This is not the case for modern detergents, but is held over from when soaps were all made from lye. The polymerized layers of oil that you have will stay mostly in tact with some dish detergent and a light scrub sponge. After washing and drying mine off with a towel, I apply some oil and heat it on the stove for a few minutes to maintain the seasoning.
But absolutely mortar and pestle should never ever get soap, particularly something like a molcajete made from volcanic rock. I just wipe mine really thoroughly with a clean, damp cloth.
Edit: SMFH don’t mass down vote someone for having inaccurate information. Had they not commented, they wouldn’t have opened themselves up to the opportunity to learn something.
I run my mortar and pestle through the dishwasher. It’s glazed stoneware, and is virtually non porous. Molcajete are an exception, but there’s not much good to be gained by having old spice and herb residue in cooking gear.
Afaik, it’s traditional to Central American (and maybe South American?) cuisine, but I don’t know any science-y aspects to it’s use. You make salsas and guac directly in it, and I can say they do hit different, but I can’t say exactly why.
Yep. My pan gets hand washing with a few drops of soap after every use and it’s fine.
Lye, or sodium hydroxide, strips the seasoning layers. It used to be used in soap.
People use it when restoring cast iron in the modern day to strip old seasoning off. Then they can start againt and re-seaaon!
victoria (cast iron maker that’s a above lodge but below others,) recommends using a little dish soap.
even if the soaps do remove some seasoning, you should have enough on there, and cooking with enough oil that it regenerates. That’s the secret to cast iron’s longevity, in point of fact. Every time you cook with it, you add some more to the seasoning. (it also can develop some marvelous flavors if you’re intentional in how you cook with it.)
Depending on who you talk to? Lancaster and stargazer; and then there’s the heirlooms that are 100% worth hunting down (like the old wagners.)
If you’re looking for enameled cast iron, la creusette is top, imo. (Enameled doesn’t take seasoning, but the finish is much more durable than ptfe)
I would suggest Victoria being a good place to start; it’s not going to absolutely wreck the bank. Some of the Lancaster are lighter though making them easier to use… and my faves are some literal heirlooms from my grandma (which went back a few generations further,)
So Victoria has a smoother finish than new lodges- it’s not quite ground, stargazer is ground (like old cast iron used to be. This gets you to the smooth-mirror seasoning people cover with fewer cycles of seasoning.
IMO, out of the box, Victoria’s seasoning is basically right there because of ilthis where new-lodges have always taken a lot even if they say it’s pre-seasoned.
And if you ever feel the need to strip the old to bare metal… well. It’s going to take a weekend or two for a lodge. They’re still great pans, don’t get me wrong, and it’s not especially hard work just tedious.
Soap and water. It’s cast iron, not silk.
Try not to use soap if possible, it can get into the iron since it’s porous and become a part of the “seasoning”. Same goes for mortar and pestle care
This is not the case for modern detergents, but is held over from when soaps were all made from lye. The polymerized layers of oil that you have will stay mostly in tact with some dish detergent and a light scrub sponge. After washing and drying mine off with a towel, I apply some oil and heat it on the stove for a few minutes to maintain the seasoning.
But absolutely mortar and pestle should never ever get soap, particularly something like a molcajete made from volcanic rock. I just wipe mine really thoroughly with a clean, damp cloth.
Edit: SMFH don’t mass down vote someone for having inaccurate information. Had they not commented, they wouldn’t have opened themselves up to the opportunity to learn something.
I run my mortar and pestle through the dishwasher. It’s glazed stoneware, and is virtually non porous. Molcajete are an exception, but there’s not much good to be gained by having old spice and herb residue in cooking gear.
Interesting thanks for chiming in. I’ve only ever had a molcajete.
I have a marble one. Also can be washed, as it’s non-porous.
What’s the benefit of a molcajete, I wonder? Seasoning, obviously, but any others?
Afaik, it’s traditional to Central American (and maybe South American?) cuisine, but I don’t know any science-y aspects to it’s use. You make salsas and guac directly in it, and I can say they do hit different, but I can’t say exactly why.
Yeah I read something about those. Blends differently than in a blender. I buy that.
Perhaps the original reason was just that that type of stone was available there and this type over here?
🤷 No idea. Sounds like you should do a research piece about it!
Yep. My pan gets hand washing with a few drops of soap after every use and it’s fine.
Lye, or sodium hydroxide, strips the seasoning layers. It used to be used in soap. People use it when restoring cast iron in the modern day to strip old seasoning off. Then they can start againt and re-seaaon!
victoria (cast iron maker that’s a above lodge but below others,) recommends using a little dish soap.
even if the soaps do remove some seasoning, you should have enough on there, and cooking with enough oil that it regenerates. That’s the secret to cast iron’s longevity, in point of fact. Every time you cook with it, you add some more to the seasoning. (it also can develop some marvelous flavors if you’re intentional in how you cook with it.)
What is above Victoria?
Depending on who you talk to? Lancaster and stargazer; and then there’s the heirlooms that are 100% worth hunting down (like the old wagners.)
If you’re looking for enameled cast iron, la creusette is top, imo. (Enameled doesn’t take seasoning, but the finish is much more durable than ptfe)
I would suggest Victoria being a good place to start; it’s not going to absolutely wreck the bank. Some of the Lancaster are lighter though making them easier to use… and my faves are some literal heirlooms from my grandma (which went back a few generations further,)
Nice, thank you. I just have a Lodge. Haven’t had any gripes about it, but curious what difference would come from leveling up
So Victoria has a smoother finish than new lodges- it’s not quite ground, stargazer is ground (like old cast iron used to be. This gets you to the smooth-mirror seasoning people cover with fewer cycles of seasoning.
IMO, out of the box, Victoria’s seasoning is basically right there because of ilthis where new-lodges have always taken a lot even if they say it’s pre-seasoned.
And if you ever feel the need to strip the old to bare metal… well. It’s going to take a weekend or two for a lodge. They’re still great pans, don’t get me wrong, and it’s not especially hard work just tedious.