#21
|
|||
|
|||
Boogaali Frames
On Wed, 31 Jul 2019 10:02:15 -0000 (UTC), Duane
wrote: Joy Beeson wrote: On Tue, 30 Jul 2019 11:15:12 +0700, John B. wrote: But of course, some folks will want to be "modern" and "trendy" but given that the "swift walker" a two wheel sort of device was built of wood and dates to 1817 just how "trendy" is wood? Ceramic knives are trendy, and that dates all the way back to the paleolithic. Sometimes there's a reason for a revival. Cast iron was dropped like a hot potato when tin pots became cheaply available, but I cook in little else. In the interval between tin pots and now, cheap paper towels were invented -- so my cast iron is eaier to take care of than my stainless steel. Cast iron *must* be wiped dry if it gets wet, and it *always* leaves permanent black stains on the wiping cloth. (Which explains old embroidery patterns for marking dish towels "glass". I.E., *not* to be used on pots.) And the rags had to be washed by hand. I'm still boggled by the discovery that Mom had both my older sisters in diapers at the same time *before* we got electricity and running water. Me too, but we moved to town not long after I was born. Once a cast iron pan is cured it can be dried simply by putting it on the fire for a couple minutes. My procedure is to wash with soap and water. No abrasives. Then wipe dry with a dish towel. then heat for a couple minutes. My cast iron pans came with me from New Orleans and I haven’t lived there since 1987. Cast iron pans you can will to your kids... or grand kids (if people still cook in that age :-) -- cheers, John B. |
Ads |
#22
|
|||
|
|||
Boogaali Frames
On Wednesday, July 31, 2019 at 6:02:18 AM UTC-4, Duane wrote:
Joy Beeson wrote: On Tue, 30 Jul 2019 11:15:12 +0700, John B. wrote: But of course, some folks will want to be "modern" and "trendy" but given that the "swift walker" a two wheel sort of device was built of wood and dates to 1817 just how "trendy" is wood? Ceramic knives are trendy, and that dates all the way back to the paleolithic. Sometimes there's a reason for a revival. Cast iron was dropped like a hot potato when tin pots became cheaply available, but I cook in little else. In the interval between tin pots and now, cheap paper towels were invented -- so my cast iron is eaier to take care of than my stainless steel. Cast iron *must* be wiped dry if it gets wet, and it *always* leaves permanent black stains on the wiping cloth. (Which explains old embroidery patterns for marking dish towels "glass". I.E., *not* to be used on pots.) And the rags had to be washed by hand. I'm still boggled by the discovery that Mom had both my older sisters in diapers at the same time *before* we got electricity and running water. Me too, but we moved to town not long after I was born. Once a cast iron pan is cured it can be dried simply by putting it on the fire for a couple minutes. My procedure is to wash with soap and water. No abrasives. Then wipe dry with a dish towel. then heat for a couple minutes. My cast iron pans came with me from New Orleans and I haven’t lived there since 1987. -- duane With proper care good quality cast iron pots and pans can last for generations. Cheers |
#23
|
|||
|
|||
Boogaali Frames
On 31/07/2019 7:13 a.m., Sir Ridesalot wrote:
On Wednesday, July 31, 2019 at 6:02:18 AM UTC-4, Duane wrote: Joy Beeson wrote: On Tue, 30 Jul 2019 11:15:12 +0700, John B. wrote: But of course, some folks will want to be "modern" and "trendy" but given that the "swift walker" a two wheel sort of device was built of wood and dates to 1817 just how "trendy" is wood? Ceramic knives are trendy, and that dates all the way back to the paleolithic. Sometimes there's a reason for a revival. Cast iron was dropped like a hot potato when tin pots became cheaply available, but I cook in little else. In the interval between tin pots and now, cheap paper towels were invented -- so my cast iron is eaier to take care of than my stainless steel. Cast iron *must* be wiped dry if it gets wet, and it *always* leaves permanent black stains on the wiping cloth. (Which explains old embroidery patterns for marking dish towels "glass". I.E., *not* to be used on pots.) And the rags had to be