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seasoning my wok
2Fategghead
Posts: 9,624
After our baked potato's and spatchcock chicken cook yesterday I seasoned my new wok that I got from the CGS. I used Crisco and got it looking like this. Do I use mild soapy water to wash the lard off it now before using or do I use it like this? Can someone tell me some good wok cooks i've never woked before. I work nights the rest of the week so I may have to cook something in the late morning before work else I will have to cook at 8:pm when I get home. Thanks Tim
I did this three times.



I did this three times.



Comments
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How to Season a Carbon Steel Wok
Here's How:
1.Rinse the wok in hot water with small amount of liquid detergent.
2.Scrub the exterior of the wok with a scouring pad.
3.Repeat the process on the inside of the wok, using a sponge instead of a scouring pad.
4.Rinse the wok and place over high heat. This will prevent rust.
5.Dry the wok with a paper towel.
6.Pour approximately 2 tablespoons vegetable oil into the wok.
7.Use another paper towel to rub the oil over the entire inside surface of the wok.
8.Repeat this process until no black residue comes up on the paper towel. The wok is now ready to use.
Tips:
1.Flat bottomed woks are better for electric ranges. Round bottomed woks can reflect heat
back on the heating element, damaging it.
2.It is important to thoroughly clean the wok to remove the manufacturer's protective coating.
3.It is better not to purchase a non-stick carbon steel wok, as the high heats required for Chinese cooking may damage the non-stick coating.
4.If you do purchase a non-stick wok, following the seasoning and cleaning instructions carefully, or you may damage the coating.
How to Clean a Carbon Steel Wok
Time Required: 15 minutes
Here's How:
1.Rinse the wok in hot water.
2.Gently lift off or scrub away food particles with a nonmetallic scrubber.
3.Rinse the wok.
4.Dry the interior and exterior of the wok with paper towels.
5.To finish drying, place the wok over medium-high heat.
6.Wipe the inside of the wok with a small amount of vegetable oil.
7.Store until ready to use again.
Tips:
1.Never scrub the wok with an abrasive cleanser, as this can damage the seasoned surface.
2.Do not put the wok in the dishwasher.
3.If rust appears or the wok is accidentally cleaned in the dishwasher, simply re-season it,
being careful to remove all the rust. -
Wash it in hot water only and use a clean rag to wipe it off...DO NOT USE SOAP.....once it is dry I add a drop of olive oil and wipe it in the wok with a paper towel....you will love the wok...
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what foods do u cook in your wok ---?--we have a nice wok --have not used it yet in our egg ---
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Linda,
Shrimp fried rice, stir fry veggies, broccoli beef, kung pow chicken to name a few.

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Tim - The bottom looks good but looks like you need to tilt the wok and season the sides a little more. Pretty much should be black all around. I repeated the process probably 3 times on the bottom and the sides.



