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Pre-Seasoned Cast Iron Skillets Are A Timeless Must-Have For Every Kitchen! The LI-GELISI Cast Iron Skillet Is Heavy Duty And Virtually Indestructible, So They Will Last You Years, Decades, And Generations To Come! LI-GELISI Skillets Are Factory Pre-Seasoned, So They Are Ready To Use Straight Out Of The Box. Take The Stress Out Of Cooking Weeknight Dinners! LI-GELISI Cast Iron Cookware Is Multi-Functional, And Suitable For Many Different Cooking Methods. Plus Our Design Has Superior Heat Retention And Conducts Heat Evenly, So Your Food Will Turn Out Great Every Time!
K**.
I'm giving this 5 stars to cancel out the people who don't understand cast iron
I'm giving this 5 stars to cancel out the people who don't understand how to clean, treat, or season cast iron. Before you buy this, know that it is made of cast iron, and do some research on how to work with it. It might not be for you!This pan is beautiful, sturdy, and the heat distributes perfectly. I like that the handle comes off so it doesn't burn during seasoning. My handle is a lighter wood than the product photo, but I'm fine with it. I also like that this one is a bit wider than the other tamagoyaki pans. If you want a solid tamagoyaki pan, this one is great.
T**L
Good performance for an excellent price
My daughter decided she wanted to make tamagoyaki for her bento, so we ordered up this pan and made 8 tamagoyaki this weekend to practice our technique. The usual advice is to start with a Teflon tamgoyaki-ki and that's probably good advice, which I ignored. This cast-iron pan requires more precision with heat to avoid sticking. But it's very usable if you're careful and of course is more durable in the long run than a coated pan. Iwachu is considered the best of Japanese cast-iron, but you'll pay nearly as much for an Iwachu (if you can find one) as you would for a professional copper tamagoyaki pan. In comparison, this pan is a great value for less than $30. The casting seems a bit rough in texture (rougher than a modern Lodge skillet), but it should smooth out over time as it becomes better seasoned.Upon receiving it, I washed the pan thoroughly and gave it three seasoning coats with Crisbee, which I highly recommend for all cast-iron seasoning and maintenance. As far as heat, remember that cast-iron has a much higher heat capacity than either Teflon or copper pans, so you need to be careful not to apply too much heat from the burner when cooking. After a weekend of experimenting, we found the following works best... 1) Pre-heat the pan over low heat for about 10 minutes, rotating occasionally to avoid hot spots. 2) Oil the pan and increase heat to medium. 3) When a few drops of egg sizzle convincingly but not too aggressively, *drop heat to low*, then add an egg layer. 4) After you've formed and rolled each layer, re-oil and increase heat back to medium, dropping back to low before adding the egg for each new layer. What you want is for the bottom surface of the egg to cook immediately on contact to avoid sticking and then let the residual heat in the pan do the rest of the work. Lowering the heat prevents burning the bottom. It will take a solid minute+ for the pan to come back up to temp between layers, so be patient. Proceeding this way, only a thin film of oil is required for each layer and I expect performance will improve as the pan seasons further and smooths out.As far as capacity, this pan seems a bit too small for the common 4 egg tamagoyaki recipe. The shallow front edge (which is helpful for rolling and plating) reduces the effective capacity compared to completely rectangular pans. But using a 3 egg recipe is also a little awkward - when you get to the third layer, making it standard thickness will leave you with too little egg left over for a full 4th layer but too much egg to dump in all at once. I think it's best to make a 4 egg recipe but expect to have a little leftover egg after 4 layers. So it's like a 3.5 egg tamagoyaki pan.Overall, a fine little tamagoyaki-ki for an excellent price. A Teflon pan would definitely be easier to get started with and I'd recommend that for those without experience cooking on cast-iron. But I think this pan will be more durable and be a better performer than a Teflon pan in the long run.
B**A
Quickest way to make a perfect omelette every time!
Quickest way to make a perfect omelette every time!Japanese figured it out a long time ago with this pan. I didn't do any fancy seasoning. Just warmed it up once with generous amounts of avocado oil. Wiped it clean and used it the next day. You should use generous amounts of oil the first few times you use it.You also have to preheat it before you start your omelette. Like any cast iron pan, if you don't get it up to temperature first, you will end up cooking your food INTO the pan as opposed to cooking it ON the pan.Just set it on low and let it simmer for 5-10 minutes to let the heat build up evenly across the entire pan.The attached picture is of my very first attempt.
