Old oil on cast iron Dutch oven

Old oil on cast iron Dutch oven - Aged heating battery made of cast iron near windowsill with curtains in house

I have a Dutch oven that remained in storage for about three years. Apparently I covered it with oil prior to the storing. Now,it has that old oil smell to it that I can't get of.

Any advice on how to remove the oil and smell?



Best Answer

Try burning it off. Put it in a 500 degree oven for an hour or so. If there is oil on it, it will smoke.

After that, you may need to re-season the Dutch oven.

Good luck.




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More answers regarding old oil on cast iron Dutch oven

Answer 2

Yes, this can be huge pain to deal with. Note for the future - if "oiling prior to storage" mineral oil (USP) might be a better choice than vegetable oil, as it does not go rancid.

If you have a dishwasher you can run the pan through the dishwasher to remove most of the (now rancid) oil. Then follow @user40124's advice to burn it off (but have less smoke) and finally re-season it. Alternatively, burn it off in a wood fire where the additional smoke won't be an issue. The thread I just linked in a comment on the question suggests running it in a self-cleaning oven on the the clean cycle.

Dry promptly after the dishwasher runs or it will rust. Likewise, don't wait a long time between burning it off and re-seasoning, or the clean, oil-free pan will quickly rust.

Answer 3

Strip it and re-season it. Just make sure that when you prepare the cast iron for storage, that you bake the oil on, and don't store the cast iron wet. Depending on your choice of oil, it will be plus or minus 385 degrees until the oil is dry. About an hour usually if the pot is cold.

I don't use nor recommend FGMO, I don't want to eat that whether or not it's supposed to be harmless.

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Images: Erik Mclean, Erik Mclean, Pixabay, Travis Saylor