Hi, glennm - a few ideas: if you live in or near a town big enough to have a restaurant supply store, you might just wander in and look around. The restaurant supply place here carries quite a few items that are the right size for home cooking and the owners are quite happy to take a "civilian's" money!
Also, if you don't already own a cast iron skillet and a cast iron dutch oven or 3-qt saucepan, get thee to an auction house! Or a hardware store. Or - and this may surprise you - a plain old secondhand store (Goodwill, Salvation Army, VFW, et al). Or a yard/garage sale. Or an estate tag sale. Any of these el cheapo places are excellent sources for really good stuff at really good prices. It requires a certain amount of wading, but there are some real deals out there. I've seen not only beautiful, smooth grained cast iron skillets and pots; very expensive, top of the line name-brand pots, pans, china, pottery, silver; gadgets both antique and new . . . the works, actually, and if a person is patient and persistent, (aka stubborn and relentless) it's possible to equip an entire kitchen, beautifully, for about 20 cents on the dollar.
BTW, when you buy cast iron anything, look at the interior. If it looks pebbly don't buy it - it will never perform to standard. What you want is the old, fine-grained cast iron - the bottom of the pan looks like it's been spun in circles and even when new it is very smooth. When properly seasoned, I've found these to be within a couple percentage points of being as nonstick as "boughten" nonstick pans. Oh - if you're lucky enough to bump into anything with "Griswold" stamped on the bottom, grab it! You have just acquired an heirloom.
Let us know what you find, wherever you end up finding it. It will be fun to hear about your search and its results!
