GSI's hard anodization process hardens the cooking surface to about twice as hard as stainless steel, which makes cleaning the GSI Dutch oven a breeze. The anodized coating also delivers non-stick performance, doesn't need to be seasoned like cast iron, and seals the aluminum away from your food.
Prem wrote:Danny,Anodized means there's no bare aluminum on the surface of the cookware, so there's no taste from any metal in the food. The coating is an inert compound of aluminum approaching the hardness of the gemstone GARNET (an inert aluminum compound).
Cast iron is high maintenance compared to these hard anodized aluminum Dutch ovens.
I should say that I've been using cast iron cookware since 1977 and own a small pile of the stuff (http://www.tnttt.com/viewtopic.php?t=36723). I now own two hard anodized Dutch ovens and love cooking in them more than anything else. I even have a stainless steel Dutch oven, but the hard anodized is as close to non-stick as you can get without a plastic Teflon-like coating.
Here's some info on a standard size (12 inch), hard anodized, camp Dutch oven:
http://tinyurl.com/GSIanodizedDO
I posted this stuff only to help everyone out who might be interested. I know that cast iron is a religion, but so is fine cooking. You can find what works best for you.
My two hard anodized camp Dutch ovens work great!
If you want hard anodized and titanium skillets / fry pans like one of my camping buddies swears by, here you go:
http://www.scanpancookware.com/scanpan-ctx-83/
Best wishes,
Prem![]()
Thanks for the info on the oven. I've been considering getting a couple of the anodized ovens just to see how I like them. I love my cast iron, but I'm not a cast iron bigot. I'll cook in about anything.
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