I’ve only bought the pan a week ago and used it three times. Hot dogs, eggs, and steak.
When I’m done I clean it with a scrubby sponge and once with a little bit of detergent, then put it on the stove to dry quickly. Then while it’s hot I smear maybe a teaspoon of vegetable oil on it with a paper towel “brush”.
In between uses it’s wet with oil, as you can see in the picture. How much residual oil should there be? I had the impression that it would be dryer.
Also, how much should I scrub? I am not going to leave crust of beef on there, but I also don’t think it’s supposed to be scrubbed back to new smoothness.
I use a carbon steel pan, as I find the smoothness much easier to keep clean (smaller pores than cast iron).
I spent some time seasoning it at first (6 layers is a little overkill, I did 8, don’t be me), and now I just lightly scrub/wipe off any food or oils after cooking and reseason maybe monthly if that. My pan is dry and clean between uses.
If I burn food or it sticks for some other reason, I scrub harder. If I need an abrasive, I reseason afterwards.
Reseasoning includes cleaning thoroughly with detergent to get any soot off. Then rubbing in oil with cloth, and drying off as much as possible with a clean cloth before popping it into the oven for an hour. Wiping it down gives thin, even layers.
If need be I repeat up to three times.
I’ve used them for 4-5 years now without issue.
My cast iron grill pan absorbs more flavors though, so that needs a lot more cleaning if switching between cuisines.
Really interesting details, thank you. I didn’t think about the pan absorbing flavor.
Cast iron doesn’t “absorb” anything. It’s not untreated wood. It also doesn’t have “pores” (even Cook’s Country makes this mistake). Steel pans are just made with a smoother surface than cast.
It’s a damn hard material, with an uneven surface (how much I hate the coarse surface of most cast). If you can find an old cast pan that was made with a smooth surface at an estate sale, or ebay, it’s worth paying a little more. Those are every bit as smooth as steel pans - I have both, the steel is better for stuff when heat retention isn’t crucial, cast for things where I nees the pan to not cool down as much, say browning a hunk of meat.
There’s a lot of (mistaken) mythos around cast. It’s cast freakin’ iron, the same thing steam train boilers are made from. It started being used for cooking because it was a ubiquitous, sturdy, heat-indifferent material (it ain’t getting damaged at home fire temps).
Technically you’re correct, however, the unevenness of the cast iron pans is harder to clean and thus effectively retains more flavor. In common parlance: the pan absorbs flavor even though the iron doesn’t (let’s gloss over the few things that do bond to iron).
Beyond cast iron, which is cast and thus has a rough surface from the molding. Carbon steel pans are made from sheets and then shaped, it’s the same material, only different processing. But the sheet is smooth, meaning less nooks and crannies for stuff to hide behind come cleaning time.
Also, have you considered the feel of grass against your fingers, I hear it’s lovely this time of year.