cornbread DSC 6234

Iron pan, perfect cornbread

Classic things bring me joy. Perhaps it’s part of my frugal nature, but give me something that is destined to last for years over something trendy or disposable any day. One of my oldest treasures is my cast iron skillet. It’s my favorite tool in the kitchen and if I’ve cooked a meal, chances are at least one dish was touched by my iron skillet’s surface, seasoned by almost a hundred year’s worth of food memories. If I think about it enough, it almost gives me chills to think of all that history gracing each meal.

I wish my iron skillet was an old family heirloom because that would make for a better story. As much as I’d like to embellish, however, I have to admit I bought my iron skillet in an antique shop. (Hey, at least it’s old!) I found it in Iowa City many years ago, and the shop owner told me it was cast in the early 1900s. There’s no date or brand on it, so unless I carbon dated it there’s no real way of knowing its true age. It’s said, however, that a flat bottom means the cookware is older than one with ridges; mine is flat. It’s also blacker than midnight and heavier than a house. (Making it ideal for both toning my arms and shooing away door-to-door salesman.) And working with it is a dream as it heats evenly, is nonstick and transfers brilliantly from the stove top to the oven. It’s a true one-pan wonder.

Even though I haven’t inherited any of my family’s iron cookware, my grandmother, my mother and my uncles all use cast iron that has been passed down through the generations. Yes, they have the pleasure of cooking with iron pots and pans that were also used by my great-grandmothers. There were no blacksmiths in my family, so my great-grandmothers bought their cast iron back in the early 1900s, but that doesn’t make them any less amazing; it’s thrilling to cook with something that has served people for a hundred years. One skillet my mom has is tiny, probably six inches in diameter. When I was young, I considered it my own personal pan because it was perfect for frying one egg, the first thing I learned to cook. So, I reckon my love for iron cookware was set at a young age.

Texas cornbread | Homesick Texan

You can find old iron skillets at garage sales, flea markets or antique stores. If you wish to purchase one new, Lodge out of Tennessee is the only company still manufacturing them in America today (though Wagner, another classic brand, is supposed to resume production this year). Until recently, new iron cookware only came raw and in order to make it usable you had to season it yourself. But apparently some consumers want instant gratification, so Lodge introduced a pre-seasoned line under the Lodge Logic label. I find it sort of illogical, but I guess you have to give the people what they want. (There have been rumors that Lodge is phasing out its unseasoned iron ware, but I haven’t seen anything to validate this.) If you buy your cast iron new, I highly recommend getting it unseasoned. Seasoning is not only fun, but it’s a way of bonding with your new cast iron friend.

Once you buy your cast iron piece, seasoning it for the first time is an easy process. First rinse with hot water and dry completely. (Do not use soap!) Coat the entire piece of cookware (both inside and out) with either vegetable oil, lard or bacon grease. Cook it in an oven set at 450-500 degrees until it quits smoking (about 15 minutes). Take it out, pour out any oil and put it upside down back in the oven at 250 degrees for two hours (you might want to put some foil under it to catch the excess fat). After you’ve let it cool, do the touch test. If it’s smooth, it’s ready to go, but if it’s sticky it didn’t get hot enough. Scrub off the gummy bits and start over.

After it’s seasoned, you don’t want to wash it with soap because that will ruin the finish. To clean it, just stick it in water and scrub (if you need more grit than a sponge or steel wool use salt). To dry it, put it on a stove and heat it until all the water is burned off, otherwise the cookware will rust. If, after using it for a while, you start to see rust, rub it with steel wool and re-season the cookware. It may seem like a lot of work, but trust me, if you take care of your cast iron, it should provide you with a long, happy cooking relationship.

I can do a lot with my cast iron skillet: scramble eggs, fry fish, broil beef, bake biscuits, sautee vegetables and roast chiles. I suppose I could use other cookware for these jobs, but I don’t like to fuss with lots of pots and pans—using the same skillet works for me. But there’s one dish that nothing but a cast iron skillet will do: cornbread. Why? If you bake it in anything else cornbread will not achieve the desired crispy crust.

