Cast Iron Grill-Grate Lets You Grill Great
Posted by Doyle Bailey for Cast Iron Cookware Shop
grills your vegetables and will not let them escape into your campfire. It holds them on the grill. It measures 15 x 11 inches . It also holds those delicate fish in place. This cast iron grill cooks your steaks, sausage, bacon and other meats evenly without flame damage. It is great for camping and grilling on the beach.
You can really grill great with the Lodge Cast iron BBQ Grill/Grate
TASTE THE FOOD NOT THE COOKWARE WITH CAST IRON COOKWARE
The Gateway to Family Fun with Cast Iron Camping Cookware and Accessories
What do you do when family is not as fun as it once was? Here are some suggestions that may help put the fun back in family. They may just be the Gateway to Family Fun you have been looking for.
- a family outing or camping trip can be the occasion to rediscover just how much fun being together can be. Hunting, fishing, hiking, exploring, birdwatching, photography and campfire cooking.
Teach your kids to cook over a camp fire or a fire pit.
Check out these easy ways to use cast iron camping cookware products:
gives you numerous fun options:
Make toasty sandwiches or fruit pies in your Rome pie irons.
Roast hot dogs or marshmallows in your Rome Hot Dog/Marshmallows Roaster.
Do not forget every one’s family favorite S’mores. Make three at a time in your Rome S’more Maker.
Not all camp cooking is done in a dutch oven or a skillet. While these are wonderful for preparing the main meal, what about dessert or fun activities around the campfire before time to turn-in?
Camp Cookware, Camping, S'more Makers, activities with children, camp cookware accessories, camp dutch oven, cast iron camping cookware, cast iron cookware, cast iron fry pans, cast iron pie irons, cast iron skillets, dog'n brat roaster, firepit cookout sets, hot dog roaster, marshmallow roasters, pie irons, rome industries, rome pie irons, rome popcorn poppers, sandwich makers, skillets | Comment (0)The Old South Pot: A Symbol of Success
“In the old days, the hall mark of successful plantation life was the iron pot” according to Francois Mignon in”Plantation Memo: Plantation Life in Louisiana 1750-1970 and other matter”.
When there was no silver on the dining room table, you could survive on pewter, earthenware, china or porcelain. You might even survive if your white-columned mansion went up in flames, but “life without an iron pot was rugged in the extreme“.
“In Louisiana all during the 1700’s (Great Pots Era), iron cooking utensils ranging from little three-legged pots nestling safely upright on the ashes in the hearth (today we call them camping Dutch ovens) to the big iron skillets, so masterfully handled by Negro cooks, were familiar equipment in town and plantation homes alike. It was early in the 1800’s however, that the day of the great pots dawned…sugar had come into its own and from year to year greater grew the demand for bigger and even bigger iron pots in which the cane juice could be started on its way to syrup and eventually to granulated sugar…”
Iron pots for making syrup and sugar, wash pots or clothes and iron pots for cooking food; they are all a part of what was life on a plantation. The iron pots from life on a plantation are today reminders of an almost forgotten yesterday. Some can still be seen on the Cane River Creole Plantations of Natchitoches, Louisiana.
Today’s cast iron cookware
may be pre-seasoned, enameled and somewhat unlike its predecessor from the past, but is still indebted to pots from the past for a heritage of nostalgic appeal and excellent cooking. Old fashioned? A little heavy? Nevertheless, cast iron cookware has its place in today’s kitchen and in the camping gear of out door cooks.
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What travels well, cooks evenly, cleans up easily and is just about the perfect cookware for campfire and outdoor cooking?
The answer: cast iron cookware. All you need is a campfire with a few hot coals and anyone can cook in the great outdoors or at your backyard fire pit. You do not have a be a rocket scientist or a professional chef.
WHAT YOU NEED TO GET STARTED:
Really, all you need is two pieces.
- A Dutch Oven (also called camp ovens)
2. A skillet with a lid. Many outdoor cooks consider other pieces necessary but these two are adequate to get you started.
SOME BUYING TIPS:
- If you shop for a dutch oven, be sure to look for one that comes with a reversible lid that functions both as a lid and when turned over is a griddle. The griddle side has a concave shape which keeps your pancakes, bacon and eggs, bacon, etc. from falling off or dripping into your coals.
- Skillets, like a 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. This multi-use cooker is a dutch oven, saute pan and fryer, all in one. If you want just one cast iron cookware piece for your camping and outdoor cooking, this might just be what you are looking for.
DO NOT FORGET SOME CAMPING COOKWARE ACCESSORIES THAT ARE DESIGNED FOR BIG TIME FUN
When you planing your camping trip, outdoor excursion or back yard cookout, do not forget cast iron camping cookware and camping cookware accessories.
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Cookware with Benefits for Everyday and Gourmet Cooking: Castiron Cookware
Posted by Doyle Bailey for Cast Iron Cookware Shop
Castiron Cookware combines the versatility of cooking for everyday and for gourmet.
