Cast iron's quieter, faster, lighter cousin.
Walk into any working restaurant kitchen in France. The pan on every burner is carbon steel — not cast iron, not stainless. Here's what they know.
Half the weight
A 12" cast iron skillet weighs 7 lb. The same size in our French-rolled carbon steel: 3.5 lb. You can flip it one-handed, lift it off the burner without an oven mitt, and store it without a special hook. Same heat retention. Same durability. Half the workout.
Heats 40% faster
Carbon steel is thinner-gauge than cast iron, which means it responds to your stove the way a copper pan does — fast up, fast down. Searing temperature in under 90 seconds. Drop the heat and the pan follows you. Cast iron doesn't.
Slicker patina, sooner
Carbon steel develops the same natural nonstick polymerized patina as cast iron — but because the surface is smoother and more reactive, it gets there in weeks rather than months. Eggs slide. Fish flips. The patina deepens for decades.
Built to outlive you
Forged from a single 2.3mm sheet of carbon-rich steel in a French workshop using a process unchanged since 1925. The handle is triple-riveted, not welded. There's nothing to chip, peel, warp, or wear out. Pass it down.
Ships ready to cook
Most carbon steel needs 4-5 rounds of seasoning before first use — a hassle that puts most home cooks off the category entirely. We factory-season every pan with flaxseed oil at 480°F before it ships, so yours is jet-black, slick, and ready for an egg the day it arrives.
Restaurant-grade, home-priced
The same French-made carbon steel pan retails for $180-$250 under chef-targeted brands. We sell direct, so you pay $89 for a 10" and $119 for a 12". Same forge. Same steel. No restaurant-supply markup.


