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No worries Lug. I'm sure because it's gonna be my first time making it there's gonna be some trial and era. Hopefully it doesn't crumble!! That's my biggest fear and that's why I'm asking a lot of questions and trying to watch the videos that are out there. I love scrapple and hope I can get to making it good.
I wonder if tap dancers walk into a room, look at the floor, and think, I'd tap that. I wonder about things.....
Re: Cooking with Gas and Old Cast Iron
[Re: Lugnut]
#7760090 01/01/2304:10 PM01/01/2304:10 PM
No worries Lug. I'm sure because it's gonna be my first time making it there's gonna be some trial and era. Hopefully it doesn't crumble!! That's my biggest fear and that's why I'm asking a lot of questions and trying to watch the videos that are out there. I love scrapple and hope I can get to making it good.
If scrapple falls apart when cooking, its usually because of too much water in the mix. Ya have to learn when its "done" in the kettle which is mostly determined by feel when stiring and amount of steam coming off.
There comes a point liberalism has gone too far, we're past that point.
Re: Cooking with Gas and Old Cast Iron
[Re: Catch22]
#7760096 01/01/2304:21 PM01/01/2304:21 PM
No worries Lug. I'm sure because it's gonna be my first time making it there's gonna be some trial and era. Hopefully it doesn't crumble!! That's my biggest fear and that's why I'm asking a lot of questions and trying to watch the videos that are out there. I love scrapple and hope I can get to making it good.
My biggest issue when I first started making it on my own was getting it too wet. I was afraid to thicken it up too much because the thicker it gets the harder it is to stir. And you have to keep stirring as you thicken it because if even a small amount burns it will ruin the whole batch. So I tended to err on the side of caution and pull it off the fire while it was still too wet.
I’ve pretty much got it dialed in now but it can be pretty crumbly. That’s just the nature of it. Think of it as a meat cake. It’s denser but similar in texture. I suppose I could use some more fat or something as a binder but I haven’t done that yet. After the initial cooking off of the bones, we scoop the juice out and let it sit overnight. The next day all the tallow and fat has risen to the top of the 5 gallon buckets, like 1.5- 2 inches thick that we take off and discard. I have started putting some of that back in to act as a binder.
Eh...wot?
Re: Cooking with Gas and Old Cast Iron
[Re: Lugnut]
#7760100 01/01/2304:32 PM01/01/2304:32 PM
Hippie, Lug, y'all are awesome. Thanks for sharing your scrapple wisdom!! I feel bad cause I went in a scrapple direction on a CI thread so heres a pic of my CI loaf pans. They make some good bread.
I wonder if tap dancers walk into a room, look at the floor, and think, I'd tap that. I wonder about things.....
Re: Cooking with Gas and Old Cast Iron
[Re: Lugnut]
#7760113 01/01/2304:58 PM01/01/2304:58 PM
Love cooking with cast iron . Makes the food taste better.[img]http://[/img] Mostly during camping and hunting season . But I my wife says at home is good too !
Re: Cooking with Gas and Old Cast Iron
[Re: Lugnut]
#7760183 01/01/2306:30 PM01/01/2306:30 PM
I have saved searches on eBay, they notify me when specific items are listed. I always contact the seller and ask if the pan is flat, no warping, etc. That way I have a reason to return it if it is defective.
Eh...wot?
Re: Cooking with Gas and Old Cast Iron
[Re: Lugnut]
#7760204 01/01/2307:02 PM01/01/2307:02 PM
I found my Iron Mountain set in an old farm dump while small game hunting decades ago. Took them home, cleaned them up and have been using them daily ever since.
Eh...wot?
Re: Cooking with Gas and Old Cast Iron
[Re: Lugnut]
#7760241 01/01/2307:38 PM01/01/2307:38 PM
Nessy, ebay is a source, but usually they bring the big bucks. Garage sales, thrift stores and sometimes the Goodwill has them. If you want to get into CI I suggest a lot of research on brands, logo's, years made and value. Also like Lug said, condition. Warped, bowed, cracked, etc.
A lot of the CI makers ran a economy brand for the poor folk. Griswold had Iron MTN and Victor, Wagner had National ( which is the #9 in my pic and my go to skillet. She's 100 years old and is awesome), Wapak had Oneta, Favorite had Miami and so on.
I see your skillet is from Taiwan or China. The older Taiwan skillets from 30-50 years ago are really good users with smooth bottoms and can be found cheap. I have one that's my go to cornbread skillet, my buddy give it to me. Lug, that's cool as heck you found them skillets and are using them!!
I wonder if tap dancers walk into a room, look at the floor, and think, I'd tap that. I wonder about things.....
Re: Cooking with Gas and Old Cast Iron
[Re: Nessmuck]
#7760254 01/01/2307:49 PM01/01/2307:49 PM
The pans were made by Griswold, they are their Iron Mountain series. Manufactured between the mid 30s and mid 40s they were a less expensive alternative to the marked Griswolds. I have a set of four.
The griddle is a newer, 30 or 40 year old, Lodge. It’s not the same quality as the iron Mountain series but it gets the job done.
My granddaughter and I just came back from running the line. This is our trapper’s breakfast before we hit the fur shed.
Dippy eggs, toast and venison scrapple with homemade apple butter for me. A stack of pancakes and scrapple with maple syrup on everything for my granddaughter.
Just finished dinner and now I'm hungry again,
“I don't know, Chief, if he's very smart or very dumb.” Capt. Quint
Re: Cooking with Gas and Old Cast Iron
[Re: Lugnut]
#7760398 01/01/2309:58 PM01/01/2309:58 PM
There are many online resources to find out how many coals/briquettes on the top and bottom of a Dutch oven to get the correct temp for baking.
For cooking stews and other things it really doesn't matter to much.
When baking it does. I also found that until you've learned how many to put on it's best to place a bundt pan in the Dutch oven. You're definitely going to have some mistakes, and those mistakes can be fun to clean.
Millions of trees die every year to print environmentalist publications
Re: Cooking with Gas and Old Cast Iron
[Re: Lugnut]
#7760403 01/01/2310:10 PM01/01/2310:10 PM
Thanks hippie! When I looked at the pic I posted it looks like a small skillet with wings lol. Those are full size drumsticks. Here's a pic of the #14 with a #9 sitting in it.
This one is the flagship of my collection Catch. It’s an Erie 719 #12. The last one was made in 1909. It’s not a daily user but it does get used frequently. It’s big enough to cover two burners. I recently saw one for sale on Etsy for $1000.00.
Eh...wot?
Re: Cooking with Gas and Old Cast Iron
[Re: Lugnut]
#7760748 01/02/2310:44 AM01/02/2310:44 AM