You can cook just about anything in cast iron. Of course castiron cookware is best known for its good old fashioned cooking but do not let this reputation fool you. Due to its even heating qualities (heat retention and distribution),and the fact it can be used in the oven and on the stove top, you can cook just about any food, including gourmet in it.
Cast iron cookware offers:
- a large selection of pots, pans, and cookware shapes. You can choose from cast-iron griddles, grill pans, serving pots, Dutch ovens, pizza pans, roasters, casseroles, waffle makers, muffin pans, corn bread pans, camping cookware, bread bakers, dog’n brat, panini sandwich toasters, pie irons roasters and more.
- multi-use pans A single pan covers a multitude of dishes. A single cast iron skillet can be used to bake a cake, make cornbread, sear a fillet, roast a chicken, fry potatoes, or stir-fry vegetables. You can get a cast iron casserole with a grill pan lid and have two pieces for the price of one.
- cast iron cookware does not particularly care where you use it. You can prepare a dish in enameled cast iron cookware and take it to the table and serve from it there. It is so attractive that it will enhance your table with a presentation appeal and it will keep your food warm throughout your dinner due to its heat retention. Cast iron camping cookware is at its best at your backyard fire pit cookout or at your camp site in the great outdoors.
- cast iron cookware can cook almost anything (including gourmet dishes). “Cast-Iron Cooking for Dummies“ by Tracy Barr has great techniques for cooking and recipes as well.
Cast Iron Dutch Oven: the Pot that Won the West
Posted by Doyle Bailey for Cast Iron Cookware Shop
Some say the cast iron dutch
oven goes back hundreds of years. Others maintain the dutch oven originated with the Chinese 2,500 years ago. A great source for further investigation is “Dutch Ovens Chronicled, Their Use in the United States” by John G. Ragsdale, published by the University of Arkansas Press.
In 1704 Abraham Darby traveled from England to Holland to inspect the Dutch casing process which used brass vessels cast in sand molds. When he returned to England, Darby experimented with this process and eventually patented a casting process using a superior quality of molding sand as well as the process of baking the mold to improve casting smoothness. Soon Darby was casting and shipping pots to the new colonies as well as other parts of the world. Ragsdale suggests that the name “Dutch Oven” may have originated from the original Dutch process for the casting of these metal pots. Others believe that the name may have come from Dutch settlers in Pennsylvania who used similar cast iron pots or kettles.
Cast Iron Dutch Ovens can have:
- a flat bottom having three legs to hold the oven above a bed of coals for a heat source from below the dutch oven
- flat sides and a flat, flanged lid for holding coals for a heat source from above the dutch oven therefore giving it an “oven” effect
- a steel bail handle attached to the “ears” on each side of the dutch oven near the top to enable carrying
This type of oven is a cast iron camping dutch oven.
Cast Iron Dutch Ovens also come Enameled
in beautiful colors that are so attractive that you can serve your guests at the table from your dutch oven. Your food will stay warm because cast iron is great for its heat retention.
When the West was opened and the United States was expanding and people were on the move, they were forced to leave their large, heavy cook stoves behind. People learned to cook complete meals from stews to soups, bread to biscuits, in their Dutch Ovens. This pioneering spirit is not a lost art. Wonderful and tasty meals are still being prepared today in cast iron cookware.The cast iron dutch oven was the “Queen of the Fleet” when the Prairie Schooners rolled westward. It still reigns.
TASTE THE FOOD NOT THE COOKWARE WITH CAST IRON COOKWARE
Camp Cookware, Lodge cookware, advantages of cast iron, camp dutch oven, cast iron camping cookware, cast iron camping dutch ovens, cast iron dutch ovens, dutch ovens, enameled cast iron cookware | Comment (0)Cast Iron Cookware Shop Offers Camp Cookware and Accessories
Posted by Doyle Bailey for Cast Iron Cookware Shop
Cast Iron Cookware Shop offers great options to compliment your camp cooking gear.
Get ready for your camping and outdoor recreation activities with cast iron cookware products and accessories from Lodge and Rome.
A rugged Lodge tripod made of hot rolled half inch solid bar stock with 24 inch galvanized chain. The tripod legs measure 43 1/2 inches. Use with any cast iron product that has a bail handle. such as a Lodge Dutch Oven, camp dutch oven or cast iron kettle. Cook your food over the campfire and keep it at serving temperature in your castiron pot. This tripod travels well in car, truck or camper. (dutch oven not included)
The Rome Firepit Cookout Set includes a round cast iron pie iron, a square cast iron pie iron, a S´more Maker, and Hot Dog-Marshmallow Roasters.
Camp Cooking Accessories from Cast Iron Cookware Shop



Is there anything wrong with using straightened wire clothes hangers or even the tines of a yard broom to roast hot dogs? Probably not. Is there an easier way to roast our hot dogs and marshmallows? Is there a way to turn them out in quantity for your kids, troop or camping party? Is there a more fun way to roast hot dogs and marshmallows? The answer to all four questions is YES!
Check out these products and just imagine the fun you could have.
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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 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.
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