Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands for deals, including promoted items.
Heads up, this deal has expired. Want to create a deal alert for this item?
expired Posted by GimmeYoTots • Mar 22, 2021
expired Posted by GimmeYoTots • Mar 22, 2021

3-Quart Lodge Pre-Seasoned Cast-Iron Combo Cooker

+ Free Shipping

$37

$62

40% off
Walmart
37 Comments 57,596 Views
Visit Walmart
Good Deal
Save
Share
Deal Details
Walmart.com has 3-Quart Lodge Pre-Seasoned Cast-Iron Combo Cooker (LCC3) on Sale for $36.97. Shipping is free.

Amazon.com has 3-Quart Lodge Pre-Seasoned Cast-Iron Combo Cooker (LCC3) on Sale for $36.97. Shipping is free.

Note: In stock on June 16, 2021.

Thanks to community member GimmeYoTots for finding this deal.

Features:
  • Foundry seasoned, ready to use upon purchase
  • Use on all cooking surfaces, grills and campfires
  • Oven safe
  • Sauté, sear, fry, bake and stir fry to heart's content
  • Made in the USA
  • Included Components: 10.25" Shallow Skillet

Editor's Notes

Written by BostonGirl
About this product:
  • This has earned 4.5 stars overall (out of possible 5) based on over 12,200 customer reviews.
About this deal:
  • Our research indicates that this deal is $8 lower (17.8% savings) than the next best available price from a reputable merchant with prices starting from $44.99 at the time of this posting.
About this store:

Original Post

Written by GimmeYoTots
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Walmart.com has 3-Quart Lodge Pre-Seasoned Cast-Iron Combo Cooker (LCC3) on Sale for $36.97. Shipping is free.

Amazon.com has 3-Quart Lodge Pre-Seasoned Cast-Iron Combo Cooker (LCC3) on Sale for $36.97. Shipping is free.

Note: In stock on June 16, 2021.

Thanks to community member GimmeYoTots for finding this deal.

Features:
  • Foundry seasoned, ready to use upon purchase
  • Use on all cooking surfaces, grills and campfires
  • Oven safe
  • Sauté, sear, fry, bake and stir fry to heart's content
  • Made in the USA
  • Included Components: 10.25" Shallow Skillet

Editor's Notes

Written by BostonGirl
About this product:
  • This has earned 4.5 stars overall (out of possible 5) based on over 12,200 customer reviews.
About this deal:
  • Our research indicates that this deal is $8 lower (17.8% savings) than the next best available price from a reputable merchant with prices starting from $44.99 at the time of this posting.
About this store:

Original Post

Written by GimmeYoTots

Community Voting

Deal Score
+61
Good Deal
Visit Walmart

Price Intelligence

Model: Lodge Combo Cooker Cast Iron, 10.25", Black

Deal History 

Sort: Most Recent
Post Date Sold By Sale Price Activity
05/21/25Amazon$37 popular
10
01/08/19Amazon$27
1

Current Prices

Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 5/25/2025, 01:15 AM
Sold By Sale Price
Amazon$37.49
Leave a Comment
To participate in the comments, please log in.

Top Comments

People put way too much damn time into their sourdoughs breads. Here's what I do.

I make bread once a week (you can feed your starter as late as once every two weeks, probably).

I take out the "dirty" tupperware dish where I grow my starter. I haven't washed it from when I used it last week, but otherwise, it's not full of starter.

I add whatever amount of water I want and whatever amount of flour I want, as long as it can make a slurry. I stir it up with a fork. You don't have to measure this, but I do measure, because you can use any bread recipe you want, as long as you subtract the flour and water that you used for the sourdough. In my specific case, I use 1/3 c water and 1/2 c bread flour. This takes about five minutes. Then I seal this tupperware and leave it out overnight.

At some point, the next day, the starter will be nice and bubbly. You can just throw in the other ingredient and mix it for five or ten minutes if you're lazy, but I prefer to use a bread machine to knead the other ingredients for a bit. My specific recipe is

Starter I made yesterday (put the dirty tupperware back in the fridge for next week)
5 1/2 c bread flour
2 c water
1 T sugar
1.5 T salt

Then cover and let it rise maybe 12-18 hours. Then punch down. Split into two and roll into baguettes. Score and let rise maybe 40 minutes.

Heat oven to 450°F and as it's heating, add a small pan of hot water.Give the baguettes a spray of water with a spray bottle and throw them in for 12 minutes before reducing heat to 350°F. Cook for another 35 minutes or so. Take out the pan of water in the last 10 minutes. It's better if you put them on a pizza stone.

