perc-o-prince
Well-known member
I would personally never let anything other than the proper oil or grease touch my cast iron before baking. Never flour and never sprays that have anything other than 100% oil in them.
I have a couple of the cast iron versions of your pan, and many other pans for cornbread like sticks, wedges, etc. I've always understood that the heat/grease method for seasoning the pan, cast iron or aluminum, is basically the same. I don't think you can use the "oil-it-and-sit-it-in-a-paper-bag-in-a-warm/dark-area-for-a-month" method for aluminum.
For cooking, I always pre-heat my pan right from the cupboard then take it out, give it a quick greasing (the spray I buy is nothing but oil, but I usually use a silicone brush with butter when I wanna be really bad, or good, as the case may be!), then pop the batter in. I'm sure I could get away without greasing at all, but that does develop a good crust. The crust, IMHO, is what separates the man's cornbread from the boy's!
Chuck
p.s.- I also throw kernels of corn in mine whenever I can!
I have a couple of the cast iron versions of your pan, and many other pans for cornbread like sticks, wedges, etc. I've always understood that the heat/grease method for seasoning the pan, cast iron or aluminum, is basically the same. I don't think you can use the "oil-it-and-sit-it-in-a-paper-bag-in-a-warm/dark-area-for-a-month" method for aluminum.
For cooking, I always pre-heat my pan right from the cupboard then take it out, give it a quick greasing (the spray I buy is nothing but oil, but I usually use a silicone brush with butter when I wanna be really bad, or good, as the case may be!), then pop the batter in. I'm sure I could get away without greasing at all, but that does develop a good crust. The crust, IMHO, is what separates the man's cornbread from the boy's!
Chuck
p.s.- I also throw kernels of corn in mine whenever I can!