Table of Contents

Retained


"Using a haybox can easily save up to 50% of the energy required to cook food. This is because instead of the heat from a saucepan being lost it is trapped by the insulation and used to heat and cook the food." - Seggy Segaran

What is retained heat cooking?

If removed from a cooker, food in a cooking pot will continue to cook until the pot cools down. Placing the pot in an insulated box to prevent cooling means that the food will continue to cook without the use of further fuel. This is known as retained heat cooking, aka thermal cooking, haybox cooking, sit boiling or fireless cooking.

Figure 1: Making a retained heat cooker from insulation board: cutting the board with a heated knife.

Traditionally the insulation was straw or hay, hence the name haybox. In the middle ages, earthenware pots were used in a hole in the ground insulated with moss, leaves or hay; and in the 1940s Girl Guides were taught how to make a haybox using a large biscuit tin and straw. Nowadays we have better insulating materials and you can make a very efficient haybox (although hay still works, of course). It is one of many different low-impact cooking methods.

Really good introduction to retained heat cooking.

The energy savings can be dramatic. For example, potatoes or rice are normally brought to the boil and then simmered for 15-20 minutes. If they're brought to the boil and then the pot is placed in a haybox, that's 15-20 minutes' worth of fuel saved. Modern cookers based on the haybox principle are commercially available from the usual outlets. Known as thermal cookers, they use an outer vacuum flask with a removable inner stainless steel cooking pot. They work in the same way as the traditional haybox, but are smarter-looking and more expensive.

Figure 3: Another way of doing it – an insulated basket.

What are the benefits of retained heat cooking?

Figure 4: Adding a pot of food, with lid.

Our advisors, Seggy and Jane, run workshops in India helping villagers set up solar cookers and hayboxes to cook food slowly (improving nutrition) and without burning firewood.

What can I do?

Make a haybox cooker

You can, of course, use a box full of hay, if hay is available where you live. If not, you could use a box / cooler with old towelling and textiles, or even wrap the pot in a sleeping bag. Here's a way to build a 'haybox' cooker from scrap insulation board.

Figure 6: Home-made insulation board ‘haybox’ in use.

Figure 7: Finished meal.

Cooking with a haybox

  1. Bring the pot to the boil on the hob in the normal way (although you don't need quite as much water, as less is lost through evaporation).
  2. Simmer for a couple of minutes to make sure that all the contents and lid are up to boiling temperature.
  3. Remove from the heat and transfer to your haybox.
  4. Place a brick or similar weight on top to make sure there are no gaps between the layers of insulation board.
  5. Allow your food to cook for around twice as long as simmering on the hob - but there is no harm in leaving it longer; for example, you can leave potatoes or rice for over an hour, and they'll be fine.
  6. Don't keep opening the haybox to check on your meal - it won't burn; opening it lets some heat out which is not replaced.
  7. NB: make sure your food has boiled thoroughly before putting it into the haybox; there's a risk of bacterial growth if not.

Figure 8: A real haybox – i.e. a box with hay in it – used regularly by friends of ours. Put hay underneath and around the sides, add the pot, put hay on top, then a lid - works a treat.

Estimated cooking times

As a rough rule of thumb, for retained heat cooking you can at least double the normal cooking time. However, it's difficult to specify precise times as a little longer during the boiling stage would mean a lot less time in the haybox. The size of the food also makes a difference; whole potatoes need more time than if cut into quarters, for example. If you find the food is not cooked through you can do a second short boiling at the end. After a little practice you'll soon learn what works for you and your haybox. Here are some recommended cooking times.

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Food Boil time Haybox time

Date on Lowimpact:2014-09-25