I used this as a guideline http://www.thaifoodandtravel.com/features/wokcare.html -
thank you
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Got it Kim. Thanks
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Thanks Frank. The next time I use my egg i'll season on the wok some more. Tim
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The more you use it the darker it will get.Just takes time.
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This is one of my favorite wok recipes. I cooked it at Eggtoberfest...
Szechuan Pork
Ingredients:
Medium red pepper
Green onions
1 lb pork tenderloin
Chili garlic sauce
Fresh ginger
Low sodium chicken broth
Low sodium soy sauce
Peanut butter
Rice or spaghetti noodles
Pea Pods
Cooking oil
Directions
Take 1lb pork tenderloin and cut it into 1” strips. In a plastic zip lock bag marinade the pork by mixing 1 tablespoon chili garlic sauce and one teaspoon of minced fresh ginger and mix it into the pork. Set aside and marinade for 2-4 hrs. Slice a medium red pepper into strips or Julienne style. Next take 4 green onions and slice them diagonally into 1 1/2″ pieces. Cut ends off of pea pods and cut the pods in half. Set vegys aside for later use.
Next take 1/4 cup of low sodium chicken broth (you must use low sodium or it will be very salty when cooked) and 1 1/2 tablespoons of low sodium soy sauce and add it to 1 tablespoon of peanut butter Mix this together with a fork or small whisk.
Get the BGE stabilized at 350 degrees. Place the wok in the egg for about 5 minutes so the wok gets hot. Put 2 tablespoons of a good quality cooking oil into the wok. Next add the pork to the wok. You only need to get the outside of the pork browned but not fully cooked before you add the red pepper. The smaller the pork chunks and the hotter your wok is the shorter the cook times will be and vice versa. Cook the red peppers & pea pods until they start to soften slightly before moving on to the next step.
At this point the pork has been cooking about 12 minutes at 350 deg. Now that the peppers & pods have started to soften it is time to add the green onion and peanut butter mixture and mix thoroughly. Allow this to cook until the sauce thickens slightly. About 2-4 minutes. With extra caution and two oven mitts remove the wok and pour the Szechuan Pork into a bowl making sure to get all of the sauce from the wok.
We served this over fried rice & it was great. Eat & enjoy -
You make it look easy in the XL. LOL
Great post and pictures to boot.
So many people give up on wok cooking because they never get a good non stick glaze before they start cooking.
DarianThank you,DarianGalveston Texas -
2Fategghead wrote:Thanks Frank. The next time I use my egg i'll season on the wok some more. Tim
By definition, yes you will...but I wouldn't put any more effort into it.
I'm by no means an expert on wok cooking or seasoning. All I know is my own experience. I did a heavy seasoning using oil when I first got my wok (if I ever have to do this again, I'll actually use lard). I got a high-shine finish like what you've got. And then as I started cooking, that shiny coating started flaking off. After many cooks, my wok now has a dark, matte finish. With the initial coating, you could see that the finish had a thickness to it...it was a thick layer of coating. Now that I've been using it a lot, that layer is gone, and the seasoned finish it has now just appears to be part of the surface of the wok, rather than COATING the surface of the wok. I believe that what I now have is approaching a seasoned wok, not a wok with a coating of burned oil.
You've done enough to get your wok in a condition where you can start cooking on it. As you use the wok, the act of cooking in it will do the REAL work in seasoning it. No more effort required, unless you do something that ruins the patina, like cleaning with detergent, or leaving acidic foods in the wok (cooking with tomatoes or other acidic ingreds should be fine, just clean the wok right away, afterwards).
Also, you know that shortening (Crisco) and lard are two completely different things, right?
Don't worry about your seasoning anymore...just cook. From this point on, the seasoning will take care of itself. -
Thanks Jon
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Thanks Ben. I did not know Crisco and lard were differn't. Tim
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i like to use lard but what you want to do is wipe another light coat on and put it back in your egg upsidedown this time and recook it at about 350. what i think you did is season it like you would on a wok burner
ive done it both ways and upsidown in a stableized egg with the dome closed works for cast iron pots and woks. fukahwee maineyou can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it -
How long do you let it heat up upside down in the egg stabilized at 350°? 2 minutes?
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Lard is rendered pork fat, and is semi-solid at room temperature.
Crisco (shortening) is made from vegetable oils (liquids) that have been hydrogenated to make them solid at room temps. -
i would go indirect for maybe an hour, check it twice and wipe it again if needed then shut the egg down with it inside. whatever extra is in it will drip out while it cooks, just don't go real heavy with your crisco, its better to go with really light coats instead of one heavy one. the way yours looks just cook it til it starts to get dry and shut it down inside the egg.fukahwee maineyou can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it
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heres the oven method described by the owner of "the wok shop"
Grace Young's excellent book The Breath of a Wok, has several wok seasoning methods. One of the methods included in the book is Tane Chan's oven method. Tane Chan also happens to be the owner of the The Wok Shop, and sent me email wok seasoning instructions along with my order confirmation. So I decided to use that method.
"The wok is carbon steel and has to be seasoned to prevent it from rusting. The seasoning process is relatively easy to do. Just wash and dry your wok thoroughly. Coat lightly, interior and exterior with cooking oil. Bake in hot oven, 425 degrees for 20 minutes. Place in oven upside down. Remove from oven, let cool to touch and scour wok with an abrasive pad.
Scour the "seasoning" or patina away...like you want the wok back to its original finish. Wash, dry, coat and bake again...same process. Do this 4 times. After the 4th baking, you will not be able to scour the seasoning away...and that is the result you want."fukahwee maineyou can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it -
What a great thread! I just got mine a week or so ago and did maybe 4 cycles of oiling/heating/washing. I moved the wok all around and inverted it until it was black all over.
On my first cook, beef with oyster sauce, I scooped everything out with a ladle but before I could remove the wok the sauce that was left in the bottom was burned on. When I washed it the seasoning in this area came off.
Should I re-season it or just continue cooking? Should I remove the wok when the dish is done instead scooping out the contents?
When I lived in Thailand they had these "brushes" that were basically thin strips of bamboo that were tied together at one end. When they finished cooking they added water, quickly scrubbed it with this device, and then dumped the water. How does that sound?
Bruce -
Yes, you need to remove the wok from the heat as soon as the food is done. Don't scoop it out with a ladle, that takes too long. Rather, dump from the wok into the serving dish.
I rinse with water as soon as I'm done cooking, or in between batches or dishes...while the wok is still hot (and over the coals). A squeeze bottle with of water is handy. I don't have one of those nifty bamboo brushes, I just give it a few swipes with my bamboo spatula thingy. If there is anything cooked on and stuck to the wok, when it's dry, I scrub lightly with kosher salt and a dry towel, then rinse it again.
Hard to tell if your wok will need re-seasoning, but it wouldn't hurt. Just give it a light seasoning and then keep cooking. My inital seasoning flaked off too. -
Ah, I like the water bottle idea Ben. I saw those bamboo brushes at the Asian market in OKC before I ordered my wok. I plan on getting one next trip down...would you like for me to grab you one (or anyone else interested)while I'm there?
Bruce -
i use a heavy duty pot brush. what works pretty well is taking the empty wok and heating it up again, then add a little water so it steams up quickly and hit it with the brush. it lifts the crud the same way as making gravy in a pan with the roasted crud drippings. the more you use the wok the less things stick and burnfukahwee maineyou can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it
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