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AZ Prepper
11-01-2009, 08:39 AM
Seasoning Your Dutch Oven
http://www.dutchovendude.com/dutch-oven-seasoning.shtml (http://www.dutchovendude.com/dutch-oven-seasoning.shtml)

Seasoning a dutch oven does two things:

* Prevents rust and corrosion
* Creates a non-stick cooking surface for easier clean up

Without a good seasoning coat, your food won't taste as good as it could, your dutch oven will rust, and cleaning up after cooking will be more difficult.
So, are you convinced? Good!

Seasoning is a pretty simple process, but does take an hour or more. It is very important that you season your brand new dutch oven or one you have just acquired.
The initial seasoning will remove any undesirable contaminants and get your oven ready for that first meal. After the initial seasoning, every time you use the dutch oven you will be strengthening the coating and improving the look of your cookware.

By the way, aluminum dutch ovens benefit from seasoning even though they don't rust like iron. Aluminum does oxidize and the seasoning layer will prevent that. Seasoning also makes it easier to clean up due to the non-stick surface.

Initial Seasoning

The first time you season your dutch oven, you are removing a protective waxy coating applied at the factory to prevent rust in shipment as well as starting the non-stick coating process. Some cookware now comes pre-seasoned from the factory so you may not need to perform this initial seasoning.
If you have an outdoor barbeque grill, see if your dutch oven will fit inside with the grill cover closed. It is much better to season your dutch oven outside rather than in your kitchen oven, but you can do it inside. You'll want to do it on a day when you can open the windows because there will be smoke created.
This is how to season a dutch oven:



Preheat your grill or oven to 350 degrees.
If you are using your kitchen oven, wrap a large cookie sheet with a raised edge in aluminum foil and place it on the lowest possible shelf of the oven. This cookie sheet catchs oil that drips from the dutch oven so make sure it is bigger than the diameter of your dutch oven.
This will be only time you will ever use soap on your dutch oven! After this, never use soap unless you are stripping your oven to perform a completely new Initial Seasoning. Wash your cookware in soapy hot water. Use a scouring pad or steel wool to scrub away all coatings down to the metal. Remember, after this you don't use soap to clean up.
Thoroughly dry the dutch oven and lid with a cotton towel or paper towels. Place it in the grill for a minute or two to really dry it and heat it up a bit. Use an oven mitt to remove the dutch oven from the grill and let it cool just enough so you can touch it.
Rub vegetable shortening all over the inside and outside of your dutch oven and its lid. Use plain Crisco or Wesson - do not use butter or butter flavored shortening. Using a paper towel or cotton rag, rub the shortening into all the pockmarks, holes, and dimples in the metal surface.
Place the dutch oven upside down in the grill or kitchen oven and close the door or grill lid. By being upside down, the melted shortening will drain out of the dutch oven leaving an even coating rather than a pool in the bottom.
Place the lid in the grill also so it bakes along with the dutch oven.
Bake the dutch oven for 45 to 60 minutes. Remember to open windows and temporarily disconnect your smoke alarm while doing this.
Turn off the grill and leave the dutch oven inside to cool for 15 minutes.
Using an oven mitt and paper towels, remove the cookware from the grill.
Use paper towels to wipe off excess oil from the inside and outside of the dutch oven and lid.
Repeat steps 5 through 9.
Allow the cookware to cool until you can pick it up.
Wipe off all excess oil with paper or cotton towels and you're ready to go!


Periodic Seasoning

As you use your dutch oven, the grease, oil, and fat from the food you cook will continue to season the cookware. Some acidic foods such as beans and tomatoes can remove some of the coating. So, frying bacon, deep-frying fish, making doughnuts, or cooking fatty foods will improve the protective layer while acidic foods will harm it.
Once seasoned, your dutch oven will most likely not need to be seasoned again as long as you use it often and clean it correctly. It never hurts to reseason it and some folks like to do that at the start of a cooking season.
It also may be necessary to reseason if food seems to be sticking too much or your cookware has been abused or stored incorrectly. If there is rust or the oven just doesn't look well coated, it's a good idea to season it again.

