Friday, November 14, 2008

How to Properly Execute Solar Cooking

Several conservation techniques produced solar materials. In the food realm mothers can now save electricity and not worry about burning their foods with the advent of the solar cooking technique. This cost efficient and accident free way of cooking has been the interest of food lovers in recent years, but do you know how to properly be involved in solar cooking?

Well, an important tip to consider in solar cooking is that some meat burns faster than greens. Vegetables, bread and red meats take three to four hours before being cooked; while legumes, eggs, fish, chickens and rice take one to two hours of cooking.

To cook your food faster, remember to place the cooker in the direction of the suns angle. This will lessen the cooking time. Also, bear in mind that the cloud covering affects solar cooking. The more clouds there are, the longer you will have to wait before everything is done.

You must also take note that the cooker size, pots size and color, food size and quantity, air temperature, and water content all affect solar cooking. It may be difficult at first to watch all of these things at the same time, but doing so will save you a lot of money.

Know how to make the right cooker. You need to make short and shallow boxes so as to conserve heat. Making a box otherwise will produce a worthless solar cooker. However, if you created the perfect cooker but used a thick, light-colored and huge pot, you can’t continue in doing your solar cooking experience.

Pots must be black to absorb heat. They must also be small and thin so that foods are easily cooked. Yes, the smaller the better! In solar cooking everything must be as small as possible especially the foods. You have to chop the food into small portions because they will cook faster this way.

Remember, although air temperature isn’t considered an important factor in solar cooking you should still consider it. Even if there is sun exposure for you to use in generating heat in your cooker, if the air temperature is so low, food will be uncooked. Lastly, take a closer look at your water content as much as possible boil with small amounts of water.

Perhaps solar cooking to some seems pretty laborious. Well, it is indeed troubling and can only cook food in small amounts but the benefits of cost-efficiency and safety can assure more positive reviews than negative ones. The art of solar cooking is the future of cooking. Next thing we know giant solar cookers will replace ovens.

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