I do a lot of cast iron cooking. But I confess to being a vegetarian hiding amongst you all. So most anything I do probably would fall short.
I did like the Mexixan hangover dish. Very similar to some of my creations. Think I will give the pan pizza a try. Frittata's with whatever you like are good in cast iron. Start on the stove top and finish off in the oven. One of the beauties of cast iron is being oven safe.
In Newfoundland small balls of bread dough are flattened in the pan are called "touters". Sort of like dutch oven only in the skillet without a cover. They are tasty when warm with butter, garlic butter even maple syrup.
Most of my cooking is done without a recipe. Just throw what suits you in and let her go.
Someone said above about not needing to clean the pan. RIGHT ON!! My cast iron stuff is very old and they shine and reflect like a mirror. Water never touches my cast Iron. Just wipe it out when still hot using a paper towel and some cheap vegetable oil.
A Navahjo boy in Taos NM who was making and selling Navahjo flat bread on cast iron showed me how to clean up a pan if it did get crusted. Throw it into the hottest BonFire you can get and let it
get glowing red hot! Afterward season it up again and away you go. I have done this to old cast iron I bought that someone had allowed to get crusted. Works like a charm.
I did like the Mexixan hangover dish. Very similar to some of my creations. Think I will give the pan pizza a try. Frittata's with whatever you like are good in cast iron. Start on the stove top and finish off in the oven. One of the beauties of cast iron is being oven safe.
In Newfoundland small balls of bread dough are flattened in the pan are called "touters". Sort of like dutch oven only in the skillet without a cover. They are tasty when warm with butter, garlic butter even maple syrup.
Most of my cooking is done without a recipe. Just throw what suits you in and let her go.
Someone said above about not needing to clean the pan. RIGHT ON!! My cast iron stuff is very old and they shine and reflect like a mirror. Water never touches my cast Iron. Just wipe it out when still hot using a paper towel and some cheap vegetable oil.
A Navahjo boy in Taos NM who was making and selling Navahjo flat bread on cast iron showed me how to clean up a pan if it did get crusted. Throw it into the hottest BonFire you can get and let it
get glowing red hot! Afterward season it up again and away you go. I have done this to old cast iron I bought that someone had allowed to get crusted. Works like a charm.
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