in the campfire.
If it's winter, throw it in the woodstove.
Wipe it off and oil it after the fire goes out.
Duh.
Rocket surgery.
I got 99 problems but the 'vid ain't one
- indyfrisco
- Pro Bonfire
- Posts: 11683
- Joined: Fri Jan 14, 2005 1:15 pm
I think the article is good for explaining how to prepare a "found object" cast iron implement for use. Yet, I am crouched here in humble PA, and therefore know nada.
King Crimson wrote:anytime you have a smoke tunnel and it's not Judas Priest in the mid 80's....watch out.
mvscal wrote:France totally kicks ass.
PSUFAN wrote:I think the article is good for explaining how to prepare a "found object" cast iron implement for use.
By using a bunch of enviro-death chemicals, making trips to the hardware store, removing excess material from the pan, and busting out the power tools?
Completely freaking asinine. My much better technique has been used on a skillet that came out of ten years in damp storage. Took about...oh, I dunno...maybe 60 seconds or less of actual labor.
But I guess I should have gone to the chemical store, the hardware store, rinsed toxic chemicals in my yard, put $12 worth of new organic cartridges in my respirator(because if you breath oven cleaner without an adequate respirator, you're a fucking idiot who is rapidly going to become a bigger idiot), busted out my drill, then did the Macarena in the meantime, instead of doing it the way that has worked quite well for a few centuries, and cost about $0.02 in oil afterwards.
I got 99 problems but the 'vid ain't one
- indyfrisco
- Pro Bonfire
- Posts: 11683
- Joined: Fri Jan 14, 2005 1:15 pm
Saw this in a blowg
I admit to never hearing of this.If you have access to an open fire, best thing is to sit the cookware in the flame. Be careful to leave the handle outside the fire so you can reclaim it. I swear I saw this work one year when we were burning some debris behind our house. My mother comes out with these nasty crusted cast iron pans and throws them in the fire. At first, I thought she had lost her mind, but after about an hour or so, she took them out and they looked brand new.
Goober McTuber wrote:One last post...
I tried that once with some Tupperware and it came out barely useable.IndyFrisco wrote:Saw this in a blowg
I admit to never hearing of this.If you have access to an open fire, best thing is to sit the cookware in the flame. Be careful to leave the handle outside the fire so you can reclaim it. I swear I saw this work one year when we were burning some debris behind our house. My mother comes out with these nasty crusted cast iron pans and throws them in the fire. At first, I thought she had lost her mind, but after about an hour or so, she took them out and they looked brand new.
-
- Eternal Scobode
- Posts: 2810
- Joined: Wed Jan 12, 2005 10:34 pm
- Mister Bushice
- Drinking all the beer Luther left behind
- Posts: 9490
- Joined: Fri Jan 14, 2005 2:39 pm
If poptart gets wind of this thread, he'll have your head for confusing Chinese with Korean.
They don't all cook alike.
They don't all cook alike.
If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so long as I'm the dictator." —GWB Washington, D.C., Dec. 19, 2000
Martyred wrote: Hang in there, Whitey. Smart people are on their way with dictionaries.
War Wagon wrote:being as how I've got "stupid" draped all over, I'm not really sure.