Periodic Seasoning is just like the Initial Seasoning except that you don't wash with soapy water. If there is rust present then you may want to strip down everything and do a complete Initial Seasoning. Otherwise, clean your cookware normally and follow the steps above except for using soap.

The finish on your dutch oven should be dark brown or black, the darker the better. It should be glossy, but not sticky. If it is sticky, you left too much oil on and you'll need to heat it more. Over time, with proper cleaning, this glossy coating will become thicker and stronger. You should notice that foods are easy to remove and clean up is simple.

Now you know how to season a dutch oven!

AZ Prepper
11-01-2009, 09:37 AM
Be aware, seasoning your dutch oven inside your home will cause a lot of smoke and smell. Open your windows and have fans prepared to blow the smoke out the window. This method is the easiest.

You can also season it by simply cooking greasy foods for long periods of time. I usually season all my dutch ovens using hamburger and bacon. I'll cook them for a very long time, using the grease to wipe the dutch oven inside and out during the process. I'll also take the lid and put it in the grill, wiping grease from the dutch oven on it on both sides, keeping it hot but not red hot. I'll flip it periodically during the process. This results in a great tasting grease which seasons the dutch oven. And the resulting bacon and hamburger, which is way overdone, has a great taste for seasoning chili or other foods. But don't cook the chili or anything else until you've done some seasoning cooking a few times to make sure its fully prepped. Be sure to pick up a wooden dutch oven spatula. Don't use metal because it scrapes off the seasoning. And plastic tend to melt.

Here are a couple other things I suggest in care of dutch ovens:
Just do some hard core cooking with it. First, run some VERY hot water and scrub it with just hot water (no soap) and a plastic scrub brush. Dry it good, then heat it up (those camp chef stoves work really well) and put oil in it, rub it around good with some paper towels (you'll go through a ton of them) and get it nice and hot (not red hot though). Do this for a while...sometimes for up to an hour. Get some sausage or something (which you don't mind throwing away) and cook it for quite a while. When you heat up the dutch oven, the pores expand, releasing whatever is being held inside (which makes food taste so good in dutch ovens). That's when you try to remove the old and replace it with new oils. After it's clean, you'll just be adding to the "oil bank" each time you cook with it...which is why you never want to scrub it too clean.

When you're done, make sure there is a little oil in the dutch oven as it cools down (just a little all around the side, bottom, outside, etc). After it cools down, wipe off the excess oil.

For storage, put some paper towels (laid flat) inside. Roll up a couple paper towels into a roll and put under the lid on one side so it doesn't close all the way on top of the pot. This will allow air flow and keep moisture from collecting. Oil in a dutch oven (in the pores) should stay good for years without going rancid. If you keep the dutch oven in a case, also put paper towels under the dutch oven and over the lid.

I hope this helps. Dutch ovens are the best!!!

AZ Prepper
11-16-2009, 10:46 PM
Quick instructional video on seasoning your dutch oven.

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Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qGRWHOHSluM

GregE
03-13-2012, 03:36 PM
I used your steps with the outdoor grill and it worked like a champ. Thanks for the information, now on to a 4 year rusted dutch oven given to me. any ideas

DMGNUT
03-13-2012, 05:25 PM
Depending on how badly rusted the oven is, will determine what you might want to try (or try first).
For light rust, a fine sand paper or steel wool.
For heavier rust you might need a rotary steel brush on a drill.
I would always end with soaking the oven in a bath of half water and half vinegar for about 4 hours.
This will help remove rust from with-in those very tiny and almost invisible nooks and crannies.
After very thorough rinsing, season the oven as normal.
Good luck too.
Some of those "rust" projects, aren't worth the time unless its a family heirloom.