Solar Cooking
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Designers and [[:Category:Manufacturers and vendors|manufacturers]] have taken varied approaches to creating solar cookers. The most commonly used have been [[solar box cooker]]s and [[solar panel cooker]]s. They work well for slow cooking, are generally less expensive to buy than other styles, and are fairly easy for most people to [[:Category:Solar cooker plans|build]] themselves. Variations of these designs have typically been used to introduce solar cooking in deforested developing counties since the latter half of the twentieth century. High quality manufactured models are available for purchase.
   
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[[Parabolic solar cooker]]s also have a long history of use, primarily in Europe and Asia. They cook at higher temperatures and usually require more complicated fabrication. A number of models are available from [[:Category:Manufacturers and vendors|manufacturers]]. They can be used in series to create steam for [[Institutional solar cooking|institutional kitchens]] feeding thousands of people per day.
Below you will find all of the pages in this wiki that are tagged with <nowiki>[[Category:Solar cooker designs]]</nowiki>. There is also a page showing a few dozen designs along with construction plans in many languages in the [http://solarcooking.org/plans Solar Cooking Archive]. For information on testing solar cookers, see [[Testing]].
 
   
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[[:Category:Evacuated tube solar cooker designs|Evacuated tube solar cooker]]s are compact and can cook quite efficiently. Several models are available commercially. Other variations of solar cookers are also included in the subcategories listed below.
<font style="color:red">'''See also review article:'''</font> [[Compendium of solar cooker designs]]<br>
 
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'''See also:''' [[:Category:Solar cooker plans|Solar cooker construction plans]].
 
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<span style="font-size:150%;">Scroll down</span> to see all designs listed first '''by name''' and then '''by photograph'''.
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==See also==
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* [[Introduction to solar cooking]]
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* [[How solar cookers work]]
 
* [[:Category:Solar cooker plans|Solar cooker construction plans]]
 
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Revision as of 00:00, 16 July 2015

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Last edited: 15 July 2015      

Designers and manufacturers have taken varied approaches to creating solar cookers. The most commonly used have been solar box cookers and solar panel cookers. They work well for slow cooking, are generally less expensive to buy than other styles, and are fairly easy for most people to build themselves. Variations of these designs have typically been used to introduce solar cooking in deforested developing counties since the latter half of the twentieth century. High quality manufactured models are available for purchase.

Parabolic solar cookers also have a long history of use, primarily in Europe and Asia. They cook at higher temperatures and usually require more complicated fabrication. A number of models are available from manufacturers. They can be used in series to create steam for institutional kitchens feeding thousands of people per day.

Evacuated tube solar cookers are compact and can cook quite efficiently. Several models are available commercially. Other variations of solar cookers are also included in the subcategories listed below.

Scroll down to see all designs listed first by name and then by photograph.

See also

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