During a conversation about his company’s cast-iron skillets, Isaac Morton told me I’ve been seasoning mine all wrong.
According to Morton, founder of Smithey Ironware in Charleston, South Carolina, seasoning skillets in the oven is slower and less effective than other options.
“In my opinion, when you’re seasoning in the oven you’re just protecting the skillet from rust and the elements,” Morton said. “Other than cooking in it over and over again, what we call ‘stovetop seasoning’ is the better method of seasoning.”
“When you’re seasoning in the oven, you’re just protecting the skillet from rust and the elements.”
Permutations of this method are endorsed by two gear-testing greats — Jeff Rogers and J. Kenji Lopéz-Alt — and Morton goes as far as to say “we can’t do it in production [of skillets], but we all do it at home. You take a new pan and you’re able to apply a layer of seasoning on it that accelerates something like 10 years of seasoning process.”
“The reason these old Wagners and Griswolds are so nice and tidy is because they’ve been cooked on for 100 years — this is basically a way to expedite that process,” Morton said.
Here’s how to do it.