Hi folks, wondering if anyone has tried cooking on a domestic cast iron multi fuel burner. My concern is the surfaces, do you need a steel flat plate or silicon surface between the cast iron cookware and stove.
phil
phil
It's great for anything that needs a long cooking time, like stews and hotpots. I use things like the bottoms of baked bean cans (burned off in the fire) to lift the pot off the top of the stove a little if the top is too hot. If you have a house-proud SO be prepared to worry about the paint finish, not many of the stoves I've seen in showrooms lately have more than a quick spray of matt black. This will last about an hour before turning to rust when it gets wet. If it's cast iron it will then just stay like that, cast iron doesn't rust quickly, but if it's steel the rust might get worse quite quickly if you aren't careful. If a pot boils over there's a risk of cracking a hot stove top or glass panel (if your stove has one). So far I seem to have got away with it.
I always have a couple of kettles and a 2-gallon water carrier on the top of the stove, can't beat free energy.
Its not free energy though Ged is it? Its taking power that would heat the room room to heat water you may not need for a long time.
nothing tastes better than eating a dinner than when e.on got nothing out of you.
Something like this would be better for cooking and throwing some heat into the room
http://www.lehmans.com/store/Stoves...Stoves___The_Oval_Wood_Cookstove___1903?Args= Popular type of stove with the Amish I'm told.