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Thread: BBQ plates
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4th August 2004, 11:15 AM #1
BBQ plates
I have cast iron BBQ plates that have been lovingly seasoned, burnt clean after each use and have never seen soap. (I'm strange about my beer glasses too )
HOWEVER a friend of mine has cast iron plates that are no longer black and wants them returned to their former glory. She asked me as i had resored a pot belly stove to black magnificence, but I suggested high temp engine paint would not be the way to go for BBQ plates.
So dig deep people and tell me how you restore a cast iron plate that is no longer black. (she didn't tell me what colour it was, but it is not rust :confused: )Great minds discuss ideas,
average minds discuss events,
small minds discuss people
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4th August 2004, 11:41 AM #2
Dave,
I wouldn't use paint, high temp or otherwise, on any cooking surface, you just don't know what sort of toxins will be released upon heating. What I would do is wire brush if neccesary and then season. To season a iron cooking utensil or plate oil it liberally and then give it a really long slow bake. If it fits in the oven it makes it really easy, otherwise you'll need to put it over a low flame. Repeat as neccesary until your plate/pot/wok has ashiny hard coating on it. I've use this method on all my cast iron skillets, BBQ plate and the wok. The wok, being steel ended up a bit ugly, a sort of brown "varnish" layer over the silvery-grey steel, but all the cast iron stuff is a deep black colour, with the added bonus of being every bit as good, non-stick-wise, as all those fancy teflon type coatings that you can't touch with any metal implements.
Mick"If you need a machine today and don't buy it,
tomorrow you will have paid for it and not have it."
- Henry Ford 1938
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4th August 2004, 02:15 PM #3
thanks Mick, thats exactly how I deal with my BBQ and wok. I just wasn't sure if the same proceedure would revive it, I'll tell her to give it a go - thanks again
Great minds discuss ideas,
average minds discuss events,
small minds discuss people
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5th August 2004, 09:35 PM #4
Go do a big suck-up to your local fish & chip shop find out when they change their oil then throw the cast iron peice in for about 10-15 minutes. It works we did it about 10 years ago and still use the frypan. Tonto
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5th August 2004, 09:42 PM #5
I leave the BBQ plate out overnight after each incineration session and in the morning the thing has a polish on it courtesy of the neighbours springer spaniel.
Whatever note you blow youre never more than a semitone away from the correct one....(Miles Davis)
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