Cast iron Cookware Shop On Spam In Your E-mail Inbox

September 16th, 2009

Peter Scallion in the October 2009 issue of Reader’s Digest asks: “What if spammers were subject to truth-in-advertising laws“? He shows how our e-mail in boxes might read:

  • Cool New Computer viruses!
  • Your Bank Account Is Already Secure and Updated-No Action Required
  • Hi, Peter! Despite My Friendly Tone, I Don’t Know You
  • Debt? Bad Credit? Foreclosure? It’s Your Own Fault
  • Free Gift! We Get You On the Outrageous Shipping and Handling Charges
  • Delete This Without Missing a Thing
  • Financial Ruin Is Just a Click Away!
  • Sorry, You Didn’t Win Our Sweepstakes
  • Hot, Sexy Girls Don’t Have Anything to Say to You
  • Act Whenever-Supplies Will Last
  • Satisfaction Unlikely

Here are some others he did not suggest:

  • Get your website and make a fortune on the internet (but not your fortune)
  • You have inherited $4,200,000! There is really no money and I am not a government minister, I just need your money
  • Your credit card was charged $5,000. If you did not make this purchase, send us all your account information so we can really scam you.

With this kind of junk coming to us every day, it makes it increasingly difficult to know what we should believe, whom we should trust and is there anyone we can really rely upon?

In light of this, Cast Iron Cookware Shop makes the following commitment to anyone who might follow the posts in our blog:

  1. We will never ask you to substitute our judgment for your own. We are not the authority and if we are guilty of overstatement, hyperbole or error, please inform us and we will correct it. We welcome your comments.
  2. We promise to tell you the truth about cast iron cookware. Hopefully. when we share product information or any information for that matter, it will be accurate to the best of our knowledge. Should we discover we have shared incorrect information, we will retract it immediately.
  3. Cast iron Cookware Shop promises not to “spam” you.

Lodge Combo Cooker

Lodge Combo Cooker

This Cast Iron combination deep skillet and shallow skillet/griddle is a useful addition to your castiron cook ware. The shallow skillet serves as lid, skillet and griddle. The fry pan is 10 1/4 inches in diameter and 3inches deep. This multi-use cooker is a dutch oven, saute pan and fryer, all in one. This cast iron combo set is a great gift for your family members who are just starting their cast iron kitchen ware.


“Keeper of the King’s Storehouse” and Cast Iron Cookware

July 30th, 2009

In 1714 Louis Antoine Juchereau de St. Denis navigated up the Red River on his trade mission from what is now Mobile, Alabama to Mexico. Because of a massive log jam St. Denis had to leave the river and continue overland. He landed near a village of the Natchitoches (nak-a-tish) Indians. St. Denis continued on to Mexico but left a few men to guard their provisions and trade with the Native Americans.Their rustic huts became Fort St. Jean Baptiste, the oldest continuous European settlement in the entire Louisiana Purchase Territory. Francois Dion Duprez d’Herbonne (Derbonne), Barbara’s ninth generation grandfather was commissioned in 1716 by King Louis XV of France “Keeper of the King’s Store House and Paymaster of the Militia” at Fort St. Jean Baptiste.

Barbara at Ft. St. Jean Baptiste

Barbara at Ft. St. Jean Baptiste

Barbara Bailey, partner with her husband Doyle, operates Cast Iron Cookware Shop in Natchitoches. Family history shows that her grandfather Francois Dion Duprez d’Herbonne (9 generations ago) also was a merchant who dealt with cast iron cookware in the store at Ft. St. Jean Baptiste. Barbara’s grandfather’s stewardship as “Keeper of the King’s Storehouse” involved the management of cast iron cookware. It must run in the family for Barbara loves cast iron cookware. She cooks with it every day and loves to talk about it with others.

Barbara at Replica of Store at Ft. St. Jean Baptiste

Barbara at Replica of Store at Ft. St. Jean Baptiste

Cast Iron Cookware has been around a long time. Start your collection or add to your collection of cast iron cookware and you will have family heirlooms you can pass to your children and grandchildren. In the mean time you will enjoy meals that let you “taste the food and not the cookware“.

For more on the French Colonial History of Natchitoches, the oldest permanent settlement in the Louisiana Purchase, visit Barbara’s Blog. http://www.tournatchitocheswithbarbara.storeblogs.com

About Us At Cast Iron Cookware

July 28th, 2009

Castironcookwareshop.com is an online business designed to make your Pre-seasoned and Enameled Cast Iron Cookware shopping quick, easy and affordable.

Our mission is to:
Provide you a quality and durable
cast iron cook ware product at a fair price.

Enable you to cook meals that your family
will enjoy both in your kitchen and in the
great outdoors
THE CAST IRON WAY.

Allow you to TASTE THE FOOD,
NOT THE COOKWARE.

Make your shopping safe, secure and
satisfactory.


Our emphasis is on quality and value, backed up by long-term product warranties. Our Enameled and Pre-seasoned castiron cookware products are designed and constructed with a full understanding of the product’s use.

Our cookware design draws on decades of experience
in providing cook ware that is both durable and elegant
at an affordable price.

WHY SHOP WITH US?

We love cast iron cookware.
We cook with cast iron.
We have a secure web-site.
We answer our phone personally.
We listen.
We will search for a product not in our Shop.
We regard you as a valuable customer and resource.
We respect you.
We are always friendly.
We want your ideas.
Cast iron cookware adds quality to your life.

Corn Bread with One Wedge Missing

Corn Bread with One Wedge Missing

My Favorite Cast Iron Cornbread Pan

My Favorite Cast Iron Cornbread Pan

The cornbread in the picture was baked by me to go with my homemade soup at dinner tonight. The cornbread pan is the one I used to bake the cornbread. And the missing piece? You might have guessed it. I ate it while I was writing this post. Don’t you hate crumbs on your keyboard?

Cast Iron Cookware Allows you to Taste the Food Not the Cookware