#102957 - 08/19/07 07:34 AM
Cooking during a long term emergency
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Member
Registered: 11/16/06
Posts: 104
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I'm curious as to how folks are planning to handle cooking during a long term emergency at home (no power or gas) or if they need to bug out. What type of stoves/ovens they have or can make and what fuel they plan on using.
I have a couple of Coleman stoves with 4+- (Stabil-ized) gallons of fuel as well as a couple cast-iron dutch ovens and skillets for campfire cooking and a soda-can alcohol burner and a wood-gas stove made from a bean can. I plan on making a larger wood-gas stove (paint can sized) when work slows down a bit have been eye-balling some multi-burner type wood-gas stoves with ovens I saw on the web.
Edited by Spiritwalker (08/19/07 07:35 AM)
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#102958 - 08/19/07 08:23 AM
Re: Cooking during a long term emergency
[Re: Spiritwalker]
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Veteran
Registered: 12/18/02
Posts: 1320
Loc: France
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I now have a Campingaz Micro Bleuet stove, along with a few cans of gas. I also bought a lantern, working out of the same cans.
Previously, I only had my alcool stoves (Trangia + penny stoves) and a few "solid fuel stoves" (esbit stoves, emergency candles ..)
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Alain
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#102969 - 08/19/07 01:41 PM
Re: Cooking during a long term emergency
[Re: Spiritwalker]
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Member
Registered: 07/22/07
Posts: 148
Loc: TN
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The apartment complex we live in recently banned gas grills on all but the first floors so we had to give up ours. A few months ago I bought the White Box Stove over the internet and have tested it a few times boiling water, it's like a soda can stove only sturdier. It runs on denatured alcohol and is small enough to be easily tossed in a backpack and should be adequate for two. I grew up around campfires and wood stoves so if wood was available I would improvise a setup with that as well.
(BTW while trolling the net I did come across aluminum dutch ovens)
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#102983 - 08/19/07 02:48 PM
Re: Cooking during a long term emergency
[Re: Spiritwalker]
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Geezer
Registered: 09/30/01
Posts: 5695
Loc: Former AFB in CA, recouping fr...
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Since we live in a motorhome, we always have a propane stove/oven with us, and a microwave/convection oven that we can run if necessary on the built in generator. Large propane tank built in, which we always keep full (when parked we run off of a seperate five gal tank). Off of either tank we can also run our propane BBQ. Dutch Oven in a storage compartment. (side note, we always keep the 100 gal fresh water tank full too) In the car we keep a single burner propane stove and several throw away bottle of fuel. In my day pack (which is always in the car) is a soda can alcohol stove and a bottle of yellow Heet for fuel, along with a Wallyworld grease pot. Couple more bottles of Heet stored in the RV. And speaking of alcohol stoves, as soon as I can bring myself to drink a small can of RedBull, I am going to try using it and one of the Bud aluminum beer bottles to make a stove similar to the White Box Stove mentioned above. Should be much tougher than a soda can stove. In the car is also a USGI canteen/cup/cup support stove. Axe and Sven saw are in the car, so we can build a fire if necessary. All of that should hold us for a while...
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OBG
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#102990 - 08/19/07 03:39 PM
Re: Cooking during a long term emergency
[Re: frostbite]
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Geezer
Registered: 01/21/04
Posts: 5163
Loc: W. WA
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I was looking at a photo of the White Box Stove, and wondered what those three things are around the top, just below the rim, that look like screws. What purpose do they serve?
Sue
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#102996 - 08/19/07 05:08 PM
Re: Cooking during a long term emergency
[Re: Spiritwalker]
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Ordinary Average Guy
Enthusiast
Registered: 04/26/06
Posts: 304
Loc: North Central Texas, USA
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It depends upon the nature of the emergency and if I'm holing up or bugging out.
1) Bug Out/Short term emergency: Esbit stove with extra tabs. The goal is to boil water and add to mountain house backpacking meals.
2) Holing Up/Long term emergency: My Weber charcoal grill with my extra bags of charcoal. Charcoal is a lot cheaper than propane or gas, but it becomes a lot of work for just cooking small meals.
I'd like to get a Coleman Road trip grill with both the 1 lb. and larger propane tanks. It could be used for bugging out with a vehicle or staying at home.
_________________________
Also known as BrianEagle. I just remembered my old password!
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#102997 - 08/19/07 05:08 PM
Re: Cooking during a long term emergency
[Re: Susan]
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Geezer
Registered: 09/30/01
Posts: 5695
Loc: Former AFB in CA, recouping fr...
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They are pop rivets, apparently used to hold the two parts of the stove together, instead of the JB Weld that is usually used (and always cracks, in my experience)...
_________________________
OBG
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#103005 - 08/19/07 05:58 PM
Re: Cooking during a long term emergency
[Re: Spiritwalker]
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Geezer
Registered: 06/02/06
Posts: 5359
Loc: SOCAL
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I've got something of a Svea 123 /Optimus collection and enough white gas to keep me cooking for a while. In my BOB/Get-Home-Bag is an MSR Pocket Rocket and one cannister of Iso Pro (80/20 blend of isobutane and propane). Long term, I'd be someplace with a large supply of cordwood.
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Better is the Enemy of Good Enough. Okay, what’s your point??
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