Cool Cast Iron Camping Cookware & Accessories
Some really “cool“ Camping Cast Iron Cookware and Camping Cookware Accessories are really “hot” for 2010 camping.
There are some really good reasons to get to the great outdoors and camp.
Here are some:
- the soul deadening pace of modern life. Even if you win the rat race you are still a “rat”.
- the ceaseless activity that drains our vitality.
- being harried and hassled by life’s demands
- being stuck on fast forward and running on empty
- add your reasons and comment below
Some Reasons to Go Camping:
- camping is fun and family friendly
- camping allows you to be who you are and want to be in a place you want to be. Tension is who you think (or others think) you should be. Relaxation is who you are (Chinese Proverb).
- camping is still affordable
- fun activities while you camp offer numerous possibilities. Use your imagination
- no doubt you can think of others. We would love to hear from you.
Cast Iron Cookware With a Spinach Salad Popeye Would Love
Every good cook should have a spinach salad in their repertoire and Chef Paul Prudhomme’s is one Popeye would love and so will you. The Chef points out that along with the traditional elements in the salad, the tasso and cane vinegar give it a decided Louisiana flavor.
Ingredients:
1/4 cup olive oil (where would Popeye be without Olive Oil?)
9 ounces tasso, or any premium-quality cooked ham, cut into 1/4- inch cubes
1 medium-size onion, cut into julienne strips
1 small red bell pepper, seeded and cut into julienne strips
1 small yellow bell pepper, seeded and cut into julienne strips
1 tablespoon minced fresh garlic
1/4 cup freshly squeezed lime juice
1/4 cup freshly squeezed lemon juice
1 teaspoon granulated sugar
1/4 cup firmly packed light brown sugar
1/4 cup dried currants
1/4 cup raisins
1/4 cup cane vinegar or any sweet vinegar
1 grapefruit, peeled and sectioned
Two 10-ounce packages fresh spinach
PREPARATION:
- Preheat a heavy 10-inch skillet
over high heat for 3 to 4 minutes. Add the olive oil, tilting the pan so the oil spreads over the entire bottom, then add the tasso, spreading it evenly. Cook, stirring and scraping the bottom occasionally, until the tasso is lightly browned, about 4 to 5 minutes. During this time notice that the seasonings from the tasso mingle with the oil.
- Add the onion, stir well and scrape up any brown bits that may stick to the bottom of the skillet, and cook, stirring occasionally, until the onion is brown around the edges (as its sugar caramelizes), it’ll lose its acid taste as well), about 4 to 5 minutes, then stir in the bell peppers, garlic, and citrus juices and cook, stirring occasionally, until the colors of the peppers become very bright, almost glowing, then darken as they are lightly browned from the heat, about 6 to 8 minutes.
- Stir in the granulated sugar, brown sugar, currants, raisins, and grapefruit. Cover, remove from the heat, and let cool to room temperature, during which time the currants and raisins will plump and absorb the other flavors.
- Remove (when the dressing is cool) the stems and any bruised leaves from the spinach and wash well. Shake or spin the spinach dry, place it in a large serving bowl, and pour the dressing over it. Toss lightly to coat all the spinach leaves and distribute the ingredients evenly. Serve at once.
Chef Paul Prudhomme’s Louisiana Tastes: Exciting Flavors from the State that Cooks. This is a good one.
You may not be Olive Oil cooking for Popeye, but you will all enjoy this savory salad prepared in a cast iron skillet.
Featured, Lodge Cast Iron Cookware, Recipe, cast iron cookware, cast iron fry pans, cast iron skillets, skillets | Comment (0)Cast Iron Cookware Camping Essentials
When camping, it is important to eliminate the non-essential and pack as lightly as possible. While not exactly light, there are two pieces of cast iron cookware that I will always take with me.
ONE: a cast iron camping dutch oven
The cast iron camping dutch oven is small enough to pack easily and large enough to feed a family or group. The flanged lid will hold hot coals to facilitate cooking and to keep ashes out of the pot. The cast iron camp lid can be turned upside down for use as a griddle. The dutch oven legs provide stability and safety for use over your campfire or fireplace. This camp dutch oven is a skillet, saute pan, casserole cooker and fry pan all in one. A castiron pot is a lifetime investment. In our family cast iron cookware is passed down from one generation to the next. The cast iron dutch oven was originated for outdoor cooking and for centuries has done it’s job.
