Author Topic: Seasoning Different Pieces  (Read 188 times)

Offline Jim Glatthaar

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Seasoning Different Pieces
« on: June 08, 2024, 02:06:51 AM »
Over the past month or so, I have probably seasoned 40 or more pieces of iron (including lids of pans).  I am now taking different approaches based on the piece of iron I am working on.

Due to a food allergy, I can't use Crisco.  I have tried and rejected liquid oils (I tend to waste too much).  I had good success with sprays.  But when I noticed a proliferation of beeswax ingredient items, I thought I would give them a try, but the food allergy forced me to make my own (the mad scientist in me enjoyed it).  I now make my own oil/beeswax paste and am very pleased with the results, particularly for skillets, kettles & Dutch ovens. 

Working with scalding hot lids and waffle/wafer irons is another matter.  It occurred to me it is much easier to season a hot lid or waffle/wafer iron with spray than with the paste.  I found the spray goes on quickly, evenly and lightly so I can hold with one hand, spray then wipe off with the other hand.  The less time holding scalding hot iron, the better.  The quicker the spray goes on and gets wiped off, the better.

Upcoming sessions will include 2 bundt pans, which have burn potential written all over them, so they will be getting the spray seasoning.

I am open to other suggestions by WAGS members.

Offline Craig Allison

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Re: Seasoning Different Pieces
« Reply #1 on: June 08, 2024, 10:18:09 AM »
When working with pieces that require more than usual contact, I fall back on an old BBQers trick. I wear a pair of cotton gloves and cover them with 6 mil disposable Nitril gloves. It makes the accidental contacts painless and gives a short period of actually holding the hot iron without getting burnt. Throw away the oily Nitril gloves and save the cotton for next time.

I have used the different bees wax concoctions available and I've never seen anything that makes them worth the extra cost. Maybe I need to start making my own.

Offline Neal Birkett

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Re: Seasoning Different Pieces
« Reply #2 on: June 08, 2024, 02:08:17 PM »
I just use Pam spray for nearly all seasoning, in part because I needed my process to work well for waffle irons, and I did not want different processes for different pieces. I would eventually find that one worked better than the other, and feel like I had to redone those with the lower performing seasoning.  After having worked through many hundreds of pieces, I can't think of anything I would not use Pam on.   Pam is a blend of canola, coconut, and palm oils, plus lecithin, a phospholipid emulsifier that helps to stabilize mixtures of substances that do not normally blend well together, such as oil and water.  I avoid substituting a generic or any other spray, but there are a couple of versions of large spray cans that I generally buy.  Pam works well for me, but that may be in part because it integrates well to my overall preparation process.  I always finish cleaning with at least 24 hours in lye (even after electro or Evaporust or just plain scrubbing) before seasoning.

I spray Pam directly and liberally on the hot pans, about 350 deg, then let cool and drain.  I have not had any problems with the spray shocking the iron, but maybe use a low temperature about 250 if the piece is a holy grail. Note that I do not try to wipe down the hot pans.  1) it is a hassle due to being hot, and 2) there may be an absorption benefit to allow it to cool on the iron.  Iron is porous after all.  When cool, wipe off all excess with fresh paper towels.  Repeat 5x, don't be fooled by "looks good enough" at 3x (unless you are flipping it, and just don't care).  The color is robust at 4x, but do one more time.  Don't be surprised that the excess oil comes off with loose black from the cleaning process for the first 2 rounds.  No amount of scrubbing seems to get it all.  Bounty works well as my choice for paper towels, and does not leave much lint on most pieces.  I hold the hot iron with thick kitchen potholders that I don't mind if they get dirty.  I throw them in the wash every once in a while.  I also find that the lye finish then 5 coats seasoning at a minimum will deter any rust for many years, even if just stored.  When I do come across a piece that has older seasoning and is showing rust, it is almost always from before I used my current process (10+ years).

I also tried using a custom blend of oils, but really had no evidence of any improvement in performance for the increased inconvenience, so ultimately just went with Pam.

If I really want the seasoning to set, I try to cook with the piece for several months, with routine maintenance of the seasoning.  The as-cooked seasoning seems to be the ultimate finish, and you can clean up any blotches with a couple extra coats.
Best Regards,
Neal

Offline Jim Glatthaar

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Re: Seasoning Different Pieces
« Reply #3 on: June 11, 2024, 03:53:55 AM »
Thanks, Craig & Neal for describing the process you use.  I agree that cooking really improves the seasoning.  I didn't mention, but I believe the beeswax mixture may be better at filling in pitting, but I will leave that up to everyone to decide.

Offline Neal Birkett

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Re: Seasoning Different Pieces
« Reply #4 on: June 11, 2024, 04:00:04 AM »
I will keep that in mind when I am using one of my pieces with a rough surface. 

Perhaps someone could confirm the effect from use of their modern-ish Lodge?
Best Regards,
Neal

Offline Jim Glatthaar

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Re: Seasoning Different Pieces
« Reply #5 on: June 12, 2024, 02:31:47 AM »
I use it on my modern Lodges.  The problem is that filling in downward pits in a cooking surface is much easier and quicker than essentially raising the skillet bottom to fill around the pebbly surface of the modern Lodges.  I think that might takes many months of regular cooking and maintenance seasoning to achieve.

Offline Craig Allison

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Re: Seasoning Different Pieces
« Reply #6 on: June 12, 2024, 09:59:39 AM »
I wonder if seasoning a rough pan "right side up" would help fill in the roughness quicker. Kinda like cooking with oil would do. It's contrary to all I've learned but if the iron was cooked long enough to thoroughly dry the oil then it may not be a problem. But I could be wrong.

Offline Jim Glatthaar

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Re: Seasoning Different Pieces
« Reply #7 on: June 13, 2024, 03:15:25 AM »
Craig, it certainly might help.  I don't see any problem arising as the amount of oil left on the cooking surface is so small that I doubt it would start pooling and not polymerize.  I have seen some YouTube videos where people season their pans cooking surface up.