โJul-24-2016 12:52 PM
โJul-30-2016 01:40 PM
brirene wrote:
Wrap some potatoes in foil and put them right on the coals of the fire, turn a couple of times, great baked potatoes!
โJul-30-2016 01:37 PM
โJul-30-2016 01:23 PM
โJul-27-2016 03:22 PM
Little Kopit wrote:Tom Trostel wrote:
The point of seasoning is to seal the cast iron surface with carbon. If the pores in the cast iron are "open", would it not rust every time it gets water on it?
Seal with hardened oil, me son, not carbon. Put brain in gear please. What is soap or soap products supposed to do, but break down oil and grease. Water alone don' do none o' dat, dat is unlessens youse let it soak in a water tub with an electrolysis rig.
'K
:W
โJul-27-2016 03:07 PM
garmp1 wrote:
Us out West: couldn't help noticing you have the "Unique Cooking Systems" grill system. Aren't they grate!!! (er ah Great?)
โJul-27-2016 02:34 PM
โJul-26-2016 11:32 AM
โJul-26-2016 11:13 AM
Tom Trostel wrote:
The point of seasoning is to seal the cast iron surface with carbon. If the pores in the cast iron are "open", would it not rust every time it gets water on it?
โJul-26-2016 07:09 AM
โJul-26-2016 06:55 AM
โJul-26-2016 06:26 AM
โJul-25-2016 07:14 PM
Little Kopit wrote:
If you use cast iron cookware, you will not use soap. Cast iron cookware is seasoned by baking a thin coat of oil on all surfaces. If you use soap that goes into the pores of the iron and is bad news.
:C
โJul-25-2016 06:45 PM
โJul-25-2016 06:35 PM
naturist wrote:DutchmenSport wrote:
We continued cooking over an open fire for a long time, but then one day realized we were sick and tired of trying to clean pots and pans and griddles and grates and wire supports, and tripods, and all of that soot and black and charred stuff. We went through cans and cans of spray oven cleaner over the years and realized eventually, the food was great, but the clean up was awful.
Ah, so I recon nobody ever shared "THE BIG SECRET" with you: pots and pans can be spared all that black soot and crud by simply coating the outside with dishwashing liquid before you put the food INSIDE. You put it on the campfire and do the cooking thing, the pots 'n' pans still get black and ugly on the outside, but . . . and here's the beauty of it . . . drop them in the dishwater and all the black simply falls off. No scouring, not even a gentle rub with a sponge. And no permanently black cookware.
โJul-25-2016 06:29 PM
DutchmenSport wrote:
We continued cooking over an open fire for a long time, but then one day realized we were sick and tired of trying to clean pots and pans and griddles and grates and wire supports, and tripods, and all of that soot and black and charred stuff. We went through cans and cans of spray oven cleaner over the years and realized eventually, the food was great, but the clean up was awful.