Two: a cast iron 10 inch skillet
The cast iron skillet is ideal for eggs, bacon sausage, pancakes and omelets for breakfast. You can fry saute, make desserts like stewed apples and other fruits. You can grill your meats. The cast iron skillet also can serve as a grill, and griddle.
Camp Cookware, Camping, Featured, Lodge Cast Iron Cookware, Lodge Products, Lodge cookware, Lodge skillets, camp dutch oven, cast iron camping cookware, cast iron camping dutch ovens, cast iron dutch ovens, cast iron skillets | Comment (0)Why You Should Use Cast Iron Cookware Tonight
You perhaps have and use a nonstick pan all the time. Do not forget about the cast iron cookware you may have stored away in your cabinet.
There are reasons why you should get out the cast iron and use it tonight.
- cast iron cookware is so versatile that it can go from stove top to oven to grill with ease
- cast iron cookware allows you to bake a gooey pineapple upside-down cake in it as well as fry unbelievably crisp and tasty catfish
- cast iron cookware will enhance your reputation as an excellent cook
Pull out your hand-me-down skillet, or purchase a new pre-seasoned pan and try this recipe for Pork Chops with Pepper Jelly Sauce.
Ingredients:
4 (1/2 inch-thick bone-in pork loin chops (about 2 1/2 lbs.)
1 tsp. salt
3/4 tsp.freshly ground pepper
3 Tbsp. butter, divided
3 Tbsp. olive oil
1 Tbsp. all-purpose flour
1 laege jalapeno pepper, seeded and minced
1/2 cup dry white wine
1 cup chicken broth
1/2 cup red pepper jelly
Steps:
- Sprinkle pork with salt and pepper. Melt 1 Tbsp. butter with oil in a 12 inch cast iron skillet over medium high heat. Add pork chops and cook 8 minutes; turn and cook 10 minutes or until a meat thermometer inserted into thickest portion registers 150 degrees. Remove from skillet, and keep warm.
- Add flour and jalapeno to skillet. Cook, stirring constantly, 1 to 2 minutes or until flour is golden brown. Add wine, stirring to loosen particles from bottom of skillet; cook 1 minute or until almost completely reduced.
- Add chicken broth, and cook 2 to 3 minutes or until mixture begins to thicken. Whisk in pepper jelly until melted and smooth. Cook 3 to four minutes or until thickened. Remove from heat. Stir in remaining 2 Tbsp. butter. Season with salt and freshly ground pepper to taste. Return pork to skillet; turn to coat. Serve pork with sauce.
Cook with a cast iron skillet tonight and you will be an avid advocate of cast iron cookware.
CAST IRON COOKWARE ALLOWS YOU TO TASTE THE FOOD NOT THE COOKWARE
Supersize Your Wallet Not Your Body with Cast Iron Cookware
How can you super-size your “assets” not your, er…body?
Research has shown that dieters who are offered a financial reward as an incentive to lose weight are five times more likely to meet their goal when compared to other dieters who have no potential monetary reward.
This has led to a number of incentive programs:
- companies have started offering everything from gift cards to cruises to employees who shed excess pounds in an effort to cut overall health care costs.
- Corporate Sponsors give cash prizes to obese participants who drop enough weight in a year.
What a healthy and well conceived idea! It is a win/win proposition for sponsor and participant.
This leads me to a question: Is there a pot
that can help you get rid of or avoid acquiring a “pot” and save you money at the same time? Cast Iron Cookware Shop proposes the following for your consideration:
- cooking in cast iron cookware can be conducive to cooking healthy meals of veggies at home and avoiding the “bloat” that can go with “fast food“. Cast iron cooked meals are “slow food” and can lead to enhanced communication in the family.
- cooking in cast iron can save you money in the long run. Yes, you can find less expensive cookware but you will be replacing it relatively soon. Cast iron cookware is an investment and not just a purchase. You will still be enjoying the quality of your cookware long after you have forgotten what you paid for it and you can pass it on to your children and grandchildren.
- cooking in with cast iron cookware instead of eating out is cost effective and will save you money.
If you want to super size something in 2010, cast iron cookware offers you an incentive to use the cookware that will allow you to taste the food not the cookware.
Featured, Lodge Cast Iron Cookware, Lodge cookware, Useful Information, advantages of cast iron, cast iron cookware, cast iron dutch ovens, dutch ovens | Comment (0)Food with a French Accent Cooked in Cast Iron Cookware
Out of the melting pot of French, Africans, Native Americans, Spanish, and others who settled in Louisiana, there has emerged a unique culture and cuisine and a way of life known as Cajun.
