Ah, right that's a frying pan or gypsy pan. I've got two of those. One's kept just for meat, but the other does stir fries and the like at camp
Pete said something very interesting the last time this came up in discussion; that the original bakestones were made of slate.
I oven bake on a ceramic bakestone (pizza's and the like) and had wondered just how sound it'd be used like a girdle.
A griddle is one of those ridged things folks cook meat on, to us.
I have a modern electric hob, it's too wee for the traditional girdles I have, but I bought a modern flat bakestone with a cut out for the handle and am very pleased with it
The old cast iron girdles are brilliant
To get back to the slate though; that's a whole area of bushcraft that's mostly overlooked entirely. Stones and their uses.
I have stone spindle whorls, pump drill flywheels, flint strikers, granite mortars and pestles, and a couple of those beautiful hone stones that QDanT made
, but there's little discussion about stone and it's properites and uses, on the forum.
I'll see if I can get photos up (it's pouring, again
) of a thermal shock shattered pot boiler stone that came from an iron age site that was being totalled by building works. Cooked someone's dinner near 2,000 years ago
and it displays the characteristic banded colours within.
So, who's first to make their own bakestone ?
cheers,
M