It's a bit of work, and it's easier to buy the bread, but it's way easier than the nonsense most people seem to be doing with their bread. It's like their frickin' infant.

Oh yeah, I don't use a dutch oven. That's probably better in terms of taste, but the pan of water does a lot (maybe all) of the same thing. I don't like dutch oven because it just makes one little loaf and uses a ton of energy to do that. I actually double this recipe and end up with four medium sized baguettes that I hand out to friends and neighbors. Everybody loves it. I'm thinking of scaling up and making eight loves of bread, but that's going to be a bit more work. My only question is whether the oven can hold all the bread that I want to stuff into it.

Some people may read this whole thing and think that I'm a hypocrite for criticizing people for spending too much effort on their breads and then having a huge post about how I do it but if you study this, you'll realize it's not too hard. It's just 5 minutes on Friday, 10 minutes on Saturday, and then Shaping and baking the bread on Sunday. It's not really that hard, but don't tell my wife, friends, and family. They all think I'm a bread-making genius.
It's funny, but some compared keeping sourdough starter to a Tamagotchi pet for adults. I made my starter from watching one of Josh's videos (about a hundred times), which was great - and very straight forward. What I learned, later though, in order to keep the video to less than an hour, he left a lot of other details out. In his video, he was storing his starter at room temp, and using Bob's Red Mill Rye along with organic unbleached general purp flower. Well, Bob's Rye is like $4 for a 2lb bag, and organic general purpose flower is maybe $6 for a 5lb bad. That starts to really add up if you're feeding 90 grams, daily. What I learned is that many people who don't cook bread every other day refrigerate their starter.... refrigerated starter should easily last a week - 2 weeks. In addition, I now use inexpensive 5lb bags of whole wheat flower combined with Target's unbleached gen purp flower for only about $1.70 for 5lbs. Combine that with a once-a-week refresh, it's a lot easier (and cheaper) to maintain your starter.

As an aside, if you're planning on baking, let's say tomorrow, I'd recommend taking your started OUT of the fridge, doing a feeding today, let it sit overnight at room temp, and then your starter will be primed for the morning Levain/splinter.

You may still not be interested (and I can't blame you), but that info might be useful for some still on the fence.
I've had this set for years and used it for basically everything in the kitchen in addition to baking bread.

The dimensions are slightly awkward compared to a normal skillet + dutch oven (shallow side isn't deep enough for frying; deep side has wider sides and less surface area on the bottom) but certainly very usable, especially if you're not cooking huge meals for a crowd.

This is nice to have if you bake a lot and are tired of burning your fingers lowering dough into a dutch oven. I'd suggest it even more if you don't have any cast iron and are looking for a good, versatile place to start.

36 Comments

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Mar 22, 2021
65 Posts
Joined Jun 2007
Mar 22, 2021
baonilong
Mar 22, 2021
65 Posts
3.2qt
Mar 22, 2021
10,992 Posts
Joined Sep 2007
Mar 22, 2021
papitosabe
Mar 22, 2021
10,992 Posts
This was $20 @ wally a couple of yrs ago..shouldve jumped on it
4
Mar 22, 2021
29,817 Posts
Joined Oct 2010
Mar 22, 2021
Medic311
Mar 22, 2021
29,817 Posts
Quote from papitosabe :
This was $20 @ wally a couple of yrs ago..shouldve jumped on it
yeah and the reg sale price on amazon was $25. i bought it a handful of yrs ago too. it's a very versatile set

Same price at Walmart: https://www.walmart.com/ip/Lodge-...3/20450312
2
Mar 22, 2021
276 Posts
Joined Aug 2007
Mar 22, 2021
yzhai
Mar 22, 2021
276 Posts
Thanks OP. I decided to first spend 30 minutes on youtube to learn how to make sourdough before pulling the trigger. Now I have decided that I will just buy them from local bakeries after finding out how much work it takes to bake. Such a relief!
9
Pro
Mar 22, 2021
540 Posts
Joined Jan 2008
Mar 22, 2021
333
Pro
Mar 22, 2021
540 Posts
A nice setup for getting a good sear on both sides at the same time if you preheat the set..
Mar 22, 2021
2,403 Posts
Joined Aug 2004
Mar 22, 2021
cacadiablo
Mar 22, 2021
2,403 Posts
Quote from yzhai :
Thanks OP. I decided to first spend 30 minutes on youtube to learn how to make sourdough before pulling the trigger. Now I have decided that I will just buy them from local bakeries after finding out how much work it takes to bake. Such a relief!
Thanks for the laugh - I'm right there with you. LMAO
2
Mar 22, 2021
383 Posts
Joined Mar 2008
Mar 22, 2021
transparent99
Mar 22, 2021
383 Posts
Definitely will improve your sourdough. I had so many failed bakes trying to avoid buying more kitchen equipment. While this won't fix everything, it does take out one more variable that can ruin your bread, highly recommended.

