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  2. Induction cooking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Induction_cooking

    Top view of an induction cooktop. 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 ...

  3. Cooktop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooktop

    An induction cooktop involves the electrical heating of a cooking vessel by magnetic induction instead of by radiation or thermal conduction from an electrical heating element or from a flame. Because inductive heating directly heats the vessel, very rapid increases in temperature can be achieved and changes in heat settings are fast, similar ...

  4. Here's Why You Need To Try An Induction Cooktop - AOL

    www.aol.com/heres-why-try-induction-cooktop...

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  5. Kitchen stove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitchen_stove

    Indonesian traditional brick stove, used in some rural areas An 18th-century Japanese merchant's kitchen with copper Kamado (Hezzui), Fukagawa Edo Museum. Early clay stoves that enclosed the fire completely were known from the Chinese Qin dynasty (221 BC – 206/207 BC), and a similar design known as kamado (かまど) appeared in the Kofun period (3rd–6th century) in Japan.

  6. Induction heating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Induction_heating

    Component of Stirling radioisotope generator is heated by induction during testing. Induction heating is the process of heating electrically conductive materials, namely metals or semi-conductors, by electromagnetic induction, through heat transfer passing through an inductor that creates an electromagnetic field within the coil to heat up and possibly melt steel, copper, brass, graphite, gold ...

  7. Electric stove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_stove

    There are no extant examples of this stove, many of which were salvaged for their copper content during World War I. [8] To promote the stove, David Curle Smith's wife, H. Nora Curle Smith (née Helen Nora Murdoch, and a member of the Murdoch family prominent in Australian public life), wrote a cookbook containing operating instructions and 161 ...

  8. Electric heating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_heating

    For example, a fossil-fuel power station only delivers 3-5 units of electrical energy for every 10 units of fuel energy released. [12] Even though the electric heater is 100% efficient, the amount of fuel needed to produce the heat is more than if the fuel were burned in a furnace or boiler at the building being heated. If the same fuel could ...

  9. Portable stove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portable_stove

    A small Snow Peak portable stove running on MSR gas and the stove's carrying case The parts of portable gas stove—gas cartridge, burner and regulator. A portable stove is a cooking stove specially designed to be portable and lightweight, used in camping, picnicking, backpacking, or other use in remote locations where an easily transportable means of cooking or heating is needed.