We have an Elmira Sweetheart cookstove in the basement that I fire up when it gets cold out.
This morning I made breakfast on it.
I keep all types of wood to help regulate the temperature. The small boards were from a pallet. In the tin are pine cones we collect in the fall. Either will jumpstart a sluggish fire.
The stove has lots of air dampers to control the burn which controls the temperature.
The dampers are half spheres that you screw down to control airflow. There is one at the bottom under the firebox. I can also prop open the shaker grate door if a need lots of air such as when starting the fire.
These are the side dampers
I put a cast iron griddle on to heat up. I put sausage and scrapple on to cook. The plates are warming on the warming shelf. I also use all metal utensils. Plastic handles on utensils and pots can melt. The one on the tea kettle is protected by the kettle it's self.
Now the sausage is warming on the plates freeing up enough griddle space to pour some pancakes.
When all the pancakes are finished we dine. I move the kettle directly over the firebox to bring it to a boil to make tea and coffee for after the meal.
Baking in the oven requres more effort. Once the fire is hot I slide a damper that allows flue gas to travel around the oven portion heating it up.
After the oven temp is okay I put in my items to be baked. But this is not set it and forget it. I set a time for 5 minutes and check to make sure everything is okay. I add wood, open dampers or rotate the baking dish as need. I have my time go off every 10 minutes and repeat any of those steps as needed. That is were the small wood and pinecones come in handy. A burst of heat to raise the oven temp.
It is not as hard as I am making it sound. I actually find the whole process quite relaxing. Thursday I simmered a big pot of turkey soup on the stove and baked biscuits in the oven. It was yummy but I did not get any pics of the baking process.
This morning I made breakfast on it.
I keep all types of wood to help regulate the temperature. The small boards were from a pallet. In the tin are pine cones we collect in the fall. Either will jumpstart a sluggish fire.
The stove has lots of air dampers to control the burn which controls the temperature.
The dampers are half spheres that you screw down to control airflow. There is one at the bottom under the firebox. I can also prop open the shaker grate door if a need lots of air such as when starting the fire.
These are the side dampers
I put a cast iron griddle on to heat up. I put sausage and scrapple on to cook. The plates are warming on the warming shelf. I also use all metal utensils. Plastic handles on utensils and pots can melt. The one on the tea kettle is protected by the kettle it's self.
Now the sausage is warming on the plates freeing up enough griddle space to pour some pancakes.
When all the pancakes are finished we dine. I move the kettle directly over the firebox to bring it to a boil to make tea and coffee for after the meal.
Baking in the oven requres more effort. Once the fire is hot I slide a damper that allows flue gas to travel around the oven portion heating it up.
After the oven temp is okay I put in my items to be baked. But this is not set it and forget it. I set a time for 5 minutes and check to make sure everything is okay. I add wood, open dampers or rotate the baking dish as need. I have my time go off every 10 minutes and repeat any of those steps as needed. That is were the small wood and pinecones come in handy. A burst of heat to raise the oven temp.
It is not as hard as I am making it sound. I actually find the whole process quite relaxing. Thursday I simmered a big pot of turkey soup on the stove and baked biscuits in the oven. It was yummy but I did not get any pics of the baking process.