Cajun cooking has spread far and wide across the USA and even abroad. The swamps and the plantations of Louisiana are the birthplace of this unique cuisine.
The terms “Cajun” and “Creole“, in culinary terms, are often used interchangeable. However, there are differences in the ingredients and the style of cooking.
Judith Bluysen in “Cajun: A Culinary Tour of Louisiana” writes:
“Louisiana Creole cooking is the cuisine of cooks and chefs…Cajun cooking, while as labor-intensive and flavor rich, is a family project: a poor man’s cuisine based on abundant indigenous ingredients hunted, raised, or gathered”. I may assure you I have eaten both and they are both excellent.
In my home, my wife is from “Creole” origins but cooks primarily “Cajun”.
There are several givens for our family:
- a gift for cooking
- a love of eating and sharing food
- a need for a cast iron dutch oven and cast iron skillet.
For food lovers everywhere, get out a cast iron pot and try a Cajun Seafood Gumbo. C’est si bon.
SEAFOOD GUMBO
Ingredients:
3/4 cup vegetable oil
3/4 cup all-purpose flour
2 cups chopped onions
1 cup chopped bell peppers
1 cup chopped celery
1 tablespoon salt
1 teaspoon cayenne
5 bay leaves
8 cups water or shrimp stock
6 gumbo crabs, broken in half
1 pound medium shrimp, peeled and deveined
1 pound lump crabmeat, picked over for shells and cartilage
2 dozen oysters, shucked with their liquor
1/4 cup chopped green onions
1/4 cup chopped parsley
File powder to taste
Steps:
Combine the oil and flour in a large cast-iron pot over medium heat. Stirring slowly and constantly for 20 to 25 minutes, make a dark brown roux, the color of chocolate. Add the onions, bell peppers, celery, salt, cayenne and bay leaves. Cook, stirring occasionally, for about 10 minutes, or until very soft. Add the water or shrimp stock and stir to blend. Add the crabs and simmer, uncovered, stirring occasionally, for 1 1/2 hours. Add the shrimp and crab meat and cook for 15 minutes. Add the oysters, green onions and parsley and cook for 2 to 3 minutes, or until the edges of the oysters curl. Remove from heat. Remove the bay leaves. Serve with file powder passed at the table. Serves 6.
Louisiana Cooks in Cast Iron Cookware
For as long as I can remember my Louisiana family has cooked in cast iron cookware.
Every Friday my Dad would hang a huge cast iron dutch oven on a wire between two trees and fry prodigious amounts of cat fish and french fries for family, visiting relatives (many times vacationing with us) and friends. It was really a communal meal. Since we lived on Cross Lake, Shreveport, Louisiana, we caught the catfish and dressed them ourselves. I wonder what ever happened to that cast iron pot? As an adult, I would love to still have it and would treasure it like the “Holy Grail“!
My Dad would have loved to have had a tri-pod for the Friday night fish frys and when we went camping.
Matt Pelton got it right in “The Cast Iron Chef”
“There are no words to describe the tastes of food prepared in this way (cast iron cookware); it is like a symphony of perfectly balanced flavors. There is something magical about Dutch-oven prepared food. It began as a necessity and has become a pleasurable pastime”
Dutch Oven cooking is not just a hobby, it is a staple in Louisiana kitchens today. Many dutch ovens are coming out of storage, out of attics, being dusted off, discovered anew and put into use. Cast iron cookware is not just big in the kitchen, it is enormously popular among camping and out door enthusiasts.
Many people think of a Dutch Oven as only a type of “antique crock pot” or a slow-cooker. In Louisiana kitchens, including ours, there are four cooking methods that you can use with a cast iron dutch oven:
- Roasting (all the heat is coming from the bottom of the Dutch Oven.
- Broasting (most of the heat is coming from the bottom with a little heat on top)
- Baking (equal heat on bottom and top)
- Broiling (all of the heat is at the top. Usually used in the finishing stage or with dishes that require heavy caramelizing on the top)
Louisiana cooks have found that their options are almost endless whether cooking in the kitchen, at their back yard fire pit, or in the great outdoors camping.
Discover or Re-discover cast iron Cookware and you will enjoy ease in cooking, great tasting food, non-stick cookware that cleans up easily and cookware that allows you to taste the food not the cookware.
