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Forging a Viking Baking Griddle — Flatbread Iron
Forge

Created by

Forge

22. March 2026

Forging a Viking Baking Griddle — Flatbread Iron

The iron baking griddle was how Vikings cooked their daily bread. A flat iron plate, forged from bloomery iron and heated over the central hearth, provided an even cooking surface for unleavened barley flatbread. Archaeological examples range from simple flat plates to more elaborate pieces with forged handle loops. The griddle bridges ironworking and food production — it is both a product of the forge and an essential kitchen tool.

Advanced
3-5 hours

Instructions

1

Prepare the Iron Stock

Heat bloom iron in the forge to orange-hot. Begin hammering it into a flat plate, working from the center outward in overlapping blows. Target dimensions: approximately 30cm diameter, 3-5mm thick. This requires a substantial amount of bloom iron — you may need to forge-weld multiple pieces together.

Work in stages, reheating frequently. Bloom iron cools rapidly when spread thin. Flip the plate regularly to maintain even thickness on both sides.

2

Hammer to Even Thickness

Continue forging the plate on the flat face of the anvil, focusing on achieving uniform thickness across the entire surface. Thin spots will burn through in use; thick spots create uneven cooking. Use the flat face of the hammer with controlled, even blows.

Check thickness frequently by feel and by holding the plate up to light — thin spots will glow brighter when heated. Target 3-5mm throughout.

3

Smooth the Cooking Surface

At a lower forging heat (dark red to black), planish the top surface with light, overlapping hammer blows using a flat-faced hammer. This smooths the surface and closes any small cracks. The cooking surface should be as smooth and flat as possible — lumps and dents cause bread to cook unevenly.

4

Forge the Handle Loop

From a separate iron bar (approximately 15cm long, 1cm diameter), forge a loop or bracket handle. Heat the bar and bend it into a ring or hook shape using the horn of the anvil. The handle must allow safe lifting of the hot griddle from the hearth. A simple U-shaped loop riveted to the edge is the most practical design.

5

Attach the Handle

Attach the handle loop to the edge of the griddle plate by riveting. Punch two holes through both the handle base and the griddle edge, aligned. Insert iron rivets and peen them over on the back side. The rivets must be flush on the cooking surface.

Alternatively, the handle can be forge-welded directly to the plate — heat both pieces to welding temperature (white-hot, with sparks), press together, and hammer firmly to fuse the iron.

6

Season the Griddle

Heat the completed griddle over a fire until it is thoroughly hot. Rub the cooking surface generously with animal fat (tallow or lard) using a cloth pad. Allow the fat to smoke off and polymerize into a thin, dark, non-stick coating.

Repeat the oiling and heating process 2-3 times. Each layer builds up the seasoning, creating a better non-stick surface and protecting the iron from rust. The griddle is now ready for baking flatbread.

Materials

  • Bloom Iron (for plate) - ~1kg piecePlaceholder
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  • Bloom Iron (for handle) - ~100g piecePlaceholder
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  • Animal Fat (Tallow) - Small amount piecePlaceholder
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  • Iron Rivets - 2 piecesPlaceholder
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Tools Required

  • Hearth (Forge Fire)Placeholder
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  • AnvilPlaceholder
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  • Forge Hammer (Cross-Peen)Placeholder
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  • Forge TongsPlaceholder
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  • BellowsPlaceholder
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CC0 Public Domain

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