We loved this article in the Times Colonist News. The author writes about her BFF, her cast iron skillet!
She says: “One of the main reasons I love my cast iron skillet is its culinary flexibility. As you can see from the dishes above and the fish recipe below, you can use it on the stove, in the oven, over a campfire and set and cook with it right on a gas barbecue.
The other reason I love my cast iron skillet is its durability. It can last for decades if you treat it right.”
We agree!!
Read the whole article here and if you read to the end, you’ll even get her recipe for skillet barbequed fish.
Ah the beauty of cast iron, it only gets better with age. Why can’t everything be like that! Khoi Vinh has some interesting thoughts on the subject on his website. He says:
“Similarly, I have a US$20 cast iron skillet that I bought several years ago from a restaurant supply shop in downtown Manhattan. I’ve cooked hundreds of meals with it, and over time it has developed a coating from oil and food — the manufacturers call it ‘seasoning.’ It’s a little unbecoming when you think about it; in fact, though I clean it, it’s a dirty piece of cookware, and it resembles its original, store-bought state not at all.

But it’s also a beautiful piece of design. After cooking in it and cleaning it up, I’ve spent a lot of time just looking it over, marveling at how its very deterioration has been incorporated into the design of the object, at how it’s gotten more attractive — less ignorant — the more I use it. I’m not particularly sentimental about much in my kitchen, but I would be heartbroken if you took away this iron skillet.”