The best way to season a cast iron skillet is like giving it a super strong, shiny coat that helps food stick and stay delicious.
Imagine your cast iron skillet is like a rusty old bike that needs some polish. Seasoning is like painting it with oil and then baking it in the oven, this makes it smooth and strong.
How to do it
- Clean your skillet well, you can use soap if needed, but don't be too rough.
- Put a little oil (like the kind you cook with) on the inside of the skillet.
- Heat it up in the oven, like when you bake cookies, but for about an hour.
This oil becomes part of the skillet, making it easier to cook food and harder to rust.
Why it works
Every time you use your skillet, a little bit of oil gets left behind. Over time, this makes it even better at cooking, just like how your bike gets smoother when you ride it every day!
Examples
- Adding oil and heat to your cast iron pan, like making a crispy layer of love.
- Using bacon grease to coat the pan before heating it up like a cozy blanket.
- Rubbing olive oil on the pan until it feels smooth as silk.
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See also
- Once a month cooking
- How can I keep pasta from sticking to itself?
- Translating cooking terms between US / UK / AU / CA / NZ
- Why do you need to heat the pan before heating the olive oil?
- When you cook spaghetti, do you add olive oil to the boiling water?