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Ever cooked on your engine?
#1
Ever cooked on your engine?

Fun way to make a journey quite interesting, especially when the car fills with the aroma of cooking food.....

Here are picks of a chicken done on the turbo cover of my Td5 Landy.

Basted in Lemon juice, garlic,, pepper, mixed herbs and spices & stuffed with button mushrooms & small onions

4H after leaving home Yummy

Supper and brekkie

Trial by error


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#2
mmm that looks really nice and juicy!

This would be a good idea for long road trips, and a great way to make your car for efficient! Tongue

I'd like to cook a stew in a car someday.
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#3
I'm disappointed. I thought "cooking on your engine" was going to be some sort of sexy euphemism.
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#4
Watched that episode of mythbusters and got inspired? looks like good results, wouldn't be rejected especially if going on a long cruise out somewhere like camping thats for sure!

I ride a motorbike, so the most I cook on the engine is my hands since its winter.
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#5
I've cooked or rather warmed up on my engine once. I have also cooked in my car. How? Well, I fill a thermos flask with water, heat it up using a heating coil plugged in to the cigarette lighter, when it boils I add whole rice or some other sort of grain, add mixed dried vegetables or even fresh ones, close the flask and an hour or so later I have something to eat. As I'm vegan it's the best alternative I can find since eating in restaurants provides all sorts of problems.
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#6
LONDONER Wrote:I've cooked or rather warmed up on my engine once. I have also cooked in my car. How? Well, I fill a thermos flask with water, heat it up using a heating coil plugged in to the cigarette lighter, when it boils I add whole rice or some other sort of grain, add mixed dried vegetables or even fresh ones, close the flask and an hour or so later I have something to eat. As I'm vegan it's the best alternative I can find since eating in restaurants provides all sorts of problems.

That's cool...

We have a device called a "kombuis oond" (kitchen oven) basically a big material bag made to enclose a pot but the bag is filled with polystryene balls (like a bean bag is). Works well but very space hungry.... I'll give this one a shot :flirty-thank-you-sm
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#7
You're more than welcome Trialbyerror. Let us know how it goes and what you cook.
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#8
Lilitu Wrote:mmm that looks really nice and juicy!

This would be a good idea for long road trips, and a great way to make your car for efficient! Tongue

I'd like to cook a stew in a car someday.

Hi
Seen it done, same principal, use a roasting bag wrapped in foil. Chunky veggies par boiled potatoes, mushrooms baby-corn & beef cubes.
Use brown onion soup for a sauce.

When you open, throw a proportionate qnt of cream stir in & wait 5-10 min then serve

If you like it slightly spicy hot, use a small amount 2 shakes? of some peri-peri powder but cautiously else you over-flavor.

Trial by error (and ye shall succeed)
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#9
Roflmao
Wade Wrote:I'm disappointed. I thought "cooking on your engine" was going to be some sort of sexy euphemism.

I'm disssssspicable :biggrin:

Trial by error

PS Love a 20 something mechanic in dirty overalls bent over an engine, hands full of old black engine oil.....
Hubba-hubba-smiley
Shusssh My old ticker won"t take much more....
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