By DAVID RAINER, 黑料天堂
Now that the weather has finally cooled, the outdoors takes on a whole new appeal for many in 黑料天堂. Hunting and camping are likely on the agenda, and being able to feed a delicious meal to a group of hunters or campers can often hinge on your upbringing.
If you鈥檙e like J. Wayne Fears, who calls Tater Knob in Jackson County, 黑料天堂, home, it means breaking out the cast iron, just as his ancestors did while trapping and living off the land in north 黑料天堂.
What Fears finds interesting is that a new generation is discovering the benefits of cast iron.
鈥淢illennials are discovering the advantages of cooking on cast iron,鈥 said Fears, a certified wildlife biologist and prolific outdoor writer. 鈥淢y grandma knew that. Lodge (Manufacturing in Tennessee) had to build another foundry because of the popularity of both the cast iron skillet and the cast iron dutch oven.鈥
When it comes to cast iron dutch ovens, two different models are available for distinctly different purposes. The flat-bottom dutch oven is made to be used on conventional stovetops, while the dutch oven with legs is designed for outdoor cooking at campfires with coals from the fire or charcoal briquets.
鈥淔or camping, you need a dutch oven with three legs and a recessed lid,鈥 said Fears, who held a seminar recently at the Southeastern Outdoor Press Association annual conference. 鈥淭he legs keep the bottom of the dutch oven off the coals, so you don鈥檛 burn everything. It has a recessed lid so you can put coals on top to use it for baking.鈥
Fears honed his dutch oven expertise during numerous years of overseeing hunting operations all over North America, including the western U.S., Canada and Alaska.
鈥淓specially in our remote camps, we depended on dutch ovens to do a heck of a lot of our cooking,鈥 he said.
If you鈥檙e planning a hunting or camping trip, or just cooking on an outdoor campfire, Fears recommends certain cast iron cookware to achieve a delicious meal. If you expect to draw a crowd when the smell of the cooking spreads, Fears recommends a No. 12 dutch oven. The No. 12 is the diameter in inches of the pot. Fears said you might need more than one, possibly in different sizes.
鈥淚t depends on what you鈥檙e cooking, whether it鈥檚 a stew and a pan of biscuits. You鈥檙e going to need one for each,鈥 he said. 鈥淔or the stew, I鈥檇 recommend a No. 12, and a No. 10 dutch oven so you can cook some cathead biscuits.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e going to make a cobbler, you鈥檙e going to need another No. 10. You can cook all three, and all of your meal will come out at the same time.鈥
Fears also recommends that you don鈥檛 look for the cheapest dutch oven you can find.
鈥淚 want to stress to get a quality dutch oven,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here are so many dutch ovens made overseas that are pitted or they鈥檒l shatter if you drop them. If you get good quality cast iron, it can be a lifetime investment. In fact, a lot of my dutch ovens are in their third generation.鈥
Fears doesn鈥檛 discount the value of cooking with coals from the campfire if you鈥檙e in remote locations. However, if you can take a sack of charcoal briquets with you, your meals will likely be more palatable.
鈥淐harcoal is just better as far as consistency and heat control,鈥 he said. 鈥淢ost people who cook with dutch ovens can go either way. With a little practice and good hardwood coals from the campfire, you can cook just as good as you can with charcoal. But most people who are just camping will use charcoal briquets because it鈥檚 a lot easier to fool with and the temperature is more consistent on top and on bottom.鈥
Contrary to what you may have seen in western or pioneer movies and TV shows, veteran dutch oven cooks have more heat on top than on bottom.
鈥淵ou want to use twice as many coals on the lid as on the bottom,鈥 Fears said. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e cooking down more than you鈥檙e cooking up. Most people, when they first start, they want to stick a dutch oven right in the middle of the campfire and put a few coals on top. Generally, they鈥檒l burn everything on bottom, and it鈥檒l still be rare on top. That鈥檚 why you have the lipped cover so the briquets won鈥檛 roll off of the top.鈥