D**L
Very Happy
I have been using this consistently for about a week now, and have no complaints. It's heavy and feels like it is a good quality. It performs as well as any other piece of cast iron cookware I have. I find two-eggs to be the perfect amount to make tamagoyaki in this pan! Very glad I ordered it.
R**S
Worth the minimal care!
Without reservation I can say that this is the best egg pan I've ever had. I do eggs of any style (sunny, over easy, scrambled, French omelette, Japanese omelet...), and they all release perfectly. Take care of it (!) and it will take care of you.
C**T
Nice piece of cast iron
So mine just arrived today, I haven't used it yet...HOWEVER, I am a big user of cast iron cookware, so I feel confident I can judge this piece just by holding it and looking at it. First thing I noticed is that it has nice heft. That means the iron is dense (i.e. has fewer air bubbles in the casting). The surface is no more or less rough than modern Lodge brand cast iron, and to be honest a rough starting surface produces superior seasoning results down the line because the roughness acts like a fingerprint to hold on to the seasoning. I like the fact that the handle is not assembled completely because it shows to the purchaser that the handle can be removed from the pan for a seasoning exercise in the oven. As for all new pieces of cast iron, I recommend re-seasoning the pan. If you don't know how to do this, then do a web search and read more than the first entry or two, there are right ways to season and there are wrong ways to season that work, but aren't as durable and can force you to re-season again down the road. The basics, remove the handle and put aside. Put pan into oven, and set oven for a short self-cleaning cycle (2 hours is usually enough), let the pan cool enough to be able to handle it with bare hands or just a dry dish towel. It will rust FAST because of the heat. Rinse the pan in fresh cool water, and scrub the pan with scotch bright pad to remove the rust. Put back in the warm oven to let it dry. Because the oven is not so hot anymore it shouldn't rust too quickly. Once dry, grab a good seasoning oil (I prefer peanut oil, but veg oil is fine enough as a 3rd or 4th choice, just don't use olive oil). Pour a teaspoon into the pan, and with dry clean paper towel, rub the oil onto every surface of the pan (including the handle tang). I mean the whole thing, leave no surface uncovered. After that, grab another dry clean paper towel and dry the pan off. Keep replacing paper towels with new paper towels until the paper towels no longer get any oil on them. Then set your oven for 385 deg F, place you pan in there upside down. Place a cookie sheet underneath to catch any drips that may occur. Check the pan in an hour, if it looks dry it's done...if it looks like it has wet spots or bumps, leave it in for another 30 minutes. Once the pan is dry, let it cool down below boiling. Take your scrotch bright and lightly rub the inner cooking surface of the pan. Rinse and dry the pan in the warm oven again (you want to drive out ALL moisture, not just surface moisture). Now you have two choices at this point. Either repeat the seasoning (don't strip it with a cleaning cycle again), or just oil it down all over and wipe off. Either way will work, and your pan will naturally build up seasoning over time if you are careful not to remove the seasoning while cleaning. Since this pan is meant for eggs, you should never have to do anything more than wipe the pan out with a paper towel WHILE it is still HOT. Once in a while you may wish to oil the outside of the pan again since the oil is not being naturally refreshed like the inner cooking surfaces are.
S**N
The round handle doesn't fit the square pan end properly.
Overall the product works. The biggest issue I had with it was the handle, which comes in the form of a hollow wood tube with a circular shape. However, the end of the pan has a rectangular shape which does not really fit properly into the wood handle. Initially the pan ends up being loose and would rotate around the handle and we had to modify it to work. Also the surface of the pan is quite rough, I wonder if smoother surface is more suitable to tamagoyaki.So buyers beware. I think I would give it 2.5-3 stars.
M**I
Drop shipping from china
Advertised for 30 days shipping. Came 7 days after the 2 months estimated shipping time. Turns out it was being shipped from china. This is basically dropshipping.
C**L
Difference from what expected
I am a little disappointed when receive this. Does not like the handle. This cast iron looks cheap with my other cast iron. Similar size but even heavier.
M**N
Japanese Omlette Pan
Great looking pan, good quality. Prompt delivery.
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