How to Fucking Wash Cast Iron

Without ruining it. Again.

Let's Get This Out of the Way

Yes, You Can Use Soap

The "no soap" rule is from when soap was made with lye — harsh stuff that actually stripped seasoning. Modern dish soap is mild detergent. It's fine. Your grandma was right about a lot of things, but this one's outdated. Use a little soap if you want. It won't hurt anything.

Look. I've watched people do insane things to cast iron. Soaking it overnight. Running it through the dishwasher. Leaving it wet on the counter "to dry." And then they wonder why it's rusted, why the seasoning's flaking, why everything sticks.

This isn't complicated. Cast iron is the easiest cookware to care for — if you stop treating it like it's either indestructible or made of glass.

Here's how to actually clean the thing.

The Right Way

  1. Wash It While It's Still Warm

    After cooking, let it cool down enough to handle — but don't let it sit there for hours. Warm pan, hot water, food comes right off. Wait too long and you're scraping dried cement.

  2. Use Hot Water and Something Abrasive

    Hot water, a stiff brush or chain mail scrubber. That's it. If something's really stuck, a little coarse salt works as an abrasive. Scrub, rinse, done.

    Soap is optional. Use a tiny bit if there's grease you can't get off. Just don't soak the pan in soapy water for an hour. That's not washing — that's sabotage.

  3. Dry It Immediately

    This is where people fuck up. Wipe it with a towel. Then put it on the stove over low heat for a minute or two until it's completely dry. Not "mostly dry." Not "it'll air dry." Bone dry.

  4. Apply a Thin Layer of Oil

    While it's still warm, rub a tiny amount of oil over the cooking surface. Vegetable oil, canola, flaxseed — whatever. Use a paper towel. Wipe off the excess until it doesn't look oily anymore.

    You want a micro-thin layer. Not a puddle. Not enough to see. Just enough to protect.

  5. Store It Dry

    That's it. Store it somewhere dry. If you're stacking pans, put a paper towel between them.

The Whole Process Takes 3 Minutes

Hot water. Scrub. Dry. Oil. Done. People make this sound like a ritual. It's not. It's less work than loading a dishwasher — which, by the way, you should never do with cast iron.

Never Soak Cast Iron

Not for 5 minutes. Not to "loosen" stuck food. Iron rusts when it sits in water. Period. If you have stubborn stuck-on food, boil some water in the pan for a few minutes. That'll lift it. Then scrub and dry immediately.

Shit That Will Ruin Your Pan

See Gray Metal?

Congrats. You scrubbed through your seasoning. That's bare iron now. And bare iron rusts. Fast. Like, minutes-after-getting-wet fast.

Dry it. Now. Then re-season that spot before you cook on it again. I don't care if it's just a small patch — water finds bare iron like it's got a grudge.

Don't know how to season? Christ. Fine. Go here.

What to Buy

You don't need much. A stiff brush or a chain mail scrubber. I'd go with the chain mail — it's more effective on stuck food and it won't damage seasoning like steel wool will.

One Thing Worth Buying
Lodge Chain Mail Scrubber
~$15-20 Stainless Steel Lasts Forever

Lodge makes cast iron. They know what works on it. This thing handles stuck-on food without scratching seasoning, rinses clean instantly, and will outlast every sponge you've ever bought. Simple tool that does the job.

Get the Scrubber

Don't want chain mail? A stiff nylon brush works fine for everyday cleaning. OXO makes a good one for like $10. Just don't use anything that'll scratch metal — no steel wool, no green scouring pads.

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That's it. Hot water, scrub, dry completely, thin layer of oil, store dry.

Soap won't kill your pan. Soaking will. The dishwasher will. Storing it wet will.

Cast iron has survived being dropped, being left on fires, being passed down for generations. It can survive a little dish soap. What it can't survive is you leaving it in water overnight because you "didn't feel like dealing with it."

Now go wash your pan. The right way this time.