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Weeds are just plants with enough surplus will to live to withstand normal levels of gardening!--Alexandra Petri
"The only thing...more expensive than education is ignorance."~Ben Franklin
"We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light." ~ Plato
Deane Adams wrote:I have often said that if I ever remodel or build another place, I will have an outdoor/summer kitchen, mostly for the canning. I might as well plan for a full size stove with an oven. I am making myself a little hungry thinking about warm buttered rolls!!!
Peace
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Amy Gardener wrote:
What else are avid permie bakers doing when the heat is extreme and you gotta have bread?
Invasive plants are Earth's way of insisting we notice her medicines. Stephen Herrod Buhner
Everyone learns what works by learning what doesn't work. Stephen Herrod Buhner
My MIL had a special pan for baking cornbread on the stove-top
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"The only thing...more expensive than education is ignorance."~Ben Franklin
"We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light." ~ Plato
South of the Salt Fork
(W)e also make quite a bit of lavash type flatbread on an old plow disc set upside down over a little simple stove made out of a piece of 10" pipe
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Amy Gardener wrote:What a great list of options so far!
Don’t bake when it’s too hot Buy an electric appliance that can be used indoors or outdoors: toaster oven, bread maker, steamer, waffle maker Use the stovetop: griddle breads, steamed breads, flat breads Make bread outdoors with fire: gas or wood fired grill, fire pit, tandoor, (I’ll add horno and earth oven because these are part of my baking adventures) Build an outdoor dream kitchen sometime in the future
What else are avid permie bakers doing when the heat is extreme and you gotta have bread?
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Amy Gardener wrote:Anne writes,
My MIL had a special pan for baking cornbread on the stove-top
Does anyone use a "special pan" to bake on the stove-top that has a hole in the middle that allows the heat to rise through the center of the pan until it hits the lid then disperse along the top of the bread until the burner heat exits through little holes on the sides of the lid? This stovetop baking pan goes by brand names Wonder Pot from 1950's Israel (not to be confused with the haybox-type thermal bag or insulator) or the Omnia stovetop oven from Sweden, or the Tredoni stovetop oven from Italy. Depending on the brand, the stovetop oven looks like an angel food or bundt cake pan with a lid and a small donut shaped flame diffuser/focuser that fits directly over the burner. The small chimney pipe in the middle is the defining feature, much like a Kelly Kettle or a copper water heater that uses the central pipe to allow heat to rise and heat from the bottom, exterior, and interior. The system uses very little fuel and focuses the heat directly on and through the baked items instead of heating an oven box.
With that little background, I will say that this special stovetop baking pan has been my baking obsession for the better part of a year. At medium heat on a small gas stovetop (indoor or outdoor), this pan can make a perfect donut shaped loaf in the same time as an oven loaf. Using home rolled phyllo sheets, I've made flakey fruit filled pastry rings and spanakopita. With practice, loaves can be brown and crunchy on the outside, tender crumb on the inside.
I'm happy to share my tricks with this special pan if anyone is interested. If anyone else uses the pot for stovetop baking, your stories and experiences are invaluable: much is on the WWW but not many people are writing who are really skillful at making the pan work.
randyeggert.com
Working toward a permaculture-strong retirement near sunny Sperling.
Argue for your limitations and they are yours forever.
I often bake sourdough bread & pizzas in a cast iron skillet. Medium heat with a good top cover does the trick.
sow…reap…compost…repeat
Argue for your limitations and they are yours forever.
WARNING permaculture is highly addictive, it may cause life altering changes such as valuing people, community and resources, and promote respect, learning, support and kindness .
Randy Eggert wrote:
Amy Gardener wrote:Anne writes,
My MIL had a special pan for baking cornbread on the stove-top
Does anyone use a "special pan" to bake on the stove-top that has a hole in the middle that allows the heat to rise through the center of the pan until it hits the lid then disperse along the top of the bread until the burner heat exits through little holes on the sides of the lid? This stovetop baking pan goes by brand names Wonder Pot from 1950's Israel (not to be confused with the haybox-type thermal bag or insulator) or the Omnia stovetop oven from Sweden, or the Tredoni stovetop oven from Italy. Depending on the brand, the stovetop oven looks like an angel food or bundt cake pan with a lid and a small donut shaped flame diffuser/focuser that fits directly over the burner. The small chimney pipe in the middle is the defining feature, much like a Kelly Kettle or a copper water heater that uses the central pipe to allow heat to rise and heat from the bottom, exterior, and interior. The system uses very little fuel and focuses the heat directly on and through the baked items instead of heating an oven box.
With that little background, I will say that this special stovetop baking pan has been my baking obsession for the better part of a year. At medium heat on a small gas stovetop (indoor or outdoor), this pan can make a perfect donut shaped loaf in the same time as an oven loaf. Using home rolled phyllo sheets, I've made flakey fruit filled pastry rings and spanakopita. With practice, loaves can be brown and crunchy on the outside, tender crumb on the inside.
I'm happy to share my tricks with this special pan if anyone is interested. If anyone else uses the pot for stovetop baking, your stories and experiences are invaluable: much is on the WWW but not many people are writing who are really skillful at making the pan work.
I found this online: https://www.aiphomeimprovements.com/tn/tredoni-stovetop-baking-hollow-ring-pot-11-aluminum-oven-pot-28-cm-11-inch-7352490.html
Best luck: satisfaction
Greatest curse, greed
Hi Thekla,
Yes, the aluminum gave me pause. On the positive side, aluminum distributes the heat well and has no thermal mass so preheating is a non-issue.
A ceramic coating over the aluminum is offered by manufacturers of the Tredoni and Omnia ovens (I haven't tried the ceramic option). Omnia offers a reusable silicone pan liner which was my choice. These work beautifully.
I hope one of these options will sway you to give the oven a try. I'm really amazed by the effectiveness of the simple design.
Happy baking!
Amy
Argue for your limitations and they are yours forever.
Argue for your limitations and they are yours forever.
Working toward a permaculture-strong retirement near sunny Sperling.
I'd rather use brick than cob as it would need less protection from the elements.
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