Sizzle & Serve! 🔥 Elevate your grilling game with Lodge.
The Lodge Cast Iron Grill Pan is a 10.25-inch cooking essential designed for grilling enthusiasts. Its ribbed bottom allows for fat drainage and creates beautiful grill marks, while the pre-seasoned finish ensures a natural, easy-release surface. With unparalleled heat distribution and retention, this pan guarantees efficient cooking for all your favorite meats.
C**E
Very handy for grilling meats and some vegetables. Great size for a lid.
We wondered if we'd use it, but its turned out to be great. For a first cast iron I'd recommend the 12" or 10" Lodge regular cast iron skillet, but this pan provides a useful option. There are lots of times when its nice to cook meats in particular above the oil. This pan does great. We originally bought the square version as its more readily available, however we had some fish dry out because we couldn't cover it. With this round pan we're able to use several glass lids that we have as well as a Lodge cast iron lid. This has worked out great. We're able to sear and get grill marks without meat swimming in fat and cover it for part of the cooking to make sure everything gets cooked through.This has worked particularly well for burgers, but also chicken breasts, turkey tenderloin and awesome sliced eggplant.It can be a challenge to clean between all the ridges. We tend to put some water in the pan while its still pretty warm, then dislodge major food with the Lodge grill pan scraper. But the real essential tool has been the "Bürstenhaus Redecker 2-1/4 Inch Diameter Pot Brush". Seriously don't know how we'd clean it without it.Overall has been a good purchase and we're using it more than I ever expected.
B**K
Love this Cast Iron Grill Pan~
This is fabulous for burgers & chicken. I would recommend getting the rubber handle gripper though, as the pan is heavy & gets extremely hot. Meat looks like you cooked it on the grill & tastes like it too. I would also suggest getting a cast-iron press, (with ridges), so when you cook your chicken or hamburger in the skillet, you can press it with a cast-iron press that makes it cook faster and look amazing.Cleaning this is a Pain In The A**!!! I bought the chain cast-iron cleaner from Amazon, as you should never use soap, Brillo, or the dishwasher with anything made from cast iron. Flavors soak into the iron and cooking a burger that ends up tasting like soap is a major "Fail". You can't let water sit on it or in it, as it will rust quickly and set into the pan. Wash, dry, and place a small amount of oil in pan to store.I would recommend this pan if you are someone who follows care instructions.
S**H
Great cooking tool, some caveats
My son loves hamburgers and I don't like grilling them outdoors (if raining or cold, plus grilling meat over flame creates VERY unhealthy conditions, and the grill is always a filthy blackened disgusting mess), so I wanted something that would produce the same effect but, (a.) be used indoors on a stove, (b.) be more healthy, not over open flame (where drippings can create carcinogenic fumes and deposits), (c.) drain the grease from the food, (d.) not be some ludicrously expensive gadget, and, (e.) be reasonably easy to clean. We have non-stick pans and use them, but over time the coating comes off into the food with unknown health effects and, if overheated, they emit vapors that kill any pet birds in the area and probably not great for humans to inhale either), so I preferred non non-stick.I considered the George Foreman grill, which typically gets good reviews and is a perfectly valid choice, but many versions of it to consider, some with removable grills to clean and some (sigh) not, different sizes (2 burgers, 4, "family size", etc.), not expensive but not cheap, usually has non-stick finish, etc. I like simplicity. I saw various grilling trays and pans that are used atop surface cooking (stoves, etc.), waded through the critically-helpful Amazon reviews, and chose this Lodge grill pan. The negative reviews were things like it rusts (duh, it's iron, iron rusts, and you have to dry it immediately after washing, although you have to know that already or visit Lodge's website to find out, not mentioned in the enclosed instructions, a duh for Lodge), and that food sticks to it (annoying for sure but it's not a non-stick pan so......).So far, we've made burgers on it a few times, will get to steaks and fish and veggies, but haven't yet.GOOD:>RESULTS: Produces extremely consistent results, food always cooked perfectly.>MORE RESULTS: Rave reviews from my picky son and me.>EASY: Easy to use>STURDY: Built of thick cast iron, will certainly outlast me, probably suitable for use in zombie attacks or nuclear war. Also great for defending yourself against bears, creaming your spouse, and that sort of thing. Good, old fashioned, last forever stuff.>DRAINS GREASE: The raised ribs in the bottom keep the food up and let grease drain away from it, which I think makes for more healthy and less-messy results. There are spouts formed on both sides to tip and drain, they work okay, only minimal dripping down the outside that would be bad (going into the flame).>LINES: Many other reviewers thought that the best feature or a very important feature is that the ribs in the bottom create the blackened lines in the food that show that it was grilled, as if it were done on an outdoor "real" grill. I guess this is nice, but I am surprised that so many people thought this was so important, more so even than how the food tastes, etc.NOT GOOD (not "bad" to me but not "good"):>UNDERSTAND IT BEFORE USING: Before using, go to the Lodge website as the enclosed directions suggest to see some important directions that frankly should be at least summarized in the enclosed directions. You either have to be experienced with cast iron cookware or go to the web site or you will have some disappointments.