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Yea if you throw it in fire you risk warping, or cracking the pan. Also I have read that of you over heat the metal it can turn it to a red color that looks like rust . apparently doing this will cause the pan not to take seasoning properly.
www.AvidArms.com I'm STIHL out of conditioner!!
Finally joined the ranks of broke homeowner
Am I short stroking or going to fast?
Aren't the dutch ovens made to be put into the camp fire with coals below and on top? Wouldn't this subject it to the same level of heat as "putting it in the fire"?
There's another form of damage which results, unfortunately, from good but misguided intentions. You'll often hear or read how simple cast iron cleaning can be if you just burn a pan in a fire. If the fire burns too hot, however, the molecular structure of the iron can be irreparably changed. Iron so-damaged will have an often scaly, patchy, dull red appearance, different from regular rust's orange/brown. Re-seasoning over such damage is usually not possible. A fire-damaged pan:
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