BrotherBart said:"Having french fries tonight dear?"
pen said:That's how I refinish cast iron cookware.
However, when it's really smoking/baking-in, it ain't smelling like french fries.
pen
Hass said:Do you think this makes it tacky like cast iron cookware?
At least some of my seasoned cast iron goodies leave some goo on your fingers when you handle them.
BrotherBart said:If you use cooking oil instead of lard you end up with goo.
pen said:BrotherBart said:If you use cooking oil instead of lard you end up with goo.
I keep lard around at all times (as it should be!), but have used crisco for testing while seasoning and I've found it works just fine also (no stick).
pen
BrotherBart said:If you use cooking oil instead of lard you end up with goo.
stoveguy2esw said:i was cringing im not ashamed to say, i helped build that stove , its an 18-TR an exempt unit and quite a successful one we built up into the early 00's (dad still has one in his woodshop) after looking at the whole series of pictures im simply amazed at how great this turned out.
aint every day i learn somthing in the woodburning business. i did today. great post! rest assured i'll pass this one around the office come monday. thanks for sharing this with us , and thanks again for choosing my product to do it with, that was pretty damned cool!
BTW, that stove was designed and built to "work for a living" she'll hold up for many years to come
Webmaster said:That whole process of "rendering" sorta grosses me out.......I remember when giant dump trucks loaded with the meat cuttings used to be tooling around in Philly! It pained me to think someone was gonna eat that stuff.......
But if you use the deer or bear fat after you harvest the fella, that's probably OK....
:coolsmirk:
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