Also great for frying bacon, pan frying chicken, and making crispy Brussels sprouts.

The 3.2qt is a perfect size IMO, good for loaves up to about 800-900g, and is versatile and small enough for an apartment.

Price has been regularly $40 since at least early 2020, you may be able to get one for about $30 if you do Amazon warehouse and get a 20% warehouse deal. (What I did) But for brand new, $36 isn't bad.

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Mar 22, 2021
2,645 Posts
Joined Dec 2010
Mar 22, 2021
radars
Mar 22, 2021
2,645 Posts
Too small
4
Pro
Mar 22, 2021
1,769 Posts
Joined Feb 2006
Mar 22, 2021
Shadow Rider
Pro
Mar 22, 2021
1,769 Posts
lol Josh Weismann, that guy thinks he's saving kittens with the simple stuff he makes, just one of the most pretentious attitudes
2
Mar 22, 2021
228 Posts
Joined Dec 2007
Mar 22, 2021
oxnardprof
Mar 22, 2021
228 Posts
It is also good for no knead bread. I got this when Costco had it on clearance, it is a very good unit.
Mar 22, 2021
1,013 Posts
Joined Jan 2014
Mar 22, 2021
iamlamont
Mar 22, 2021
1,013 Posts
Quote from radars :
Too small
I have this. It's not huge but heavy as is. It would be really heavy to handle while hot if it were bigger.
Mar 22, 2021
19 Posts
Joined Jul 2009
Mar 22, 2021
einstein1486
Mar 22, 2021
19 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank einstein1486

I've had this set for years and used it for basically everything in the kitchen in addition to baking bread.

The dimensions are slightly awkward compared to a normal skillet + dutch oven (shallow side isn't deep enough for frying; deep side has wider sides and less surface area on the bottom) but certainly very usable, especially if you're not cooking huge meals for a crowd.

This is nice to have if you bake a lot and are tired of burning your fingers lowering dough into a dutch oven. I'd suggest it even more if you don't have any cast iron and are looking for a good, versatile place to start.
1
Mar 22, 2021
4,976 Posts
Joined Dec 2015
Mar 22, 2021
DeProof
Mar 22, 2021
4,976 Posts
I have had this for years. It was actually my first cast iron because it has so many uses, basically 3 in one, as you get a short skillet, tall skillet, and small dutch oven all in one...

Here are some things I have observed on this particular set:

Short skillet has a wider/bigger cooking surface than the taller one. To help you picture it, you can fit ~4 quarter pound patties in the short, but only ~3 in the taller one.

Each skillet can fit up to two decent sized ribeyes in a pinch, but for a really good sear and to prevent steaming from overcrowding, I usually just do one per pan.

I highly recommend this if you are new to cast iron cooking, as this has many options. Great starter set.

Many get all worked up over cast iron care and seasoning, but I have found that if you wash and DRY them while they are still warm (not hot) from cooking, you are good to go until the next time, as long as they get semi occasional use (like once a week or more). This method means I rarely need to reseason, if ever.
Last edited by DeProof March 22, 2021 at 10:03 AM.
Mar 22, 2021
2,537 Posts
Joined Sep 2009
Mar 22, 2021
lolly67
Mar 22, 2021
2,537 Posts
Quote from yzhai :
Thanks OP. I decided to first spend 30 minutes on youtube to learn how to make sourdough before pulling the trigger. Now I have decided that I will just buy them from local bakeries after finding out how much work it takes to bake. Such a relief!
Exactly! Love me some good sourdough. However, after looking at what it takes to maintain sourdough starter, forget it, like having a pet!!

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Mar 22, 2021
231 Posts
Joined Jul 2013
Mar 22, 2021
seasky1
Mar 22, 2021
231 Posts
Just bought this set last week and took it to camping. It came pre-seasoned. Grilled NY steaks on the short skillet and fajitas on the tall skillet. Both came out to be really good. Clean up was easy. Just heat up skillets, spray some oil and wipe away with paper towels. A bit of heavy but loved the versatile of this set. Also, Made in the USA is a huge added bonus.

Popular Deals

View All

Trending Deals

View All