Now, I don’t want to start a debate about cornbread—but it is a fact that there are differences between Northern and Texan cornbread: Northerners like it sweet while Texans like it salty. We are also known to jazz it up with jalapenos, green chiles or cheese. But the one thing a Texan will never, ever put into their cornbread is sugar. That said, my mom—who has a legendary sweet tooth—admits to putting honey in hers (so I have to question her Texan creditentials), but never mind that. Cornbread is for dinner, not dessert.

Texas cornbread | Homesick Texan

Here’s a classic Texan cornbread recipe, baked in a cast iron skillet, of course. Be sure and get the cast iron good and hot, as that’s what sears the batter and makes for a crispy, crunchy crust.

Print
5 from 7 votes

Cornbread

Servings 8
Author Lisa Fain

Ingredients

  • 1/4 cup bacon drippings or vegetable oil
  • 2 cups finely ground cornmeal, yellow or white
  • ½ cup all-purpose flour
  • 1 tablespoon baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon kosher salt
  • 1 large egg
  • 2 cups buttermilk

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 450°F.
  • Put the drippings or oil in a large (10-inch) cast-iron skillet and place in the oven as it preheats.
  • In a large bowl, stir together the cornmeal, flour, baking powder, and salt. Whisk together the egg and buttermilk then stir into the dry ingredients until well combined.
  • Take the skillet out of oven, pour the hot oil into the batter, then stir until the batter is smooth and well combined. It will be thick.
  • Pour the batter into the skillet and bake for 20-25 minutes, or until the cornbread is lightly brown on top and and an inserted knife comes out clean.

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121 Comments

  1. Anonymous says:

    Being Texan also, I have eaten Beans and Greens, with Cornbread, Pinto Beans or Butter Beans with Cornbread and have always had something close to your recipe. I use a bit more oil, and do set the pan to sizzlin before I put my batter in. One good hint, heat your oil 1/4 cup or so,to about 175 or so, put your oil in the batter, whip it up and let it sit out for 10 min while your pan goes up to sizzlin at 400 or so. When your pan and oil left over in the pan get there, put your batter in to set the crust and cook it the appropriate time depending on the depth of your batter. Your cornbread will be nore even textured. And by the way, the little bit of cornbread that escapes from the table has been know to be crumbled up in a glass of milk (or buttermilk) as my Dad showed me. He would put a little pepper and salt in his cornbread and milk…..I worked at Cracker Barrel and have pretty much all of the items that Lodge offers, they all work well just make sure they are seasoned well….STEAKMAN

  2. I made this recipe from your cookbook last night – and it's the best cornbread I've ever made!

    We use our cast iron skillet for all kinds of things, too – from roasted potatoes on the grill to chocolate cake.

  3. Edie C...Deep in the heart of Texas. says:

    I have about 5 cast iron skillets different sizes and that is all I ever use. Goes from fried potatoes, to pancakes, to steak, to cornbread, just whatever I am cooking on the stovetop or oven. My first I bought when married 50+ years ago and then inherited my mothers from her mother. They will go to my daughter one day. She already gets glassy eyed when helping me in the kitchen.

  4. Anonymous says:

    I love mine, i have 1 lodge 10in pan with a lid that is also a pan.(this is the one i use for cornbread.)i have a cast iron dutch oven with a lid that you can put in a fire and cover with coals. And my favorite, my grandma's 12" skillet that is so seasoned you can fry an egg without anything and it wont stick. I put enough bacon grease in the bottom that the batter floats.

  5. I too love my cast iron! Elise, I was skeptical, but you got this recipe very close to what I grew up with in Texas. A TINY bit of sugar, baking powder, nearly all yellow corn meal (little bit of flour), and definitely bacon drippings. No butter though.

    Mom either made this in a casserole dish when making a large amount, or in her Lodge cast iron cornbread molds. I call them molds, because the pans had little molds you would pour the batter into that were shaped and textured like ears of corn. Years later I bought one of these to, and it's my favorite fun way to make cornbread.