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Fire Me Boy!
07-10-2011, 08:47 AM
From a recent edition of Cooks Illustrated (please pardon any typos - I had to re-type it from the magazine):

For years we've seasoned cast iron cookware in the test kitchen by placing it over medium heat and wiping out the pan with coats of vegetable oil until its surface turns dark and shiny. When a pan starts to look patchy, we simply repeat the process. But when we heard about a new method that creates a slick surface so indestructible that touch-ups are almost never necessary, we were intrigued. Developed by blogger Sheryl Canter, the approach calls for treating the pan with multiple coats of flaxseed oil between hour-long stints in the oven.

We carried out Canter's approach on new, unseasoned cast iron skillets and compared them with pans treated with vegetable oil - and the results amazed us. The flaxseed oil so effectively bonded to the skillets, forming a sheer, stick-resistant veneer, that even a run through our commercial dishwasher with a squirt of degreaser left them totally unscathed. But the vegetable oil-treated skillets showed rusty spots and patchiness when they emerged from the dishwasher, requiring reseasoning before use.

Why did the new treatment work so well? Flaxseed oil is the food-grade equivalent of linseed oil, used by artists to give their paintings a hard, polished finish, and it boasts six times the amount of omega-3 fatty acids as vegetable oil. Over prolonged exposure to high heat, these fatty acids combine to form a strong, solid matrix that polymerizes to the pan's surface.

Although lengthy, seasoning with flaxseed oil is a mainly hands-off undertaking. We highly recommend the treatment:

1. Warm an unseasoned pan (either new or stripped of seasoning*) for 15 minutes in a 200-degree oven to open its pores.

2. Remove the pan from the oven. Place 1 tablespoon flaxseed oil in the pan and, using tongs, rub the oil into the surface with paper towels. With fresh paper towels, thoroughly wipe out the pan to remove excess oil.

3. Place the oiled pan upside down in a cold oven, then set the oven to its maximum baking temperature. Once the oven reaches its maximum temperature, heat the pan for one hour. Turn off the oven; cool the pan in the oven for at least two hours.

4. Repeat the process five more times or until the pan develops a dark, semi-matte surface.

*To strip a cast iron pan of seasoning, spray it with oven cleaner, wait 30 minutes, wash with soapy water, and thoroughly wipe with paper towels.

Mr. Laz
07-10-2011, 08:52 AM
Ultimate way to season cast iron (http://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?p=7739566#post7739566)
use it!!

GloryDayz
07-10-2011, 08:53 AM
Seemed doable until "Repeat the process five more times ". You get to doing this for a scout troop and you'll be there FOREVER...

ChiefGator
07-10-2011, 08:55 AM
Awesome, thanks for posting...

I have some Cephalon unison pans I use for most things, but I am about to buy some new cast iron pans for some types of cooking.

SAUTO
07-10-2011, 08:55 AM
How much would that cost in electricity?

Five hours maxed out?
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Just Passin' By
07-10-2011, 10:54 AM
Thanks for passing this on, FMB.

Bugeater
07-10-2011, 11:05 AM
How much would that cost in electricity?

Five hours maxed out?
Posted via Mobile Device
Well, basing it on my oven and my summer kwh rate for last year...

3000w/hr = 3kwh

x 5 hours = 15kwh

x $.10/kwh = $1.50

Of course, if you do it this time of year it you'll have to figure in some additional cost due to the additional heat load you're putting on your air conditioning, but I don't feel like calculating that one.

bevischief
07-10-2011, 11:09 AM
Thanks.

SAUTO
07-10-2011, 11:15 AM
Well, basing it on my oven and my summer kwh rate for last year...

3000w/hr = 3kwh

x 5 hours = 15kwh

x $.10/kwh = $1.50

Of course, if you do it this time of year it you'll have to figure in some additional cost due to the additional heat load you're putting on your air conditioning, but I don't feel like calculating that one.

Lol thanks.

And I was just being a smart ass, first in...
Posted via Mobile Device

Fire Me Boy!
07-10-2011, 12:54 PM
I've got a 12-inch round griddle that I never use because the seasoning on it sucks. It's tough to force yourself to use one that the seasoning sucks on when you have 4 or 5 other pans that would do the job that are ready to go. I might just strip the seasoning off it and try this one weekend.

Fire Me Boy!
07-10-2011, 12:56 PM
use it!!

You gotta season before you use it. And even using it won't prevent it from needing reseasoned periodically.

cdcox
07-10-2011, 01:02 PM
I've got a 12-inch round griddle that I never use because the seasoning on it sucks. It's tough to force yourself to use one that the seasoning sucks on when you have 4 or 5 other pans that would do the job that are ready to go. I might just strip the seasoning off it and try this one weekend.

If you (or anyone else) tries this, let me know. I have a skillet that never seems to hold its seasoning and would like to give this a try, but the process seems a little time consuming.

Fish
07-10-2011, 01:07 PM
The process is time consuming. But it's important enough to justify. And you don't really have to repeat it 5 times. But the more you repeat it, the longer it lasts.

WV
07-10-2011, 01:23 PM
I have one seasoned traditionally and one I bought pre-seasoned and don't have issues with either one. Maybe if I were starting over I'd give this a shot, but not at this point.

Stewie
07-10-2011, 03:12 PM
I've seasoned mine according to the mfg specs and that has worked fine and not nearly as involved. They do suggest more than one seasoning, but I just put a fine coat of oil after each use and have had no problems. I even do fried eggs without sticking.

boogblaster
07-10-2011, 06:42 PM
kool

RJ
02-29-2012, 09:34 PM
I'm in the process of seasoning two pieces, a 10" skillet and a 4 qt. dutch oven. The skillet at one time was very nicely seasoned but I let it get away from me. The dutch oven was supposedly seasoned when I bought it but I was never happy with it. As an experiment, I am using canola on the dutch oven and flax on the skillet. If I really see a big difference I'll strip the dutch oven and do it again.

Has anyone else tried this since FMB's original thread and if so do you have any advice?

Fritz88
02-29-2012, 09:42 PM
Need to give it a try.

hometeam
02-29-2012, 09:54 PM
The original cast iron skillet thread on CP made me go out and buy one. It could have been one of the greatest decisions I ever made~

Looking at this now I may go buy another unseasoned pan and try this method.

mikeyis4dcats.
02-29-2012, 09:55 PM
still no better way to cook a steak at home.

mnchiefsguy
02-29-2012, 10:00 PM
I'm in the process of seasoning two pieces, a 10" skillet and a 4 qt. dutch oven. The skillet at one time was very nicely seasoned but I let it get away from me. The dutch oven was supposedly seasoned when I bought it but I was never happy with it. As an experiment, I am using canola on the dutch oven and flax on the skillet. If I really see a big difference I'll strip the dutch oven and do it again.

Has anyone else tried this since FMB's original thread and if so do you have any advice?

I have done one skillet with this method, and I was pleased with how it turned out. Stuff still sticks a little bit, so I may give it one more round of seasoning. I did six rounds of seasoning with flaxseed oil. Everytime I use it though, it seems to work better, so overall I am very pleased with the results. I have more pans to season, but am waiting till spring when it is a big warmer, when I can run the attic fan and open up the windows.