Off the Galley Mike

Off the Galley Mike

Mike — Off The Galley

Six years as a Navy cook on submarines and destroyers, feeding 130 sailors from a galley the size of your bathroom. Now I cook the same big-flavor, no-nonsense food for my family of four — and share every recipe here. No culinary school. No fancy plating. Just real food that works, tested on the toughest critics afloat and the pickiest ones at home.

15 Best Cast Iron Skillet Recipes — One Pan, Maximum Flavor

by Off the Galley Mike | Recipe Collection

If you own one pan, make it cast iron. It sears better than stainless, it’s more durable than nonstick, it goes from stovetop to oven without thinking twice, and with proper care it’ll outlast you. My cast iron skillet has seen more action than any other piece of equipment in my kitchen — and that includes the smoker.

On the boat, we didn’t have cast iron (too heavy, and a 12-inch skillet sliding across the galley during angles and dangles would take someone out). But the second I got my own kitchen, cast iron was the first purchase. Every recipe below was either developed in or perfected in a cast iron skillet.

The Cast Iron Lineup


Crispy Fried Chicken

Crispy Fried Chicken

Cast iron holds oil temperature more consistently than any other pan. The chicken fries evenly, the coating stays crispy, and the pan retains enough heat that adding cold chicken doesn’t crash the temperature.

🕜 Prep 20 min
🍳 Cook 30 min
👥 Serves 4

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Chicken Fried Steak

Chicken Fried Steak

The shallow fry technique works best in cast iron — half an inch of oil, screaming hot, and the heavy pan keeps everything steady. Make the cream gravy in the same skillet with the leftover bits.

🕜 Prep 20 min
🍳 Cook 30 min
👥 Serves 4

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Skillet Cornbread

Skillet Cornbread

Preheat the cast iron with butter until it’s almost smoking, pour the batter in, and listen to that sizzle. The butter creates a golden, crispy bottom crust that defines Southern cornbread.

🕜 Prep 10 min
🍳 Cook 25 min
👥 Serves 4

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Smash Burgers

Smash Burgers

Cast iron gets hotter and stays hotter than any grill grate. The flat surface means maximum contact between beef and screaming hot metal. The result is a crust that’s deeper and more flavorful than any other method.

🕜 Prep 10 min
🍳 Cook 10 min
👥 Serves 4

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Chick-fil-A Sandwich

Chick-fil-A Sandwich

Pan-frying the pickle-brined chicken breast in cast iron produces an even, golden crust on both sides. The heavy pan regulates oil temperature so the coating doesn’t burn before the chicken cooks through.

🕜 Prep 15 min
🍳 Cook 30 min
👥 Serves 4

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In-N-Out Animal Style Burger

In-N-Out Animal Style Burger

The mustard-grilled technique only works on a flat surface — you need the mustard to hit hot metal and caramelize. Cast iron is the only home cooking surface that replicates the restaurant flat-top.

🕜 Prep 10 min
🍳 Cook 10 min
👥 Serves 4

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Pepperoni Pizza

Pepperoni Pizza

A preheated cast iron skillet in a hot oven creates a crispy bottom crust that rivals a pizza stone. The pan’s heat produces those charred spots on the underside that make homemade pizza feel professional.

🕜 Prep 15 min
🍳 Cook 12 min
👥 Serves 4

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Grilled Ribeye Steak

Grilled Ribeye Steak

When the weather won’t cooperate for grilling, a cast iron skillet seared steak is the next best thing. Get it smoking hot, sear two minutes per side, and finish with butter.

🕜 Prep 15 min
🍳 Cook 20 min
👥 Serves 4

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Chicken Fajitas

Chicken Fajitas

The sizzling fajita platter at Mexican restaurants is cast iron. Replicate it at home: preheat the skillet in a 500°F oven, cook everything on the stovetop, bring the whole screaming hot skillet to the table.

🕜 Prep 15 min
🍳 Cook 30 min
👥 Serves 4

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Classic Chili

Classic Chili

Brown the beef in cast iron for the deepest sear, then build the chili right in the same pan. The fond from the seared meat dissolves into the chili and adds layers of flavor.

🕜 Prep 15 min
🍳 Cook 45 min
👥 Serves 4

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Salisbury Steak

Salisbury Steak

Sear the patties, build the gravy in the same pan. One skillet, one dinner, maximum flavor from the pan drippings.

