When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Horezu ceramics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horezu_ceramics

    Horezu potters use many traditional tools like a mixer for cleaning the earth, a pottery wheel and comb for shaping, a hollowed-out bull's horn and a fine wire-tipped stick for decoration, and a wood-burning stove for firing. This ancient craft is preserved in the ancestral hearth, now known as Olari Street of Horezu, where artisans shape the ...

  3. Chimenea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chimenea

    Chimenea burning wood A chimenea (UK English) [ 1 ] or chiminea (US English) [ 2 ] ( / ˌ tʃ ɪ m ɪ ˈ n eɪ . ə / CHIM -in- AY -ə ; from Spanish chimenea [tʃimeˈnea] , in turn derived from French cheminée , "chimney") is a freestanding front-loading fireplace or oven with a bulbous body and usually a vertical smoke vent or chimney .

  4. Russian stove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_stove

    These stoves combine the functions of a traditional stove, oven, and fireplace into a single unit, and serve a broad range of purposes, including cooking (boiling, baking, and smoking), drying plants and mushrooms, providing interior heating and ventilation, bathing, and providing a warm place to sleep (many units include a sleeping berth atop ...

  5. Kamado - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kamado

    This is by virtue of the heat retention properties of the ceramic shell with temperatures up to 750 °F (400 °C). Precise control of airflow (and thus temperature) afforded by the vent system means Kamado-style cookers are much like wood-fired ovens and can be used to roast and bake.

  6. Tabun oven - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tabun_oven

    Tabun oven with lid, from Palestine Baking ovens in Palestine: 1. saj, 2. and 3. tabun. A tabun oven, or simply tabun (also transliterated taboon, from the Arabic: طابون), is a portable clay oven, shaped like a truncated cone. While all were made with a top opening, which could be used as a small stove top, some were made with an opening ...

  7. Kenya Ceramic Jiko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenya_Ceramic_Jiko

    The idea for the Kenya Ceramic Jiko came from the Thai Bucket Stove and was modeled after the Kenyan Traditional Metal Stove known as TMS. [4] It was from the re-designing of these two stoves that the Kenya Ceramic Jiko was created. Through the collaboration of both local and international organizations, the Kenya Ceramic Jiko evolved and took ...

  8. Palayok - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palayok

    Filipino cuisine expert Maria Orosa is credited with turning the earthenware pot into an oven. Called the "Palayok Oven ", [ 2 ] [ 3 ] the contraption consists of a palayok fitted with a piece of thin sheet metal cut to fit the bottom of the pot and a piece of aluminum foil placed below the lid. [ 4 ]

  9. Wood-burning stove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood-burning_stove

    A 19th-century example of a wood-burning stove. A wood-burning stove (or wood burner or log burner in the UK) is a heating or cooking appliance capable of burning wood fuel, often called solid fuel, and wood-derived biomass fuel, such as sawdust bricks.