Review
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“A must-own book. Druckman’s creations leap off the
page, and better yet, inspire you to grab a skillet.” —San
Francisco Chronicle
"There's no one better to offer instruction on how to use the
most essential, versatile item in your kitchen—Druckman is a
prolific food writer and a home cook, and her enthusiasm for
dishes like butter mochi cake and green-pea panisse is
contagious." —Grub Street
"I love this book! Charlotte's recipes are fresh, exciting, and
truly fun, and her writing makes you want to stir, sizzle, and
bake your way through each of them." —Dorie Greenspan, New York
Times bestselling author of Baking Chez Moi and Dorie's Cookies
"Charlotte's knowledge, imagination, and passion for food make
her an incredible resource for skillet cooking." —Christina Tosi,
chef-owner of Milk Bar and author of Momofuku Milk Bar
"Stir, Sizzle, Bake radically reimagines the possibilities for
cast iron. With recipes that range from green pea panisse to
coconut egg-in-a-hole, Charlotte is a smart, permissive, and
inspiring guide." —John T. Edge, coeditor of Southern Foodways
Alliance Community Cookbook
"This is the book you need if you want to cook with cast iron."
—Diana Henry, author of A Change of Appetite
"Stir, Sizzle, Bake delves into not just what you can do with
these pans, but also how to keep them in tip-top shape. Through
her research, Druckman has developed a very
understanding about how these basic, yet fickle, pans
work." —First We Feast
"Druckman offers cast-iron skillet recipes that are interesting,
international, complex in some cases, and using ingredients you
might not associate with cast iron. Whether you want to go
complex, or keep it simple, you'll find something worth pulling
your skillet out for (if yours doesn't have a permanent place on
the stove already)." —Faith Middleton, talk show host of "Faith
Middleton Food Schmooze" on WNYR
“The kind of food you can make in a cast-iron pan is the kind
that humanity has been cooking in cast-iron for centuries:
sturdy, rugged, nourishing, but still — particularly with
Druckman’s knack with unconventional ingredients in innovative
combinations — sophisticated.” —Eater
"Charlotte Druckman goes deep on cast-iron baking." —The New York
Times
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About the Author
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Charlotte Druckman is a journalist and food writer
whose work has appeared in various publications, including
the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, Cherry Bombe,
and Bon Appétit. She’s the proud cofounder of Food52’s Tournament
of Cookbooks, and is also the author of Skirt Steak and coauthor
of Cooking Without Borders with Anita Lo. She lives in New York.
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Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
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WHERE IT STARTED
Humankind has been cooking with cast iron for eons, well before
there were cookbooks or even handwritten recipes. It’s an
enduring material; it’s also a relatively forgiving one. Things
have a way of turning out all right in one of those heavy,
searing pans.
Maybe that’s because, as I reasoned, you don’t see anything too
fancy or delicate being prepared in them—no foam, no fragile,
paper-thin layers, no custards, no sugar sculpture. Cast-iron
skillets are the workhorses of home cooking. Sweet or savory, the
stuff you fix in them is as accessible as the pans themselves.
That approachability is what made me take on baking, which, up
until then, had been a source of intimidation.
In the United States, the cast-iron skillet is typically
associated with rustic cooking—outdoorsy sorts take it
camping—and with down-home grub such as biscuits and cornbread,
probably the first things people think of when you mention
“baking” and “cast iron” in the same sentence. But rustic needn’t
be unsophisticated. And biscuits and cornbread needn’t be
predictable or adhere to your grandparents’ recipes. You can fool
around with the classics—maybe incorporate Fritos corn chips into
your cornbread, or roasted butternut squash into your biscuits.
And because cast iron is a globally utilized material, you
can—and should— cull inspiration from multiple locales.
Since I was a little girl, I’ve been enchanted by cookbooks. I’d
run my hand along the spines on my parents’ kitchen shelves. I’d
pick up whatever volume my mother was cooking from and flip
through it. But for a food writer, having so many expert opinions
at your fingertips can have a negative effect; it caused me to
start secondguessing myself. Every time I thought about combining
flavors or trying a different cooking method, I’d question it. My
sense of adventure and creative spirit were gone. Slowly, I
stopped cooking.
