Frying Pan
Aug. 6th, 2008 10:14 am My friend Stephen Bann- who is a dedicated cook- used to say you should never wash a frying pan. The ancient grease, impregnated with the flavours of a thousand fry-ups, is a treasure, adding subtlety and depth to anything you cook in it. I sometimes let my pan go a day or two without washing- and acknowledge that it's a bit of a thrill when the flavour of yesterday's mushrooms turns up in today's bacon and eggs- but then I start to worry about health and safety and the pan goes into the sink and receives a good scrubbing. Am I being unduly cautious?
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Date: 2008-08-06 09:42 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-06 10:35 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-06 10:58 am (UTC)I hope you will forgive me, but the question interested me so much that I posted it on my blog:
http://radicchiodiaries.blogspot.com/
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Date: 2008-08-06 12:33 pm (UTC)No-one's come up with the definitive answer yet. Maybe someone will on your website.
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Date: 2008-08-06 09:42 am (UTC)Course, that wasn't a non-stick wok; the seasoning is necessary to make it a usable utensil.
I'm not very careful about washing a frying pan after each use; I figure that the temperatures you fry at are going to zap most things that might be a bit nasty on the surface.
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Date: 2008-08-06 10:37 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-06 10:16 am (UTC)Depends on the pan I think.
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Date: 2008-08-06 10:40 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-06 10:46 am (UTC)I should say that me and Alan are vegan so there's no worries with us about contamination with meat, eggs or dairy products.
I probably like to scrub the steel cookware because I don't want them to end up like they did in the places where I worked!
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Date: 2008-08-06 10:36 am (UTC)I once had an iron omelette pan, which just got wiped - but I gave it away because it got too heavy for me. Also, that was before we all got so salmonella conscious.
I always scour my stainless steel pan until it shines.
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Date: 2008-08-06 10:42 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-06 11:24 am (UTC)I have this Le Creuset omelet pan. Even though it has some sort of nonstickery inside it, I find that the omelet cooked after washing sticks. So I've stopped washing it. Instead, I wipe it out with a paper towel after each use. (Being on Weight Watchers, I only put a tsp of butter in the pan, so there's not much left to wipe out.)
The Designated Cast Iron Potwasher in the household doesn't wash them, either: instead, he pours some white vinegar in the pan/dutch oven, boils it up (scraping off anything that stuck last time), dumps the vinegar, rubs in a couple drops of some kind of neutral oil such as Mongolian Fire Oil (!), and thta's that.
Like several other commenters, we scrub our stainless steel frying pans.
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Date: 2008-08-06 12:40 pm (UTC)After all I've read here, I think I'm going to keep it away from soap and water and go with the dry wipe.
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Date: 2008-08-06 11:35 am (UTC)My two woks get plenty of use and I do rinse them out with hot water and a little washing-up liquid after use, but they're only wiped gently and then dried with kitchen towel. I never soak or scrub them. All my other pans go in the dishwasher.
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Date: 2008-08-06 12:45 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-06 02:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-06 12:36 pm (UTC)I think there's a healthy cleanliness, and then there's the horror of germs that's been brought to us by the cleaning companies. They brand their soaps 'anti-bacterial,' though of course all soaps are anti-bacterial; that's why we wash our hands with them.
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Date: 2008-08-06 12:50 pm (UTC)I'm sure I read somewhere that modern kids are much more in danger of infection and food-poisoning than earlier generations were- and it's all because they're being brought up in a sterile environment and don't get to build up their defences.
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Date: 2008-08-06 12:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-06 12:52 pm (UTC)I'm going to abandon soap and water and go with the dry wipe with kitchen towel.
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Date: 2008-08-06 12:57 pm (UTC)I like to eat at a little Asian cafe that has an open kitchen, and I've been able to observe the cooking line. They have large, carbon steel woks lined up on high-pressure gas burners, with water faucets right nearby. When a cook is finished making one dish, he'll run hot water into his wok, give it a swish with a metal scrubber (not a heavy scrub), then heat and oil it again for the next order. They do not use soap.
For my own stainless pans, I do wash them with soap and give them a good scrub, because I use them to create great crusts and deglaze them for pan sauces.
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Date: 2008-08-06 03:53 pm (UTC)I like open kitchens.
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Date: 2008-08-06 04:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-06 04:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-06 01:26 pm (UTC)I'm so shy of food poisoning having had it several times... I expect that all the answers you received are correct though.
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Date: 2008-08-06 04:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-06 04:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-06 01:41 pm (UTC)She told me that frying is such a hot process that it kills all the germs, but I never believed her.
I do wash my own skillets, and I gave her my cast iron one so she could have all its germs for herself.
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Date: 2008-08-06 04:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-06 04:40 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-06 07:12 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-06 02:29 pm (UTC):)
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Date: 2008-08-06 04:04 pm (UTC)I've pretty much decided I'm going to give up soap and water and use paper towels instead.
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Date: 2008-08-06 02:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-06 04:06 pm (UTC)I'm going to accept your word as a professional on this.
No more soap and water for me!
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Date: 2008-08-07 08:25 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-07 11:31 am (UTC)These days I always cook fish in the oven.