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| Pots & Pans Discussion on what to cook foods in. |
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For what it's worth, here is an article on the care and feeding of cast iron that I wrote for Mother Earth News several years back:
The Care and Feeding of Cast Iron |
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I disagree with the soap thing - I wash my cast iron (and I have many pieces) with hot soapy water, rinse well, dry immediately and place on the burner and re-season.
Been doing it that way for years - so did my mom - so did my gram. Yes I know all about detergent destroying the seasoning. I've heard it all - everyone is entitled to their own opinion. I know you can add hot water to a dirty pan and boil it, scraping the bottom. And I still use hot soapy water to clean my cast iron. As soon as whatever I am cooking in the cast iron is done - it is removed to a serving dish and the pan is immediately washed and dried. My cast iron never sits in water. That's the way we've done it for years. Ain't stoppin' now. |
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I am very familiar with the conditions that Cathy describes- not only from bacon, but also from some sweet-cured ham. Both at home in cookware and in commercial kitchens as when using the griddle/grill/flat-top (whatever cooks call it, wherever they are) to cook bacon or ham sometimes the sugars, honey, corn syrups, maple syurps and other things used in the products sludges-up the pores of the cooking surface and makes it all gummy and sticky. I see it often, in fact.
In restaurants, some meat products were so bad I used to hate grilling them for sandwiches, breakfast & such and always kept a vinegar or lemon-juice mister nearby to immediately spray and razor-blade that area of the griddle right after cooking the product so that spot wouldn't continue to caramelize and burn and get all gross and goopy. Also, Cathy- I NEVER cook bacon on the stove-top at home anymore. I cook it in one of only two ways- 1.) the fastest and easiest for lovely CRISP bacon if that's how you prefer it, is actually placing on a paper-towel-lined plate (even paper-plates work) , then covering top of lined strips of bacon w/ paper-towel also, and zapping in the nucro-wave. Fool-proof. And 2.) If you have a larger amount of bacon to cook line a half-sheet pan (some call it a jelly-roll pan or rimmed cookie sheet) with parchment or foil and bake bacon in the oven at 400 degrees until desried crispness. I ain't fried bacon on the stove-top in nearly 20 years and won't... the popping grease all over hell ain't worth it for me. I'd go without bacon if I had to wipe down that spattery mess everyday. That's just me, though. I have this weird mental-thing with spattery messes on my stove-top... have it at home and even had it at work. I can't even watch a pot of marinara bubbling and spattering all over the place... makes me pace like a penned-up horse and walk in circles like a drunken banshee! Ha! Last edited by chubbyalaskagriz; 07-24-2008 at 04:17 PM. |
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By Chubbyalaskagriz: {I ain't fried bacon on the stove-top in nearly 20 years and won't... the popping grease all over hell ain't worth it for me. I'd go without bacon if I had to wipe down that spattery mess everyday. That's just me, though. I have this weird mental-thing with spattery messes on my stove-top... have it at home and even had it at work. I can't even watch a pot of marinara bubbling and spattering all over the place... makes me pace like a penned-up horse and walk in circles like a drunken banshee! Ha!}
CAG, I am exactly the same way, are we neat freaks or what!!! But as you mentioned the oven for "frying" bacon that way is what I meant when I said I place it on the non-stcik griddle (I failed to mention in the oven) and you are so right it is 100% better that way & crunchy too - I never cared if the oven got dirty, just not the stove-top that I can see Thanks for posting, Cathy |
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No particular reason, but I've never made bacon in the oven.
Wonder if I've been missing a bet all these years. I usually skillet fry it because I'll be following up with something I want the grease for. For a quick couple of slices, paper towels and the nuke do just fine. And, not to sound rash, how many pieces of bacon in a rasher? |
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Brook, in restaurants we used to cook bacon on full-sheet pans in the oven, then remove said bacon w/ tongs and then toss quartered baby red spuds around in the bacon-grease by-product, season and roast on same pan. Also cornbread and quiche-squares done this way in the bacon-greased pans works well. One pan- two uses!
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