Monday, December 21, 2015

December 21, first day of Winter. Actually, the following day is the first full day of winter. Forecast calls for rain. And rain. Hope to cook solar sometime before Christmas

Monday, November 23, 2015

Solar cooked turkey. Was gonna do a video but that was about as exciting as watching paint dry.

But here are the results:

13 pound bird
Start temp was 35º
End temp was 165º ("done" for  poultry)
Start time 8:20
End time 12:50
4.5 hours or 21 minutes per pound.


After the turkey was out of the cooker I steamed 4 quarts of beets, kale, chard and beet greens.
2 big meals, one cooker, same day.

Sunday, September 27, 2015

Breakfast Lunch and Dinner
Camped on the Oregon coast.
First meal - quinoa
Second meal - chicken/apple sausages and portobello mushrooms
Third use - drying firewood
Third meal - started at 5 p.m. Spinach omelet with cheese

Diving the Big Sur coast:
Stopped at a viewpoint for another spinach omelet (yes, my depth of recipes is shallow)

Stopping at Moro Strand State Beach - quinoa again (see above) but spiced with olive oil, garlic and onion





Monday, August 31, 2015

Parabolic cooker works like a stovetop on high. It is known as an attended cooker because it requires watching, stirring and refocusing.
Box cooker is like an oven on medium heat. It is known as an unattended cooker because it cooks more slowly and requires less frequent refocusing.
A panel cooker is like a crockpot. It is also an unattended cooker. It is the slowest of the cookers but still produces good results.
The ASSC is a box cooker that has had the oven door removed and does not have insulated sides. Instead, it achieves the lightweight convenience of a panel cooker and the power of the box cooker,

Saturday, June 27, 2015

I need an army. Or at least a platoon to feed. We have had great solar cooking days and if I used my cooker to capacity I could feed everyone on the block. Users have asked for a larger ASSC. What about a smaller?

Saturday, June 13, 2015

I have added some recipes and cooking tips and safety tips to the website. Hope you enjoy them
After a very frustrating 10 days of being out of stock, our cookers are now back on the shelf.

Thursday, April 16, 2015

Compilation of solar cooked meals

https://youtu.be/dsYf__RB4XQ

Friday, April 10, 2015

April 9, 2015.  Baked portobello mushrooms. Recipe is on AllSeasonSolarCooker.com.

April 8, 2015. Two pots of steamed veggies, pinto beans from scratch and brownies from a mix.

I love solar cooking

Friday, March 27, 2015

Five (5) yes five, cinco, 20 liters, whatever, pasteurized in less than 4 hours

Wow! I put a 5 gallon solar shower in one of my cookers. Five Gallons. That is 40 pounds of thermal mass. Reached 165 in about 3.5 hours. 178 was the high for the day - but I was not really concentrating so could have done better.
Got a solar shower - put it in the ASSC!!!!

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

The advantage of starting early.

Yes it is still February. I extend my solar cooking day by starting early. In the first 30 minutes my pot of beans has increased in temp by 70º F. Critical for long cooking foods. Winter beans? Yes!

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Cooking weather has been fantastic. Here in Southern California we get a winter wind called a Santa Ana. Warm winds blow in off the desert and out to sea. The air is incredibly clear with great (for the area) stargazing. Solar cooking from early morning to late afternoon.

Tuesday, January 13, 2015

Mid winter chicken
Here is my recipe
Wash Chicken
Put chicken in pot and put pot in All Season Solar Cooker
Remove chicken when done - 6 pounds - 2.5  hours.
Tastes like chicken