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How to avoid fake cast iron antique cookware

magnusfide
Explorer II
Explorer II
Here's a good article for those who collect vintage cast iron cookware.
How to avoid fake Griswold and Wagner cast iron antique cookware
"The only time you should fear cast iron is if your wife is fixin' to hit you with it."-Kent Rollins
First law of science: don't spit into the wind.

Magnus
12 REPLIES 12

OleManOleCan
Explorer
Explorer
down home wrote:
It's always seemed to me that the old cast iron they tried to make smooth with smaller voids in the iron. All the new stuff is rough. Watching it poured in a foundry It looked like metal with chunks and bits of a harder metal in a mix.
Watching cast iron poured in another foundry not for cookware it poured smoother.
I know the old Griswald skillets and corn bread stick pans do not stick as much.
She has a couple pieces of Wagner I don't know how they do. I bought the others for her and cleaned and seasoned them.


I've sanded a couple of Lodge Skillets and got them slick.
After I seasoned them 4-5 times they are mirror smooth, slick and shiny. I have a small skillet for cornbread, a 10" skillet for a double recipe of cornbread, and a medium skillet I use for frying eggs. (Why buy Teflon?)
I also have an old Griswald I inherited from my Grandmother.
My collection includes two Chicken Cooker skillets with lids, and several sizes of Dutch Ovens. I also have a couple of Lodge skillets that I haven't done anything to. These days after I retired, I don't seem to have the time or inclination to sand more.
None of my Cast Iron are show pieces, I use em all.
It took a couple of years to wean my wife off of modern light weight skillets, but I converted her.

OleManOleCan
Explorer
Explorer
down home wrote:
It's always seemed to me that the old cast iron they tried to make smooth with smaller voids in the iron. All the new stuff is rough. Watching it poured in a foundry It looked like metal with chunks and bits of a harder metal in a mix.
Watching cast iron poured in another foundry not for cookware it poured smoother.
I know the old Griswald skillets and corn bread stick pans do not stick as much.
She has a couple pieces of Wagner I don't know how they do. I bought the others for her and cleaned and seasoned them.


I've sanded a couple of Lodge Skillets and got them slick.
After I seasoned them 4-5 times they are mirror smooth, slick and shiny. I have a small skillet for cornbread, a 10" skillet for a double recipe of cornbread, and a medium skillet I use for frying eggs. (Why buy Teflon?)
I also have an old Griswald I inherited from my Grandmother.
My collection includes two Chicken Cooker skillets with lids, and several sizes of Dutch Ovens. I also have a couple of Lodge skillets that I haven't done anything to. These days after I retired, I don't seem to have the time or inclination to sand more.
None of my Cast Iron are show pieces, I use em all.
It took a couple of years to wean my wife off of modern light weight skillets, but I converted her.

BarabooBob
Explorer III
Explorer III
I buy good OLD cast iron at garage sales. A friend just gave me 2 Griswold pans that belonged to his great-grandmother. His wife can't lift them due to wrist problems.
I have given high quality to all of my daughters and they use them frequently.

Do not use the cast pans with a rim on the bottom on glass to cookware. The rim will not allow proper heat transfer. NOne of my 100 plus year old pans has a rim on them. My oldest pans are almost 140 yrs old and belonged to MY great-grandmother.
Bob & Dawn Married 34 years
2017 Viking 17RD
2011 Ford F150 3.5L Ecoboost 420 lb/ft
Retired

Dennis58
Explorer
Explorer
Here is a great source for cast iron

http://www.castironcollector.com/

down_home
Explorer
Explorer
Wife won't use our cast iron on glass topped induction stove top.
One or two are rimmed on the bottom designed not to slip off gas cook stoves.
Way she said it I took to mean the use of the cast iron on the induction stove top was not compatible??? Is it just fear of breakage?
Also cast iron will get a crust of grease that comes through the pores of the cast iron on the bottom mostly to the outside; would that have something to do wit it.
Grand Ma's Grand Ma's cast iron skillets had thick crust perhaps over a century old. Mom got a new electric stove with oven cleaning and let it burn it off.
Grand Ma and Great Grand Ma and her Mom probably kicked holes in their coffins.

Wanderlost
Nomad
Nomad
There are quite a few YouTube videos on how to smooth out CI. I just might try it on my grittier modern pieces. The key is to wear a painter's suit over your own clothes and respirator, so as to not get iron bits on you or in your lungs.
"The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated." -- Mahatma Gandhi

Czarny, black cat
Rainbow Bridge: Spotacus, Alexander the Grrreat, and so very many more

opnspaces
Navigator
Navigator
I have an induction cooktop at home. I never tried cast iron on it for fear it would scratch the glass.
.
2001 Suburban 4x4. 6.0L, 4.10 3/4 ton **** 2005 Jayco Jay Flight 27BH **** 1986 Coleman Columbia Popup

down_home
Explorer
Explorer
It's always seemed to me that the old cast iron they tried to make smooth with smaller voids in the iron. All the new stuff is rough. Watching it poured in a foundry It looked like metal with chunks and bits of a harder metal in a mix.
Watching cast iron poured in another foundry not for cookware it poured smoother.
I know the old Griswald skillets and corn bread stick pans do not stick as much.
She has a couple pieces of Wagner I don't know how they do. I bought the others for her and cleaned and seasoned them.

SARGUY
Explorer
Explorer
Cast iron is probably the absolute best you can find to work on induction cook tops. Nothing else works better than cast iron cook ware!

Johno02
Explorer
Explorer
DW doesn't like cast iron cookware, for various reasons. My question is will cast iron pans work on induction cooktops and burners?? Seems like they should, but how well do they work from someone that has tried??
Noel and Betty Johnson (and Harry)

2005 GulfStream Ultra Supreme, 1 Old grouch, 1 wonderful wife, and two silly poodles.

BarabooBob
Explorer III
Explorer III
My old Griswold & Wagner hangs in a proud place next to my kitchen stove. It gets used daily. I also have 1 Griswold and 1 Wagner in the TT. I use them more than our good stainless steel pans.
Bob & Dawn Married 34 years
2017 Viking 17RD
2011 Ford F150 3.5L Ecoboost 420 lb/ft
Retired

Wanderlost
Nomad
Nomad
Very handy. I also use The Book of Wagner and Griswold: Martin, Lodge, Vollrath, Excelsior (A Schiffer Book for Collectors), by David G. Smith and Charles Wafford.

Generally, if the cast iron is smooth before seasoning and weighs less than modern CI, it's far more likely to be the good stuff...

I just put away the Griswold and our un-marked, modern bean pot. The Griswold is significantly lighter and smoother. The Wagner skillets are also significantly lighter than our modern Lodges of the same size.

Guess which ones get more use?
"The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated." -- Mahatma Gandhi

Czarny, black cat
Rainbow Bridge: Spotacus, Alexander the Grrreat, and so very many more