>CAUTION! - HANDLE GETS VERY HOT WHEN COOKING AND THE PAN AND HANDLE STAY HOT FOR A WHILE AFTER COOKING. This is inherent, it's one big piece of metal, so heat is conducted to the handle and the heavy mass holds heat a long time, so always use mitts!! If you use mitts, no problems at all. If you forget to use mitts, you'll probably only do it once!>SOME FOOD STICKING: Although it arrives factory "seasoned" (see the Lodge website for procedure, it's covering the pan surface with oil and baking it into the metal) and I also oil it after washing (per website instructions) and again before and with cooking, yes, food can and probably will stick. I suspect that the burgers we've done so far would be about the worst case because the ground meat can pull away and stick to the pan more easily than, say, a steak or veggies, but after burgers I usually have to do a little light scraping or use a metallic scouring pad (preferably the kind without soap, which can ruin the oil "seasoning" of the metal). No really tough deposits, no chisel needed, but they definitely will not just rinse off or even sponge off, some scraping needed. Hey, it's not non-stick, and even our stainless steel pans usually have some sticking, get over it. NOTE: The Lodge website and/or Amazon reviewers sometimes note to not use a metal scraper or it will damage the finish, and do not use soap or it will ruin the "seasoned"/oiled treatment. They are correct about cooking heat sterilizing any residue so no germ worries. But, (1.) the "seasoning" and oiling has not stopped food sticking, so I'm not terribly worried about washing away the oil that does very little under best of circumstances, (2.) I'm okay with using a strong plastic scraper instead of metal, but the precious "finish" is not polished, etc., in the first place, and I do try to be gentle with a metal scraper, not chiseling but just knocking food deposits off, and, (3.) aside from germs and sterilization, I just don't like the food quality / taste and esthetic perceptions from leaving blackened deposits of previous foods on when I cook the next thing. If I want blackened, tar-like residue on my food I'll use the outdoor grill!! Even our polished stainless steel (not non-stick) pans have food sticking, it's annoying but not a big deal, and worth the price to cook without potentially unhealthy non-stick coatings. There may be foods or cooking techniques or cast iron products that do not result in food sticking, but I suspect the problem is inherent, as it is with anything that is not non-stick-coated, and all the stuff about seasoning and using only velvet gloves to remove stuck food is an "in" ritual thing or a diversion from the problem. Just deal with it and do the best you can, or (sigh) use only non-stick cookware.>CAN RUST: Yes, it rusts if you soak it with water for a time or forget to dry it IMMEDIATELY after washing. Easy enough, just know it and remember, no problems.>GREASE CAPACITY: As at least one other reviewer noted, the ribs in the bottom are not that deep so it does not take much grease or oil accumulation before the food is sitting in it. It's not bad but not generous. Sometimes I pour out the accumulated oil, if I can do it without spilling out the food as well and have an assistant to wipe off any that drips down the outside where it is exposed to open flame. Again, imperfect but do-able.Overall, I love it, good results, a little more cleaning and maintenance work than we spoiled, modern people like, but not bad.
P**P
Lodge L8GP3 Logic Grill Pan
This is a top quality iron pan. It is rugged and HEAVY and will last a lifetime. Use it less than I thought I would mostly due to size and weight. Lodge is made in the USA!! I would recommend this pan for heavy duty grilling. I see this pan more for outdoor grilling over an open fire. Everything about it is heavy duty and then some. I will be ordering the flat Lodge griddle and grill combo soon, flatter and more room to spread food around. Pan is smoothly finished on the bottom to protect glass cooktops but still use care.
W**R
Perfect for Steaks in an Apartment
I cook steaks all year long. I love grilling outside with FIRE but I live in an apartment in downtown Seattle so that's hard sometimes. I have to walk over to the park to do it. This is a perfect substitute. The flavor is a bit different than cooking over a flame but it's just as good. I use high-heat oil, don't worry about a tiny bit of smoke and grill just like I would over gas or charcoal.I was using a flat cast iron pan and bought this to see if it made a difference. In my opinion, it does. The sear isn't quite as good but it locks in the juices well enough. The air flow allows the outside to get a bit of a char and, if you're cooking for others, the grill marks nail the presentation. Overall I think it's a better overall steak experience.It will fit three good sized NY Strips but it's best to limit it to two.
S**N
Useful
I used this exclusively to sear my ribeyes. This puts the perfect San Francisco style coating on my steaks. I then 'jiffy pop' wrap them in foil with the juices from the skillet and finish in the oven. Perfect.
T**Y
Great pan
Good thanks
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