Very nice. Looks like you got the oil thin enough (as Cooks Country would say, so thin it's almost not there).
A few more rounds and it'll be a solid layer.
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Very nice. Looks like you got the oil thin enough (as Cooks Country would say, so thin it's almost not there).
A few more rounds and it'll be a solid layer.
I use steel wool to clean mine off when it needs reseasoned, seems to work pretty well.
Looks nice. Making me want to re-season a pizza steel I've been neglecting.
Glad to see that you succeed in making it good again. Now it looks properly clean as i was writing about on your last post. All that black gunk is gone and it has a nice brown smooth surface.
Actually i found that cleaning it with water, a little soap and a soft brush in-between layers may help a bit in making sure that any seasoning that didn't adhere strongly gets washed off and making the surface ready for the next layer. But honestly the pan looks so good to me at this point so I'd probably just start using it like normal and as such it'll get cleaned with soap in-between the layers (if you choose to do that of course but I highly recommend) when you clean it after cooking.
My son saw the pan sitting in the kitchen and asked we had bought a new one. It does look very nice. Thanks for the advice.
ran the self-cleaning cycle.
You should never run the self cleaning on an oven for any reason. They are very dangerous and can damage the oven.
Why would it damage the oven?
Apparently a lot of components aren't designed to run sustaining the 1000° F temps. https://www.familyhandyman.com/article/dont-use-your-ovens-self-cleaning-feature/
It can damage the oven, as well as the cast iron.
When cast iron is exposed to extreme heat, it can warp, crack, or permanently discolor.
This makes no sense to me and I would like to see some scientific research. We are not even close to the annealing temperature of cast iron (1300F-1400F). In no way can i imagine that a 1000F alone will make the pan warp. It really shouldn't be possible from a material science perspective.
What makes cast iron crack and warp could be rapid temperature change if you put it immediately under cold water after high temperature since the temperature gradient in the material will form stresses that could cause cracks. But if a 1000F warps the pan I'd say that it is poor quality cast iron or something else is going on.
My oven no longer works properly after the last self clean. The preheat cycle doesn’t stop at the designated temp — it just keeps getting hotter and hotter until it shuts down with an error.
I think self clean is quite bad for the electronics in the oven. Electrolytic capacitors are an example of one type of component that gets damaged over time by heat: the electrolytes dry out and the capacitor fails.
I killed the oven at my last place by running a self cleaning. Luckily I was renting.
Why would they design the oven with a self cleaning cycle if you cannot use it? It's advertising a feature that you cannot use. Sounds like a strange advice to me.