I received a gorgeous satin blue LeCrueset oval casserole for my birthday last year.  these babies are cast iron and I have yearned and yearned for one, especially since I have an Aga.
I was afraid to use it.  I know just how expensive they are and I just loved looking at it.  I was afraid that my sometimes careless (I say creative) cooking style could quite possibly send this exquisite piece of kitchen finery to the rubbish bin.  I just couldn't live with myself if that happened.
So this beautiful piece of cookware has sat pride of place in my kitchen but remained unused.  Until a few weeks ago.  I had an opportunity to use it for a beef stew out of that fabulous cookbook I keep going on about, Apples for Jam.
With much fear and trepidation I got it out and gave it a great big hug.  I figured if I ruined it I wanted it to know I loved it.  And I wouldn't want to hug it if it was a melted, black, smoldering hunk of metal , would I?
I put it down on the Aga and got busy.  It performed exquisitely.  The beef stew was gorgeous which I attribute wholeheartedly to the combination of the cookbook and cookware.
And then the cleanup.....ah, the cleanup.  After simmering a beef stew for 4 hours I expected I was going to have to put in a substantial amount of elbow grease into the cleaning.  And I doubted that my beautiful pan would ever been restored to its new condition.
Ah, but I would be wrong!  It practically wiped clean and looks just like it did when I took it out of its box all those 9 months ago.
I have now used it 6 times in 2 weeks.  I'm scouring recipe books for recipes that require the use of my pan.  I'm even thinking I could make up recipes for it.
My advice to everyone is drop what you are doing and go get yourself one of these exquisite workhorses.
Oh my god, what have I become?  I am waxing lyrical about a bloomin' pan.  I need to get out more!  Maybe karaoke.....
 
 
2 comments:
Cast iron is my favorite, but I don't have a LeCrueset. I think I need to go shopping at my favorite gourmet gadget store.
I don't have a LeCrueset, but one like it. We use it all the time. Roasts and stews. You take it from the stovetop to the oven. I love it. One drawback...it is so heavy and ours is a bit hard to clean. On the tough spots, sprinkle it with a little baking soda. It helps a bit.
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