Author Topic: Cleaning a Dutch Oven  (Read 136573 times)

Offline DeShawn

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Cleaning a Dutch Oven
« on: April 07, 2011, 06:43:00 pm »
A well-cared-for cast iron dutch oven will retain its seasoning and continue to be useful for generations.

Cleaning a dutch oven entails two steps: Remove any food left in the dutch oven, and maintain the dutch oven’s seasoning.

1. Remove any leftover food:
I’ve heard of people using everything from harsh detergents to metal spatulas to river rocks to scrub out a dutch oven. Any kind of soap put into a warm dutch oven can seep into the seasoning. This can weaken the seasoning. The soap can come back out of the seasoning and add unwanted flavors to the next meal. Harsh treatment of the oven (with things like steel wool, metal utensils, or river rocks) can scrape away the precious seasoning and the oven will need to be babied, or even re-seasoned.

It is important to not let food or water sit in the dutch oven for a long time. It can erode the seasoning and will lead to rust and re-seasoning. Once most of the food has been taken out of the oven, the remaining food can be removed with hot water and a stiff brush. Lodge Manufacturing sells a synthetic-bristled brush that works very well for this purpose. Stubborn, stuck-on food can be coaxed off using heat and/or a plastic scraper. Leftover cooking coals or a nice camp stove can be used to apply heat.

At the same time, any residual ash from the coals used in the cooking process should also be scrubbed away. The stiff brush works wonderfully for this purpose as well.

Once all of the food is removed from the dutch oven, towel dry it thoroughly, removing as much water as possible.

2) Maintain the seasoning:
While the oven is still warm, apply a very thin coating of vegetable oil (or cooking spray, according to Lodge Manufacturing) to all surfaces of the dutch oven, both inside and out. It is best done while the oven is warm because the pores of the cast iron and the seasoning will be more open and receptive to the oil. Don’t use so much oil that it pools inside the oven or on the lid. Excess oil can be absorbed with paper towels.

The dutch oven is now ready to store until its next use.

The oven should be stored with its lid slightly ajar to allow air circulation.  I like to place a paper towel in the bottom of the oven (to absorb any excess oil or moisture) and I wedge two or three folded paper towels between the oven and the lid.

Offline DeShawn

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Re: Cleaning a Dutch Oven
« Reply #1 on: September 21, 2014, 07:05:47 pm »
I'm pretty sure that I've been leaving too much oil on my ovens when I put them away. Not a LOT too much, but too much nonetheless.

This year, I have acquired two new Lodge cast iron skillets, and I'm been having a ball cooking with them indoors. We didn't have anywhere to store these two new pieces of "cast iron furniture" as Mary Ball Washington called them. I bought an Enclume rack (http://www.enclume.com/ProductCatalog/tabid/106/ProdID/34/Default.aspx)  to hang them on and I installed it in my pantry high above the door. It was wasted space anyway.

Then my wife noticed a drip or two on the pantry floor. Since then, when re-seasoning my cast iron skillets for storage, I'll clean them, wipe them with vegetable oil, and then I'll use dray paper towels to wipe off as much oil as I can. I've noticed that the seasoning on my skillets is becoming harder and smoother--a definite sign that I'm doing something right.

I believe that by leaving a tiny bit too much oil on my dutch ovens, I'm not encouraging this same harder, smoother patina to form. I'm not leaving enough oil to pool, but my ovens are a bit too shiny, and sometimes, had I not left a paper towel in the bottom of the oven, oil might have pooled. So recently, I've been doing the same thing to my dutch ovens that I have with my skillets, and I believe it's made a difference.