How about another #TipOfDay? I share these ideas in particular at times I’d just rather be distracted from “unpleasantness” and downright abject horror at something I read has gone on. Happens too much, sometimes daily in the US. Sigh. But hey! Here’s a good one now—cast iron! #CastIron #Cleaning #Cooking

After so many years of reading that some people use a chain mail-type mesh of stainless steel to clean a cast iron skillet, I finally got one. Works a treat! I heat a pan on the lowest setting with a little added Grapeseed oil for about 5-10 minutes.

Then I go at the burnt crud and crust stuff with circular wipes of this mesh. When it gets full of the crust and oil I wash it quick in really hot water (just the mesh, not the pan). Take a paper towel to wipe the skillet out. And another go at it until the skillet has a good even finish again. The mesh helps by keeping any scratches from the pan.

Sadly this pan in the photo had been left over a week waiting for me to go at it. I just wanted to have the right headspace. But now I’m so encouraged by the cleaning mesh trick I will get on it right after using these pans.

A cast iron skillet is gleaming after cleaning with the metal mesh cloth shown in the pan. It’s early morning so the light is favorable for atmospheric beauty. Image is most of the black pan and handle going to the left bottom corner. Mesh is to the right and center, with a small ring for hanging. Above it to the right is a warm yellow gleam of light reflecting on the surface of a clean plan with oiled surface.
ALT
As an artist I just can’t not notice how the texture and mesh pattern of the miniature chain links are fascinating. The vey close view here is a good detail view of the mesh cleaning cloth from the ring at the corner to hang it up for storing it. I’m proud of the nice cleaning I did on an old pan seasoned right with oil.
ALT
Jul 5, 2026, 15:26 UTCen