washed by hand. I'm still boggled by the discovery that Mom had both my older sisters in diapers at the same time *before* we got electricity and running water. Me too, but we moved to town not long after I was born. Once a cast iron pan is cured it can be dried simply by putting it on the fire for a couple minutes. My procedure is to wash with soap and water. No abrasives. Then wipe dry with a dish towel. then heat for a couple minutes. My cast iron pans came with me from New Orleans and I haven’t lived there since 1987. -- duane With proper care good quality cast iron pots and pans can last for generations. Cheers My favorite 12" frying pan came from my grandmother. They don't require much care once they're cured unless you mistreat them. |
#24
|
|||
|
|||
Boogaali Frames
On Wednesday, July 31, 2019 at 9:35:31 AM UTC-4, duane wrote:
On 31/07/2019 7:13 a.m., Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, July 31, 2019 at 6:02:18 AM UTC-4, Duane wrote: Joy Beeson wrote: On Tue, 30 Jul 2019 11:15:12 +0700, John B. wrote: But of course, some folks will want to be "modern" and "trendy" but given that the "swift walker" a two wheel sort of device was built of wood and dates to 1817 just how "trendy" is wood? Ceramic knives are trendy, and that dates all the way back to the paleolithic. Sometimes there's a reason for a revival. Cast iron was dropped like a hot potato when tin pots became cheaply available, but I cook in little else. In the interval between tin pots and now, cheap paper towels were invented -- so my cast iron is eaier to take care of than my stainless steel. Cast iron *must* be wiped dry if it gets wet, and it *always* leaves permanent black stains on the wiping cloth. (Which explains old embroidery patterns for marking dish towels "glass". I.E., *not* to be used on pots.) And the rags had to be washed by hand. I'm still boggled by the discovery that Mom had both my older sisters in diapers at the same time *before* we got electricity and running water. Me too, but we moved to town not long after I was born. Once a cast iron pan is cured it can be dried simply by putting it on the fire for a couple minutes. My procedure is to wash with soap and water. No abrasives. Then wipe dry with a dish towel. then heat for a couple minutes. My cast iron pans came with me from New Orleans and I haven’t lived there since 1987. -- duane With proper care good quality cast iron pots and pans can last for generations. Cheers My favorite 12" frying pan came from my grandmother. They don't require much care once they're cured unless you mistreat them. Plus a cast iron frying pan can be cheaper to use as it holds the heat a lot longer than the aluminium ones do. I have a small 6" cast iron frying pan I take on all my camping trips. One other great thing you can use a cast iron frying pan for is to warm your bed sheets on a cold night. VBEG LOL Cheers |
#25
|
|||
|
|||
Boogaali Frames
Sir Ridesalot wrote:
On Wednesday, July 31, 2019 at 9:35:31 AM UTC-4, duane wrote: On 31/07/2019 7:13 a.m., Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, July 31, 2019 at 6:02:18 AM UTC-4, Duane wrote: Joy Beeson wrote: On Tue, 30 Jul 2019 11:15:12 +0700, John B. wrote: But of course, some folks will want to be "modern" and "trendy" but given that the "swift walker" a two wheel sort of device was built of wood and dates to 1817 just how "trendy" is wood? Ceramic knives are trendy, and that dates all the way back to the paleolithic. Sometimes there's a reason for a revival. Cast iron was dropped like a hot potato when tin pots became cheaply available, but I cook in little else. In the interval between tin pots and now, cheap paper towels were invented -- so my cast iron is eaier to take care of than my stainless steel. Cast iron *must* be wiped dry if it gets wet, and it *always* leaves permanent black stains on the wiping cloth. (Which explains old embroidery patterns for marking dish towels "glass". I.E., *not* to be used on pots.) And the rags had to be washed by hand. I'm still boggled by the discovery that Mom had both my older sisters in diapers at the same time *before* we got electricity and running water. Me too, but we moved to town not long