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Welcome!

Lodge Cast Iron Cookware for All Your Cookware Needs

Made in the USA. Lodge Manufacturing is America's oldest cast iron cookware manufacturer and foundry. Located in South Pittsburg, Tennessee for more than 100 years, Lodge has been perfecting the process of making Lodge cast iron cookware, cast iron bakeware, seasoning cast iron cookware, cast iron camping cookware, skillets, fryers, dutchovens, griddles, and grill pans. In 2002,Lodge introduced Lodge Logic:seasoned,ready-to-use cookware. This revolution set a new standard for the cast iron cookware industry, earning Good Housekeeping's"Good Buy Award". We at the greatcountrystore are proud to feature Lodge Cookware products. Our cast iron cookware for sale are high quality and durable. 

 

New! Seasoned, Ready to Use Cast Iron Cookware

 

Introducing Lodge Logic and Lodge Pro~Logic a brand new way to cook with cast iron.

Now on select items we offer pre-seasoned, ready to use cookware from Lodge. At the plant an electrostatic spray has been evenly applied to all surfaces of your cookware, then baked-on at extremely high temperatures. Now you can use your cookware right out of the box washing and caring for it as if you had seasoned it yourself. ,

Lodge Logic and Lodge Pro~Logic seasoned, ready to use cookware eliminates the time and effort of seasoning your new selection, and will look and perform better than home seasoning.

Good Information

Some foods simply taste better cooked in iron cookware. Breakfast is one meal that cries for a cast iron skillet, but so do Mexican dishes like fajitas and taquitos. Corn bread is as synonymous with an iron skillet as Aunt Jemima is to pancakes and Chef Prudhome is to blackened fish.

The resurgence in demand for cast-iron cookware is due to several factors:

  • Iron cookware is extremely durable and just gets better with use,
  • Skillets and pots heat evenly and quickly on ALL types of ranges,
  • Take it camping and sit your pots and pans on glowing coals,
  • It's non-stick black patina finish lets you cook like a pro.

But best of all, a properly seasoned cast iron skillet or dutch oven will sear, bake, or stew, without sticking, better than aluminum, copper, or stainless at a fraction of the cost, and will last a lifetime without incurring a scratch nor a dent. Whether it's cornbread or fried chicken, flapjacks or fajitas, fried country ham or fried green tomatoes, give me a cast iron skillet every time, and Lodge, having made their cookware for over one hundred years now, is the best.

Facts About Cast Iron Cookware

 

Cast-Iron Cookware

Cast iron is one of the oldest materials for cookware, and remains to this day, one of the best. It is, of course, admirably suited for use on induction-cooking units, but it is valued by good cooks for its general usefulness. Cast-iron cookware is superb for any cooking task whatever that does not require rapid changes in cooking temperature. Iron is a material that has a high "thermal inertia": it is fairly slow to heat, but once at a temperature it tends to hold that temperature solid and steady.

Cast-iron skillets are the original--and, most feel, still clearly the best--"non-stick" cooking vessels ever. A properly seasoned cast-iron skillet  is felt by most cooks to be better than any of the modern "non-stick" coated cookware items at allowing, well, "non-stick" cooking.

Cast iron is also as rugged as, yes, iron. With only modest care, cast iron can last for generations; many families today are still happily cooking with cast-iron cookware bought by an ancestor over a century ago.

The two drawbacks to cast iron are these: first, it is not well suited for those few cooking tasks in which the temperature of cooking must be changed fairly rapidly--slow to heat is also slow to cool. Second, though rather less important, it is fairly heavy.

What makes cast iron so wonderful, almost magical, as a cooking material is the application of "seasoning". Seasoning cast iron has acquired an aura almost of the mystic, as if it were some magical technique known only to masters. Nonsense. It is simple, easily begun and easily maintained. Seasoning consists simply in applying and "baking on" some fatty oil applied to the vessel's surfaces. As time goes on, and more oil is more solidly baked in, those surfaces acquire an almost silken smoothness. One begins, with a "raw" new item of cast iron (after giving it a light hand washing) by coating its surfaces, inside and out, with a light covering of cooking oil, then placing the vessel upside down in an oven pre-heated to 350° (spread some aluminum foil under it to catch any drips) and letting it bake for about an hour--leave it in the oven after that till the oven and it are thoroughly cooled down. That's it. That wasn't so hard, was it?

After that, just remember to never wash the vessel (with soap or detergent, that is)--just rinse it with hot water and scrub it a bit with a stiff-bristled brush; after that, while it's still warm, lightly wipe a little more oil over the surfaces and store the item (preferably in a cool, dry place). It helps the process if you repeat, especially when the item is still fairly new, the oven treatment. A new, just-first-seasoned pan will not yet have achieved its final smoothness, so don't expect things like pancakes to at once cook non-stick. But before long, you'll have something much better--and much healthier!

(And whatever you do, do not ever put a still-hot cast-iron item into or under cold water! Sheer common sense ought to preclude such an act--which will almost surely crack the iron--but common sense isn't always common.) 

Moreover, if something so simple as that still seems daunting, nowadays you can buy factory pre-seasoned cast-iron cookware. (Be aware, though, that many folk who buy those still feel that it is wise to add on your own seasoning). And, of course, either way, you continue the process through the years.

(If not using soap or a detergent seems "unhealthy", just remember that the vessel is automatically sterilized by the cooking heat. In fact, cast iron is a deal "healthier" for you than most or all other cooking materials.)

Another form of cast-iron cookware is enameled cast iron. Enamelware is all those big, solid, super-brightly colored pots and Dutch ovens--delightful to cook with and delightful just to look at. Enamelware has all the virtues of cast iron itself, plus the permanent surface of baked enamel that never needs any care. Basic cast iron is almost ridiculously inexpensive compared to most other cooking materials; enameled is a bit pricier, but many people consider one or more enameled cast-iron pots to be an absolute necessity in every kitchen. And, again, this stuff lasts forever: amortize the cost over a lifetime (though it will outlast you and me), and it's not expensive at all.



"Still Going Strong"

LODGE CAST IRON

COOKING TIP

recipe or cooking tip

A Cooking Tip...
Corn bread always tastes better cooked in a Lodge cast iron skillet, if you know how. Use Crisco and heat the greased cast iron pan in the oven for 20 min., then pour the batter in and bake as usual.



Barrett Enterprises

Address: P.O.Box 112
Union Grove Alabama, 35175-0112
U.S.A.

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