Hmm, when is a pan not just a pan?
How about my 17" Maca heavy camp dutch oven. It has an elk designed by an artist in Utah cast into the lid, and it weighs over 60 lbs empty. It cost me well over $200 and it will outlast my children if they take care of it like I do. Or there's that Griswold muffin tin I inherited from my Great-grandmother. I reckon I could sell it for around $50 easy enough, but it won't be going anywhere. Or there's the first little dutch oven I bought over 30 years ago, which I have used thousands of times to cook tons of food in, 2 to 4 quarts at a time. I ground my initials and my registered brand into the bottom of it long ago, and I can still read it just fine. I suppose I could buy one just like it new today for maybe $15, but how do you replace a pot like that? Each layer of shiny carbon is another treasured memory. There's even a couple of layers in there I am sure that came after one of the last meals Grandad and I shared together.
Yep, it's just a pan.
Of all the gear that was taken with them, the lowly dutch oven was among those that Lewis and Clark both regarded as amongst the most valued.
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The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly is to fill the world with fools.
-- Herbert Spencer, English Philosopher (1820-1903)