after I was born. Once a cast iron pan is cured it can be dried simply by putting it on the fire for a couple minutes. My procedure is to wash with soap and water. No abrasives. Then wipe dry with a dish towel. then heat for a couple minutes. My cast iron pans came with me from New Orleans and I haven’t lived there since 1987. -- duane With proper care good quality cast iron pots and pans can last for generations. Cheers My favorite 12" frying pan came from my grandmother. They don't require much care once they're cured unless you mistreat them. Plus a cast iron frying pan can be cheaper to use as it holds the heat a lot longer than the aluminium ones do. I have a small 6" cast iron frying pan I take on all my camping trips. One other great thing you can use a cast iron frying pan for is to warm your bed sheets on a cold night. VBEG LOL Cheers Don’t know about cheaper but the better heat distribution makes them work a lot better. -- duane |
#26
|
|||
|
|||
Boogaali Frames
On Thu, 1 Aug 2019 00:10:41 -0000 (UTC), Duane wrote:
Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, July 31, 2019 at 9:35:31 AM UTC-4, duane wrote: On 31/07/2019 7:13 a.m., Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, July 31, 2019 at 6:02:18 AM UTC-4, Duane wrote: Joy Beeson wrote: On Tue, 30 Jul 2019 11:15:12 +0700, John B. wrote: But of course, some folks will want to be "modern" and "trendy" but given that the "swift walker" a two wheel sort of device was built of wood and dates to 1817 just how "trendy" is wood? Ceramic knives are trendy, and that dates all the way back to the paleolithic. Sometimes there's a reason for a revival. Cast iron was dropped like a hot potato when tin pots became cheaply available, but I cook in little else. In the interval between tin pots and now, cheap paper towels were invented -- so my cast iron is eaier to take care of than my stainless steel. Cast iron *must* be wiped dry if it gets wet, and it *always* leaves permanent black stains on the wiping cloth. (Which explains old embroidery patterns for marking dish towels "glass". I.E., *not* to be used on pots.) And the rags had to be washed by hand. I'm still boggled by the discovery that Mom had both my older sisters in diapers at the same time *before* we got electricity and running water. Me too, but we moved to town not long after I was born. Once a cast iron pan is cured it can be dried simply by putting it on the fire for a couple minutes. My procedure is to wash with soap and water. No abrasives. Then wipe dry with a dish towel. then heat for a couple minutes. My cast iron pans came with me from New Orleans and I haven’t lived there since 1987. -- duane With proper care good quality cast iron pots and pans can last for generations. Cheers My favorite 12" frying pan came from my grandmother. They don't require much care once they're cured unless you mistreat them. Plus a cast iron frying pan can be cheaper to use as it holds the heat a lot longer than the aluminium ones do. I have a small 6" cast iron frying pan I take on all my camping trips. One other great thing you can use a cast iron frying pan for is to warm your bed sheets on a cold night. VBEG LOL Cheers Don’t know about cheaper but the better heat distribution makes them work a lot better. Years ago my mother bought a brand spanking NEW stainless fry pan. And damned it to High Heavens the first time she used it. While a good old cast iron pan distributes the heat pretty evenly a stainless pan has hot spots :-) -- cheers, John B. |
#27
|
|||
|
|||
Boogaali Frames
On Tue, 30 Jul 2019 19:42:28 -0700 (PDT), pH wrote:
