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  2. Kitchen stove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitchen_stove

    Cooker and stove are often used interchangeably. The fuel-burning stove is the most basic design of a kitchen stove. As of 2012, it was found that "Nearly half of the people in the world (mainly in the developing world ), burn biomass (wood, charcoal, crop residues, and dung) and coal in rudimentary cookstoves or open fires to cook their food."

  3. Induction cooking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Induction_cooking

    Induction cooking is a cooking process using direct electrical induction heating of cooking vessels, rather than relying on indirect radiation, convection, or thermal conduction. Induction cooking allows high power and very rapid increases in temperature to be achieved: changes in heat settings are instantaneous.

  4. Talk:Induction cooking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Induction_cooking

    Which implies that both the cooktop and the oven can use induction. Indeed, inductive oven redirects to "induction cooker". But in the article there is no specific mention of induction being used to heat ovens—just the statement "Sears Kenmore sold a free-standing oven/stove with four induction-cooking surfaces in the mid-1980s.

  5. Caloric - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caloric

    The cookers sold for $8.50 – $15, depending on the number of wells, and came with a 160-page book instruction manual. [6] The company moved operations to Pennsylvania in 1924. In the 1960s, the Caloric Company launched the iconic ad slogan “Now you’re cooking with gas.”

  6. Pressure cooker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pressure_cooker

    A pressure cooker is a sealed vessel for cooking food with the use of high pressure steam and water or a water-based liquid, a process called pressure cooking. The high pressure limits boiling and creates higher temperatures not possible at lower pressures, allowing food to be cooked faster than at normal pressure.

  7. Induction heater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Induction_heater

    Induction heating should not be confused with induction cooking, as the two heating systems are mostly very physically different from each other. Notably, induction heating systems work by applying an alternating magnetic field to a ferrous material to induce an alternating current in the material, so exciting the atoms in the material heating ...