Camp Cookware, Camping, Lodge Cast Iron Cookware, advantages of cast iron, camp cookware accessories, camp dutch oven, cast iron camping cookware, cast iron camping dutch ovens, cast iron dutch ovens, dutch ovens, tri-pods | Comment (0)Cast Iron Cookware Helps You Get Your Pizza Right
Have you seen the commercials or the four-minute video on YouTube related to Domino’s Pizza and their reinvention? In summary Domino’s new campaign says: “We blew it”.
Focus groups and consumer surveys had revealed something that was hard to “stomach”. Their pizza stunk. Domino’s executives talked about how hard it was to hear that their pizza product “tastes like cardboard” and is worse than microwave pizza. But they admitted the truth and to committed to start over with more flavor, better crusts and cheese that doesn’t taste like discount weather caulking. Good for you, sirs! Washington politicians could learn from you. How refreshing is a quality that can be in short supply today. Honesty. Confronting a criticism head-on rather than denying it and asking for a second chance to make it right, well, that just makes me want to go out and order a Domino’s pizza. I think I will give them a little time to make the change.
In the meantime, how about this for an idea to make your own pizza, and enjoy the making as well as the eating? You can even get out of the kitchen without ordering out. Use a Rome Pizza Grill and make your pizza in your backyard fire pit, over your campfire when you get away or even over the coals in your fireplace. How much fun this could be with your children a or grandchildren!
Of course if you want a homemade pizza from your oven, nothing can beat a cast iron pre-seasoned pizza pan and it is non-stick.
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Waffles Waft Wonderful Aromas with Cast Iron Cookware
Cast Iron Waffle Irons do waffles in a way no electric waffle iron can possibly match.
With a cast iron waffle iron you can:
bake the grid like batter cakes over your campfire
prepare them in your fireplace on a cold winter’s evening
serve them up in your back yard from your fire pit
use them on your range in your kitchen
Ingredients For Basic Waffles:
- 4 3/4 ounces all-purpose flour, approximately 1 cup
- 4 3/4 ounces whole-wheat flour, approximately 1 cup
- 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 3 tablespoons sugar
- 3 whole eggs, beaten
- 2 ounces unsalted butter, melted
- 16 ounces buttermilk, room temperature
- Vegetable spray, for waffle iron
Directions
Preheat waffle iron according to manufacturer’s directions.
In a medium bowl whisk together the flours, soda, baking powder, salt, and sugar. In another bowl beat together eggs and melted butter, and then add the buttermilk. Add the wet ingredients to the dry and stir until combined. Allow to rest for 5 minutes.
Ladle the recommended amount of waffle batter onto the cast iron waffle iron according to the manufacturer’s recommendations. Close iron top and cook until the waffle is golden on both sides and is easily removed from iron. Serve immediately or keep warm in a 200 degree F oven until ready to serve.
As a “wafter” (person or things that”wafts“, cast iron waffle irons are without equal in sending delicious aromas to all who are in the area of their use.
CAST IRON COOKWARE; TASTE THE FOOD NOT THE COOKWARE
Camp Cookware, Camping, Recipe, camp cookware accessories, camp waffle irons, cast iron camping cookware, cast iron waffle iron, cast iron waffle irons, rome industries, waffle irons | Comment (0)Fun Accessories for Cast Iron Camping Cookware
Camping has always been fun for me and my family. However, it was always camping with a purpose.
For example:
- Camping in Southern Argentina in the (pre-cordillera mountains) of the Andes. Fishing was unbelievable for trout and salmon.
- Camping at Toledo Bend (between Louisiana and Texas) for bass, white perch and bream fishing.
- Camping with Royal Ambassadors (like Boy Scouts) to teach woodcraft skills.
- Motorcycle Camping with a trip from Louisiana to the Florida keys (3,500 miles round trip) was a blast. I could not have made it without a tube of Boudreaux’s Butt Paste that my wife gave me!
- Backyard camping for fun activities with children and grandchildren. Roasting franks, marshmallows and even popping corn with a campfire is irresistible for children of all ages.
Rome Industries has made available some excellent cast iron camping cookware and accessories to make camping a blast.
CAST IRON CAMP COOKWARE AND ACCESSORIES:
Firepit Cookout Set included a Square and Round Pie Irons for toasty sandwiches and tasty fruit pies.
Color- coded hot dog roasters for the kids and a three compartment S’More Maker for everyone.
A handy Tote is available for your Firepit Cookout Set.
Rome Pie Iron For Toasty Sandwiches or Fruit Pies
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