I always romanticized it but my Aunt told me that cleaning the lantern globes was an awful chore considering there was a social imperative that the girls' white clothes had to stay white. A contaminated flatiron that left a black streak meant the thing being ironed had to start all over in the wash. It was polishing the burners that got Mom down. She had a mixed bag of lamps that we got out when the power lines were down. Much, much later I realized that we could *always* call to report the outage: the phone lines never ceased to function. But this didn't strike me as remarkable until a couple of revolutions in phone service later. Mom's lamps were assorted because her friends gave her their old lamps when she married a farmer. This was in the thirties, on a central-Indiana farm. Stringing wire to homes a mile apart is more expensive than wiring homes that are adjacent, and farmers were poor. Dad had a "wind charger" for listening to the radio. I could have crawled up into the smokehouse attic (the smokehouse had been given to me as a playhouse) and looked at it, but I didn't learn that it was there until my sister (who raised her children in the farmhouse we grew up in) told me that it had blown away in a storm. I didn't even know it was a smokehouse, and haven't the slightest idea where the smoke came from and how it got out without leaving any stains or the slightest smell. ------------------- I think that having said "we moved to town" might be confusing. When the war ended, we moved back -- and used the money Dad had earned at Delco Remy to install electricity and running water, and buy a tractor. -- Joy Beeson joy beeson at comcast dot net http://wlweather.net/PAGEJOY/ |
#28
|
|||
|
|||
Boogaali Frames
On Wed, 31 Jul 2019 22:18:35 -0400, Joy Beeson
wrote: On Tue, 30 Jul 2019 19:42:28 -0700 (PDT), pH wrote: I always romanticized it but my Aunt told me that cleaning the lantern globes was an awful chore considering there was a social imperative that the girls' white clothes had to stay white. A contaminated flatiron that left a black streak meant the thing being ironed had to start all over in the wash. It was polishing the burners that got Mom down. She had a mixed bag of lamps that we got out when the power lines were down. Much, much later I realized that we could *always* call to report the outage: the phone lines never ceased to function. But this didn't strike me as remarkable until a couple of revolutions in phone service later. Mom's lamps were assorted because her friends gave her their old lamps when she married a farmer. This was in the thirties, on a central-Indiana farm. Stringing wire to homes a mile apart is more expensive than wiring homes that are adjacent, and farmers were poor. Dad had a "wind charger" for listening to the radio. I could have crawled up into the smokehouse attic (the smokehouse had been given to me as a playhouse) and looked at it, but I didn't learn that it was there until my sister (who raised her children in the farmhouse we grew up in) told me that it had blown away in a storm. I didn't even know it was a smokehouse, and haven't the slightest idea where the smoke came from and how it got out without leaving any stains or the slightest smell. ------------------- I think that having said "we moved to town" might be confusing. When the war ended, we moved back -- and used the money Dad had earned at Delco Remy to install electricity and running water, and buy a tractor. Wasn't there some sort of "Rural Electrification" program. I've read about something of the sort although I don't believe it applied in up-state New Hampshire where I grew up. -- cheers, John B. |
#29
|
|||
|
|||
Boogaali Frames
On 31/07/2019 17:52, Sir Ridesalot wrote:
On Wednesday, July 31, 2019 at 9:35:31 AM UTC-4, duane wrote: On 31/07/2019 7:13 a.m., Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, July 31, 2019 at 6:02:18 AM UTC-4, Duane wrote: Joy Beeson wrote: On Tue, 30 Jul 2019 11:15:12 +0700, John B. wrote: But of course, some folks will want to be "modern" and "trendy" but given that the "swift walker" a two wheel sort of device was built of wood and dates to 1817 just how "trendy" is wood? Ceramic knives are trendy, and that dates all the way back to the paleolithic. Sometimes there's a reason for a revival. Cast iron was dropped like a hot potato when tin pots became cheaply available, but I cook in little else. In the interval between tin pots and now, cheap paper towels were invented -- so my cast iron is eaier to take care of than my stainless steel. Cast iron *must* be wiped dry if it gets wet, and it *always* leaves permanent black stains on the wiping cloth. (Which explains old embroidery patterns for marking dish towels "glass". I.E., *not* to be used on pots.) And the rags had to be washed