Figured out a new use for a slow-cooker.
.
.
.
Having lived without hydro for half decade, relying on a small solar system for basics I became pretty hydro-efficient.
If you have a small system, you cannot use toasters, microwaves and other high consumption utilities for very long without depleting your electrical storage.
In monitoring my tiny 45W system, I discovered I can use only high consumption utilities for a few minutes.
ok - I'll get to the point, questions will be answered.
A slow-cooker, most, on low or warm use less than 100W - a microwave - 1000+W
So, on a sunny day, storage would not be depleted much using a slow cooker to warm up food.
My slow cooker is large enough that I can put in a small bowl of previously cooked food, then just drag it out when the hunger hits -
no cleaning of the slow-cooker necessary, because I put my meal in there in a container.
CC
Arkansas Granny
(31,804 posts)to warm up a bowl of food. Does it's seem to make any difference if the bowl is plastic or another material.
ConcernedCanuk
(13,509 posts).
.
.
won't even boil water, so won't melt anything.
But I'd do a test-run with glass and water in it to make sure.
depending on if the food is frozen, from the fridge, or warmed up for a bit at room temperature will determine how long it takes.
mine from the fridge - 1 hour.
warm it up on the counter for a half hour, it would be less.
first time I tried it - keep you posted.
I'm busy eating it right now!
CC
Demeter
(85,373 posts)You might like it, and eat faster. And you can build it yourself.
ConcernedCanuk
(13,509 posts).
.
.
will be using them shortly as soon as I move into the new property.
Am temporarily in a motel housekeeping unit.
But still will be using hydro for some meals, and slow-cooking on a wood stove isn't feasible.
Nice thing about the slow-cooker is I do not have to babysit it, whether I'm cooking a full pot, or just using it for a low-wattage "microwave" sort of thing.
Solar oven I'm pondering, but again - as they get quite hot, I'd have to babysit it.
CC