Nice complete piece. It is much more common to find them without the base plate you know. Do you have a gas stove this will work on?
There has been a recent influx of vintage cast iron into my household from a family source. This is the latest piece after cleaning and re-seasoning:
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Nice complete piece. It is much more common to find them without the base plate you know. Do you have a gas stove this will work on?
Every weekend that I go there, I stand at my local flea market cast iron dealer's table and covent his wares. He knows his goods and doesn't give them away, but he puts a lot of effort into cleaning and identifying his goods. I'll see if I can get some pictures this weekend to share so you can have cast iron envy too. You need a 16" skillet?I am watching for a Martin Stove Works cornbread stick pan right now for myself.
Griswold waffle irons are so intricate in their designs so even if you don't use them they are neat to have. I got one years ago at a garage sale for $15. It's a No. 8 without the wire bail, iron spiral handles with the eye-rod core, the fire ring was with it and no chips or cracks. I have never asked it to make me a waffle, I am not sure it would work well on our electric stove, so it is down in my treasure chest of precious metals. I tease my boys that some day they will inherit all my precious metal....cast iron cookware.
I need to get you guys a picture of my footed cast iron pot. I've never seen another like it. It belonged to my great grandfather Monroe Oates. He was a Presbyterian circuit preacher in the Ozarks during and after the War of Northern Aggression. He carried it hooked to his saddle and, often as not, used it to boil a chicken which he was given for his services in the mountain communities. He served briefly as a CSA chaplain near Harper's Ferry Va. before marrying Amanda Harper and moving to Arkansas. So the pot dates to at least the 1860's-1870's. The only marking is an "8" on the bottom.
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My folks had a similar one that was handed down by the maternal grandma. It had a single crack down one side to the curve of the bottom so it was a flower pot for the front porch.
This one has a bottom crack. It was cast very thin and is light, considering it is cast iron. Likewise, it holds a potted plant in a pot. Behind it in the picture is a steel milk can from Granddad's dairy. That was prewar. Second, not first.
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