Dutch oven cooking

/ Dutch oven cooking #21  
Why no soap and water on cast iron DO's or skillets? What do you use instead?

Thanks,
Moon of Ohio
 
/ Dutch oven cooking #22  
Cast iron is season with a coating of baked on fat. Lodge now sells pre-seasoned cast iron. You usualy season by coating the pan with fat or oil and put in a 350F oven for one hour. This prevents the metal from rusting. It also makes the cookware non-stick (hundreds or years prior to Teflon /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif )

If you wash cast iron with soap you risk removing the seasoning. For many of us the seasoning is almost like a badge of honor. My father had cast iron cookware that had never been re-seasoned for 25 plus years. Until my unknowing wife scoured it clean /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif Dad was not happy.

To clean my cast iron greddle and skillets I simply wipe them out with a paper towel while they are still warm. For the dutch oven I use running water since I often cook chili or stew in there. Soap and abrasive cleansers are the big no-no.

Phil
 
/ Dutch oven cooking #23  
The cast iron dutch ovens need to be "seasoned" when they are first used. This is a process where oil, usually vegetable oil, is wiped/rubbed into the metal. Then the dutch oven is heated, usually in a regular oven. One of my assistant Scoutmasters always insisted on doing it 5 times to a new dutch oven before using it. I always thought that was a bit extreme myself. Twice was usually enough.

Once a dutch oven has been seasoned, it should never be washed with soap and water because it removes all of the "seasoning" and the cast iron begins to rust. And that is really a pain to get off! To clean a dutch oven after being used, all that is needed is to scrape out any residue and then wipe the inside down with a paper towel.

Guess Phil and I were typing at the same time! At least we both agree on the basic process. Must be right, huh Phil!? /forums/images/graemlins/smirk.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
/ Dutch oven cooking #24  
Yeah, what Phil said. In addition, cast iron is porous. Soap in the pores can be hard to rinse out and leaves a bad taste. I keep a scrub brush for cast iron only, no soap. Only use it if it won't wipe clean with a paper towel.

Over time your cast iron will develop a nice black finish. That's largely carbon which provides natural non-stick /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif
 
/ Dutch oven cooking #25  
I've heard my wife talk of seasoning the cast iron stuff ....but she still uses soap and water on them. /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif

Thanks for the education guys!

Moon of Ohio
 
/ Dutch oven cooking #26  
The wife has bought a number of stone cooking things over the years, like a pizza stone and bread pans, etc. The hard plastic scrapers that come with them are ideal for cast iron, too. Makes sense because you aren't supposed to use soap and water on the stone either.

I usually just scrape our cast iron with one of those things under running water. My iron is well enough seasoned that the water doesn't cause any problems. The water also removes any salt in the process. Those scapers are nice because they have a curved corner that just fits the pots around the bottoms, and a sharp corner for tight places and stubborn pieces, and a big hard edge for general scraping.

Chuck
 
/ Dutch oven cooking #27  
<font color="blue"> plastic scrapers </font>

Cool idea! I like the the plastic "scrubbies" if a paper towel won't do it, but may have to try a scraper. Either way, I love the irony of using 20th century materials to clean cast. /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif

After reading a couple of the findings on Durbob's google search [and the double and quintuple seansoning ideas here], I may have to try stripping one of my "younger" skillets just to see if I can achieve "perfection." /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
/ Dutch oven cooking #28  
My wife always gives me a hard time when cleaning them up - just throw some oil in, heat them up, and go to it with paper towels. I have a knack of using about a roll and a half every time we go camping!! But then again, since I am cooking instead of her she can't complain too much.
 
/ Dutch oven cooking #29  
My favorite method of cleaning the cast iron skillet after frying chicken or pork chops or country fried steak, is to make gravy. Simmering the milk gravy frees up all the goodies that have stuck to the pan, and clean up after is really easy. Plus you get to eat the gravy! /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif

Chuck
 
/ Dutch oven cooking #30  
All of you guys talking about this is funny. Talking about how good cooking is when you're out camping.

All of you are forgetting something obvious... when you're out camping and hungry a can of beenie weenies and a pack of crackers tastes like a fine filet mignon. That food could have been horrible and YOU WOULDN'T HAVE KNOWN THE DIFFERENCE! /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif

Actually one time I was on a hunting trip with my best friend. We actually took a couple of high quality steaks with us. It was so good we couldn't handle it. I still have blackouts thinking about it.. its just too much.

See.. just did it again.. took 45 minutes to post this with all that lost time.
 
/ Dutch oven cooking #31  
Hey Robert,

Be sure and lemme know if a gathering starts taking shape. Yep, DO cooking would be the way to go (see the attachment I first posted). You are only a couple of hours away. Heck, if people aren't picky, I'd welome the gathering at my place. Better if during burn season... open fires are pretty hazardous from May to October.

I think we qualify as "Gold Country" as our parcel was a goldmine 125 years ago, and still has remnants and scars. One of the biggest goldmines (hydraulic) in the country (Cherokee) is about 1/4 mile away. I've looked, metal-detected, dredged, etc., but haven't found anything more than dust -- maybe they got it all.

Phil
 
/ Dutch oven cooking
  • Thread Starter
#32  
This is one of the recipes, for the blackberry cobbler. There are tons of others at this site too...

recipes

Thought about it for a moment... Guess our recipes would be challenging... I assume you measure in metric units instead of cups, teaspoons, tablespoons, pounds ect?
 
/ Dutch oven cooking #33  
Robert,

The word cobbler i have never heard before. I looked at the recipe for Blackberry Cobbler and it sounds good so i will try it in the Dutch oven in three weeks time on the banks of the river on the houseboats maiden voyage
 
/ Dutch oven cooking #34  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( it sounds good so i will try it in the Dutch oven in three weeks time on the banks of the river on the houseboats maiden voyage )</font>

Hey Vin, did you try that recipe?

I'd forgotten that you said you would when you launched the houseboat. I was reviewing this thread to get some information for a church youth camping trip coming up, and came across your comment.

If you tried it, how'd it turn out? Did you like it?
 
/ Dutch oven cooking #35  
Garry

unfortunatly i did not try the recipe but i will definatly try it in the next few week and report back
 
/ Dutch oven cooking #36  
Best seasoning is good old fashioned LARD, IMO. And for cleaning, when you need to scrub, try vegetable oil and salt. (I prefer olive oil.) The oil doesn't disolve the salt, so it acts as an abrasive - but not as hard on the pot as sand would be.

If you like Dutch ovening, but don't have a campfire handy, check out the Volcano stove. My F-I-L gave us one for Y2K, and it's pretty handy. Too small to replace a regular barbeque for our family, but just right for a couple or maybe 4 people. But it's hard to beat for doing some Ducth oven cooking on your deck. You can set it right on your wooden picnic table and cook away.

I think that's the company site - but it may be a dealer. I just found it via a search, so caveat emptor.
 
/ Dutch oven cooking #37  
Its a hard life
 

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/ Dutch oven cooking #39  
Was unable to get blackberries so i used blueberries, this is before cream /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif
 

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/ Dutch oven cooking #40  
And this is the final to be indulged, Yum Yum this was delectable delicious and should not be eaten by diabetics /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 

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