A hay box, straw box, fireless cooker,
insulation cooker, wonder oven or retained-heat cooker is a cooker that
utilizes the heat of the food being cooked to complete the cooking process.
Food items to be cooked are heated to boiling point, and then insulated. Over a
period of time, the food items cook by the heat captured in the insulated
container. Generally, it takes three times the normal cooking time to cook food
in a hay box.
History
Hay boxes are so called because hay or
straw were the commonly used insulators. Pots of food would be brought to a
boil and then placed in a box filled with hay or straw. Additional hay or straw
would be added around and on top of the pot. The inventor Karl von Drais
developed a novel form of haybox in the first part of the 19th century.
During World War II, hay boxes were used
as a way of conserving rationed cooking fuel.
Campers and hikers have used variations
of hay boxes for years, heating their food in the morning and then storing the
heated pot in a sleeping bag or backpack. In this way a hot meal is available
for eating at the end of the day.
Commercial designs based on this
principle differed only in details of construction, and the kind of insulating
material used. Some types were provided with soapstone or iron plates which
were heated during the preliminary cooking on the stove and then placed in the
fireless cooker either over or under the cooking pot. In these types, a
non-flammable insulating material was used. A successful home-made strategy was
to take a box so large that the cooking pot when placed in it could be
surrounded by a thick layer of non-conducting material, such as hay, excelsior
or crumpled paper. A cushion was placed over the pot and a tight-fitting lid was
placed over all.
Advantages and disadvantages
Haybox cooking can save vast amounts of
fuel, but there is a risk of bacterial growth if the food items are allowed to
remain in the danger zone (41−140 °F or 5−60 °C) for one or more hours. In
order to reduce the risk, food cooked in hay boxes can be reheated to boiling
before eating, or a food thermometer can be used.
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