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recently inherited these cast irons that are at least 40 years old. they were sitting in a cabinet for a few years and nasty with rust and crusty, old seasoning. i scrubbed the shit out of them with steel wool and lots of soap, then applied 4 coats of new seasoning! feel free to roast my seasoning, i have no idea if it’s good since it’s my first cast iron and would like to know.

for each coat of seasoning i just wiped the pan with peanut oil then set the oven at 435F for 20 minutes, then 460F for 10 minutes

ive been using only stainless steel for a couple months and im abt to give away my nonstick cookware. nonstick cookware is counter-revolutionary

  • CarbonScored [any]
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    edit-2
    1 month ago

    I mean maybe? I definitely scrub it with real steel wool each time, but I do rarely use soap. I am also careful never to go past smoking point so I'm definitely not seasoning it as in the way people recommend.

    If I am accidentally seasoning it, then even more argument that it's not necessary for me to actually season them I guess. But I struggle to see how anyone wouldn't be doing the same unless they're never using oil to cook with.

    • Roonerino [they/them]
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      1 month ago

      A good seasoning layer is nice to prevent sticking but the most important function of it, as far as I know, is just to keep a barrier between the iron and the air so you don't get rust. If you're not having problems with rust then I guess it doesn't really matter. Worst case, you end up using a bit more oil to prevent sticking than you otherwise would need.

      • CarbonScored [any]
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        1 month ago

        emilie-shrug Seasoning does seem to be poorly understood as a mechanism.

        The true point is cast iron is great.