This is my current cooking equipment.
Bottom to top: Chest of drawers formerly lining my hallway. Contents, mainly shoes partly retrashed, brought to thrift shop, otherwise found other places. Still needs that paint job.Mini oven. Found months before I needed it across the street and was waiting on top of the chest still in the hallway. I didn't test it but somehow it looked good. It's not a beauty but turned out to work fine! Stains on top are paint damage. Great to warm up sausage rolls and other small things that before I wouldn't heat up the gas oven for.
An electrical two-burner camping or table cooker. I bought it as an emergency in 2015. Chef's brand new state of the art electric stove arrived on a Friday, him and neighbour Freek enthousiastically brought his old totally unsafe of cheap Chinese make gas stove (given to him by a neighbour 2006 or so) to the street already. But to connect the new one adaptations in the house had to be done and I couldn't get the technician until Monday. The light weight device was cheap and good enough to warm up things for us over the week-end and make coffee. I spent the money with this in mind that my own old 1960's Etna was still working well enough, but it had a 'user maual', and badly needed a new gas hose, but I was reluctant investing in that. In the end getting tired of always turning on and off the main gas switch I took the new two-burner down and put it on top of the shut lid of the stove. Oven only for storage.
Until one morning, and I don't know how this happened overnight, my Etna had sunk through its front legs. Never thought about fixing it, I wheeled it out on my dolly (also see chest in my hallway here) first trash night, installed my mini oven and this is all I need.
Pan on top a recent find. A bit higher than my regular 20 cms, great for half liter soups that need mashing. Lid is a separate find that came by itself, turns out to be more practical than the original one.
2 comments:
Wonderful. You find some amazing things, like a treasure hunt.
Practicing patience and not wanting what I don't need, the city curbs bring close to everything I do need. Gregg, your blog has taught me even more about what I don't need. The rest is extra money.
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