Cooking over a campfire is really a problem of heat from one direction. The camp Dutch oven solves it: three cast legs hold the pot above a bed of coals, and the flanged lid is designed to have coals piled on top of it, so heat comes from above and below at once. That is how you bake a cobbler or a loaf of bread in the woods.
Six quarts is the practical middle of Lodge’s camp line. The 4-quart runs out of room once you are feeding more than a couple of people, and the 8-quart is a genuinely heavy thing to lift full of stew. At 12 inches across, this one feeds a family and still comes off the coals by its bail handle without an argument.
It arrives seasoned with vegetable oil, so it is ready to cook on out of the box, and the lid inverts to work as a griddle. Iron and oil, nothing else. Lodge has been casting iron in South Pittsburg, Tennessee since 1896.