by hand. I'm still boggled by the discovery that Mom had both my older sisters in diapers at the same time *before* we got electricity and running water. Me too, but we moved to town not long after I was born. Once a cast iron pan is cured it can be dried simply by putting it on the fire for a couple minutes. My procedure is to wash with soap and water. No abrasives. Then wipe dry with a dish towel. then heat for a couple minutes. My cast iron pans came with me from New Orleans and I haven’t lived there since 1987. -- duane With proper care good quality cast iron pots and pans can last for generations. Cheers My favorite 12" frying pan came from my grandmother. They don't require much care once they're cured unless you mistreat them. Plus a cast iron frying pan can be cheaper to use as it holds the heat a lot longer than the aluminium ones do. I have a small 6" cast iron frying pan I take on all my camping trips. Which is odd as aluminum has a higher specific heat capacity than cast iron. I like my cast iron pan though :-) One other great thing you can use a cast iron frying pan for is to warm your bed sheets on a cold night. VBEG LOL Cheers |
#30
|
|||
|
|||
Boogaali Frames
On 01/08/2019 1:35 a.m., Tosspot wrote:
On 31/07/2019 17:52, Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, July 31, 2019 at 9:35:31 AM UTC-4, duane wrote: On 31/07/2019 7:13 a.m., Sir Ridesalot wrote: On Wednesday, July 31, 2019 at 6:02:18 AM UTC-4, Duane wrote: Joy Beeson wrote: On Tue, 30 Jul 2019 11:15:12 +0700, John B. wrote: But of course, some folks will want to be "modern" and "trendy" but given that the "swift walker" aÂ* two wheel sort of device was built of wood and dates to 1817 just how "trendy" is wood? Ceramic knives are trendy, and that dates all the way back to the paleolithic. Sometimes there's a reason for a revival.Â* Cast iron was dropped like a hot potato when tin pots became cheaply available, but I cook in little else. In the interval between tin pots and now, cheap paper towels were invented -- so my cast iron is eaier to take care of than my stainless steel. Cast iron *must* be wiped dry if it gets wet, and it *always* leaves permanent black stains on the wiping cloth.Â* (Which explains old embroidery patterns for marking dish towels "glass".Â* I.E., *not* to be used on pots.) And the rags had to be washed by hand.Â* I'm still boggled by the discovery that Mom had both my older sisters in diapers at the same time *before* we got electricity and running water. Me too, but we moved to town not long after I was born. Once a cast iron pan is cured it can be dried simply by putting it on the fire for a couple minutes.Â*Â* My procedure is to wash with soap and water. No abrasives.Â* Then wipe dry with a dish towel.Â* then heat for a couple minutes.Â*Â*Â* My cast iron pans came with me from New Orleans and I haven’t lived there since 1987. -- duane With proper care good quality cast iron pots and pans can last for generations. Cheers My favorite 12" frying pan came from my grandmother.Â* They don't require much care once they're cured unless you mistreat them. Plus a cast iron frying pan can be cheaper to use as it holds the heat a lot longer than the aluminium ones do. I have a small 6" cast iron frying pan I take on all my camping trips. Which is odd as aluminum has a higher specific heat capacity than cast iron. I have a large cast aluminum pot for gumbo and red beans. It distributes and hold the heat pretty well. Lighter than cast iron but harder to clean. I like my cast iron pan though :-) You have only 1? You need at least an 8 inch for corn bread and that's too small for most other stuff. g One other great thing you can use a cast iron frying pan for is to warm your bed sheets on a cold night. VBEG LOL Cheers |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Frames for dx | skilewis74 | Unicycling | 0 | August 3rd 08 08:32 PM |
FS-Pro M frames | Jessica Cann | Marketplace | 0 | January 16th 05 01:35 PM |
28" Frames | oxfordrider | Unicycling | 8 | August 21st 04 11:17 PM |
Frames | Matt Ellman | Mountain Biking | 4 | December 30th 03 04:50 PM |
Qu-Ax frames | one wheeled stallion | Unicycling | 7 | November 27th 03 09:46 PM |