🕜 Prep 15 min
🍳 Cook 30 min
👥 Serves 4

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One-Pot Chili Mac

One-Pot Chili Mac

Everything in one cast iron Dutch oven or deep skillet. Brown, simmer, add pasta, top with cheese, done.

🕜 Prep 15 min
🍳 Cook 45 min
👥 Serves 4

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Country Gravy

Country Gravy

Make the roux in the same pan you cooked the sausage. The rendered fat becomes the base, the browned bits add flavor, and cast iron distributes heat evenly so the gravy doesn’t scorch.

🕜 Prep 10 min
🍳 Cook 5 min
👥 Serves 4

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Cornbread Muffins

Cornbread Muffins

A cast iron muffin pan produces crispier edges than any nonstick alternative. Preheat with butter for the crunchiest bottoms.

🕜 Prep 10 min
🍳 Cook 25 min
👥 Serves 4

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Air Fryer Chicken Thighs

Air Fryer Chicken Thighs

Start skin-side down in cast iron for the initial sear, then transfer to the air fryer to finish. The two-step method produces skin that’s both seared and air-crisped.

🕜 Prep 10 min
🍳 Cook 15 min
👥 Serves 4

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Cast Iron Care

Clean while warm with hot water and a stiff brush. Dry immediately on the stovetop over low heat. Apply a thin layer of oil. That’s it. Don’t use soap (unless it’s truly gunked up, then a drop is fine). Don’t soak. Don’t put it in the dishwasher. A well-maintained cast iron skillet improves with every cook.

Why Cast Iron Wins

I’ve cooked on every surface imaginable — sheet steel in the submarine galley, commercial flat-tops on the destroyer, nonstick at home, stainless steel, carbon steel, and cast iron. Cast iron wins for home cooking, and it’s not close.

Cast iron absorbs heat and holds it. When you place a cold steak on cast iron, the temperature barely drops. On thin stainless steel, it crashes. This temperature stability is why cast iron produces better sears, crispier coatings, and more consistent results than any other home cookware.

Stovetop to oven in one motion. Sear a on the burner, make in the same pan. Bake at 425°F. Fry in an inch of oil. Bake on max heat. One pan does everything.

A Lodge 12-inch cast iron skillet costs $25-35 and lasts a lifetime — literally. Your grandchildren will cook in it. Meanwhile, nonstick pans wear out every 2-3 years, and a decent stainless pan costs $100+.

Cast iron builds seasoning over time. Each cook adds a microscopic layer of polymerized oil that creates a natural, increasingly nonstick surface with accumulated flavor. A well-seasoned cast iron skillet that’s been used for years has a depth of flavor that no new pan can match.

Building Your Cast Iron Collection

Start with one 12-inch skillet. That handles 90% of cooking tasks. Add a 10-inch skillet for smaller jobs and side dishes. Add a cast iron Dutch oven for soups, stews, and . That’s three pieces of cast iron that replace an entire cabinet of specialized cookware. Total investment: about $80. Total lifespan: forever.

The Seasoning Myth

People overcomplicate cast iron seasoning. Here’s the truth: cook in it regularly with some oil or fat, clean it with hot water and a stiff brush while it’s still warm, dry it on the stovetop over low heat, and apply a thin layer of oil. That’s the entire care routine. The more you cook with it, the better it gets. Stop treating cast iron like it’s fragile — it’s literally iron. It survived foundries and frontier kitchens. It can handle your dinner.

The One Pan Challenge

Try cooking every dinner for a week using only cast iron. Monday: . Tuesday: . Wednesday: alongside in a Dutch oven. Thursday: with made in the same pan. Friday: . Every dinner, one pan, maximum flavor. By the end of the week, your cast iron’s seasoning will be noticeably better than when you started — and you’ll understand why people who cook with cast iron never go back to anything else. The pan rewards consistency. The more you use it, the better it performs.

A final thought: the best cast iron skillet is the one you actually use. Don’t baby it, don’t display it, don’t save it for special occasions. Use it every day. That’s how it becomes the best pan you’ve ever owned.

Use cast iron daily. It’s the only cookware that gets better with age.

Off the Galley Mike

Off the Galley Mike

Mike — Off The Galley

Six years as a Navy cook on submarines and destroyers, feeding 130 sailors from a galley the size of your bathroom. Now I cook the same big-flavor, no-nonsense food for my family of four — and share every recipe here. No culinary school. No fancy plating. Just real food that works, tested on the toughest critics afloat and the pickiest ones at home.