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bc.gold

Wagner Pan

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bc.gold

This is now the largest frying pan we have.

 

wag2.jpg

 

wag1.jpg

 

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The Tuul Crib

We love our cast-iron skillets especially when making cornbread. Looks like it needs to be re-seasoned.

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troutbum70

You need a cast iron stove to go with that pan.

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8ntruck

That is a really nice piece.  We have a good collection of iron cookware.  I prefer to cook with the iron over the other cookware we have.

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rmaynard

Cast iron frying pans are the only pans that sit flat on my glass top stove. I love them...wife hates them due to their weight. Before Covid, I'd buy any decent cast iron pan that I would find at yard sales. 

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rmaynard

I always try to find pans pre-1952.

Edited by rmaynard
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WHX??

Dan's @Achto a cast connoisseur. I have a couple but all I know is they hurt when I bring home a new old tractor!  :lol:

Edited by WHX24
speeling
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bottjernat1

We have a bunch of old cast iron wagner and other brand pans and pots. Great pans!

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Achto

Nice hardware @bcgold :handgestures-thumbupright:

 

I like all things that are made with iron, except maybe early Harley Davidson Sportsters:D. I have a number of cast iron pans, one or two Wagner's but Griswold is my personal favorite.

Griswold-cast-iron-skillet-size-10.jpg.30b1ab9a9690249526f940d6e8447472.jpg

 

My collection of Griswold's ranges from #3-#14 with some multiples in certain sizes, plus some Dutch ovens. Some I pick up cheap and have to reseason, others I've paid up for. It took a while for me to teach my wife how to cook on and care for iron pans but they have become her favorite cook ware. I think that food just tastes better if it's cooked on iron. Maybe it just reminds me of Mom's cooking, she used to cook almost every on iron.:)

 

I do believe that Lodge is the only US company that still makes cast iron cookware. I have a rather large Lodge and it seems well made but I don't care for the texture of their surface on the inside. 

Edited by Achto
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Achto

A saying that some of you might know may have been derived from fixing cook ware.

 

The theory has it that a tinker's dam is a small piece of dough or putty that was fashioned to hold molten solder in place while the tinker was repairing pots and pans. After use, the “damwas tossed away as worthless; thus, “not worth a tinker's dam.”

Edited by Achto
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rmaynard
34 minutes ago, Achto said:

I have a rather large Lodge and it seems well made but I don't care for the texture of their surface on the inside. 

 

I was told by an old time collector, who incidentally had over 1000 pieces of cast iron cookware in his lifetime, that after 1952, the extremely fine sand casts were replaced with course sand, therefore the rough texture. I have tried to smooth the roughness with minimal success.  As the old-timer says, ''Tis better to search for an old one then to waste time on a piece of junk". Something to be said of that.

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briankd
19 hours ago, bcgold said:

This is now the largest frying pan we have.

 

wag2.jpg

 

wag1.jpg

 

 

 

that pan wagner ware was made right here near my hometown good ole sidney ohio one of the original you can't beat em here is a link all about wagner ware cookware

https://www.abandonedspaces.com/industry/ohio-2.html

Edited by briankd
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8ntruck
5 hours ago, rmaynard said:

 

I was told by an old time collector, who incidentally had over 1000 pieces of cast iron cookware in his lifetime, that after 1952, the extremely fine sand casts were replaced with course sand, therefore the rough texture. I have tried to smooth the roughness with minimal success.  As the old-timer says, ''Tis better to search for an old one then to waste time on a piece of junk". Something to be said of that.

One of our iron frypans has what looks like spiral machining marks on the bottom of the inside.  Very coarse feed and it looks like the cutting edge was a large diameter, maybe in the 1" to 1 1/2" range.  Might be well seasoned grind marks instead. 

 

Only pan I"ve seen like this.

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bc.gold
On 7/16/2020 at 8:08 PM, 8ntruck said:

One of our iron frypans has what looks like spiral machining marks on the bottom of the inside.  Very coarse feed and it looks like the cutting edge was a large diameter, maybe in the 1" to 1 1/2" range.  Might be well seasoned grind marks instead. 

 

Only pan I"ve seen like this.

 

Most likely a product from Taiwan.

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8ntruck
6 hours ago, bcgold said:

 

Most likely a product from Taiwan.

Kind of close.  It says Korea on the bottom.  It has been on the family for a long time.  Probably was purchased in the late 50's or early 60's.

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