Lodge griddle LPG13 is a gamechanger


 

Scott Smith

TVWBB Pro
My personal story about the biggest Lodge griddle:

I found mine in a second hand store for $10, but after living with it, I would happily have paid ten times that much. I should have bought mine twenty years ago.

It lives on my gas stove. I use it virtually every day. My son says "Dad, you use that thing a lot". It's biggest superpower lies in it's ability to harness the power and space of two burners at the same time. For a big family breakfast of hash browns and bacon and eggs, I wish I had another one for the other side of the stove. The griddle reminds me of a mini version of a restaurant's flat top.

Stuff that this thing excels at:

8 pancakes/french toast at a time
1 lb. of sausage at a time
Bacon (not the full pound, unfortunately)
Burgers
Hash browns
Eggs to order
Giant rolled up omelettes
Cooking Italian sausages in the casings
I don't think you could scratch it if you tried

Stuff it doesn't do so well at:

Food you have to stir around (like browning chopped meat). There isn't much edge to keep everything contained
Impossible to cool it quickly if starting a different dish at a lower temperature
Awkward and heavy to take out of the oven

Care:

Grease it when it looks dry (every couple batches of pancakes, for example). I've used butter, vegetable oil, and bacon grease
Hand wash as needed and leave on the stove. Often a simple paper towel is all that is needed. Don't leave it wet to rust
I use a metal spatula

Cool tricks:

The back works for roasting (obviously)
The handles are designed to stay slightly cooler by moving them away from the heat and into the air
The drip trough features "ramps" on the ends so you can slide stuff out if it falls in
Opposite the drip trough is a sharp corner for scraping off your spatula
I rest the dirty edge of my spatula right on the grille
Stays hot after heat is removed
Works just as well on a Weber (or other) grill
Also fits absolutely perfectly on a two-burner Coleman camp stove
 
That is the one I own now. Not quite feeling the "love" you feel for it. Which is why I asked you. I may look into the one I linked
 
I own this griddle.....lent it out ta a family member for a couple years lol....just got it back this year.....I have never used it....I have no love for it.
Mine is lodge, I really don't know the model but it looks just like the one you are describing.
I was thinking of putting it up for sale as I think it retails for somewhere between 75 to 100 new.
I had to clean it up a bit and give it another season.....but it loks new still.
 
Have a similar le creuset thingy for two burners https://www.lecreuset.ch/de_CH/p/re...ar_CI0202_color=cerise&dwvar_CI0202_size=32cm.

And a big uncoatedcast iron pan.

So far the cast iron pan has seen more use because it has higher walls. Like you, I use the plate mainly for french toast. And I need to do more french toast, I barely use that thing.
That looks like a really nice griddle Jonas. Le Creuset makes some REALLY nice things. We own one piece of it. A blue enameled medium sized Dutch Oven. Wife and I bought it right after we moved from Albany Park (in Chicago) to the Jefferson Park neighborhood. So, pretty close to 38 years ago. It is my "go to" for pot roasts, braised short ribs and so on. Unless I have to do something quicker than those tasks fall onto my stove top pressure cookers (I have 3 LOL). Fagor brand. I turn out some good eats in those as well (though I have messed up a few meals as part of my learning curve LOL).
 
Thingy i use fairly often is this here: https://www.riess.at/produkt/doppelbraeter-compact-37-26/

Its a big enamel pan for two burners, and can act as a dutch oven. You could fry in it. But really that's something of a last resort. Its not hefty enough to properly fry something with high heat. Nevertheless ita good enough that I do big batches of tomato sauces in it.

Because I do more tomato sauces than french toast, I end up using it more.
 

 

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