I missed it, the way I remembered it. Writing a cookbook
dedicated to baking on this metal surface provided me with an
rtunity to sharpen my own skills, overcome some misgivings
I’d had about certain culinary tasks, and, the real gift, get my
confidence back.
Baking has the reputation of being rigid, not conducive to
improvisation. There are predetermined ratios in place—for wet
and dry ingredients and for . But having those set equations
frees you up to try out different flavors and ingredients, so you
can make a scone or pizza your own without turning it into
something unrecognizable or, worse, inedible. With fixed
proportions, you can only go so far before you will come up
against the limits of the baked good you’re trying to produce.
The same is true of the vessel you’re cooking in; it provides you
with some fundamental structure. With my trusty pan, I felt safe
to mess around with spices and new types of flour. I could be
more adventurous.
As I developed my recipes, I went back to some of the cookbooks
I’d grown up with, and found guidance in a few newer sources.
Sometimes, I’d ask chefs to collaborate with me. Working with the
masters is always an rtunity to learn, and this time it
wasn’t at the expense of my self-assurance; it contributed to my
improvement and only made me want to spend more time at
the stove.
I taught myself to bake so that I could, in turn, teach you. In
the process, I reawakened the instinct I used to rely on when I
was younger, engaging my imagination and logic to cook things I
inherently knew would taste good. I’m convinced we all have that
instinct, and my greatest wish is that Stir, Sizzle, Bake gets
you in touch with yours. Even if your brownies are a bit
overcooked, if you have fun making them, and if you start to
think about how you might change them next time, maybe adding
cinnamon or pretzel dust, I’ll have succeeded.
HOW TO USE THIS BOOK
I hope, like a well-used skillet, the copy of the cookbook you
are now holding becomes a keepsake, one that you return to again
and again. It’s intended to be the definitive guide to cooking on
cast iron, with a specific emphasis on baking. It’s also a solid
introduction to baking that can be used as a source of recipes
and inspiration for practiced home cooks as well. Those who are
new to—or daunted by—cast iron or baking can treat the book as a
primer, to be read and worked through in order.
For the first chapter of recipes, “No-Bake Baking,” your dough
never sees the oven. Each item is cooked on the stovetop. You’ll
be dealing with a lot of flatbreads. But you’ll also get a few
not-so-flat rounds out of it. Most of these are easy to make;
they’re quick and don’t require loads of ingredients. The recipes
in the following section, “Easy-Bake Baking,” move you into
proper baking territory, that is the oven. These may require more
prep than the items you made before, but then you can shut the
oven door, set your timer, and leave the rest to the machinery.
In “On-the-Rise Baking,” you get into yeasted dough, kneaded or
not. Don’t worry. Mostly it requires patience—waiting for a rise,
or two, sometimes three.
We’ve arrived at my favorite chapter, “Makethe-Most-of Baking.” I
think of these dishes as examples of “baking it forward,” because
you’re using the items you made in the earlier chapters in tandem
with other ingredients to deliver stand-alone dishes or, even,
meals. Last but not least—this is the category of foodstuff I
can’t live without—“Condiments.” Accompaniments for your breads,
most of these, conveniently, are also made in your cast-iron
pan.
Skillet Size
Before you get picky about the brand or age of your pan, you
should ask yourself what size you need. All the recipes in this
book were tested in a Lodge 10¼-inch cast-iron skillet, which is
the average diameter of the pan, measured across the top. When
you are buying vintage cast-iron skillets, you will see they are
numbered according to size. Unfortunately—and confusingly—these
numbers do not correspond to any recognizable dimension and were
not standardized among manufacturers, so one company’s “5” pan
may be slightly bigger— or smaller—than another’s. Despite these
minor discrepancies, you can count on a vintage “8” skillet to be
the reliable equivalent of a modernday 10-inch pan (usually
around 10¼ inches, like a Lodge).
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