Haybox or retained heat cooking is simply cooking a liquid based food like a soup or stew in it's own heat. During WWII cooking oil was rationed for the war effort this method became popular as a way to conserve cooking fuel. They used hay in a box because the air spaces in the hay trapped in heat and allowed the soup or stew to cook in it's own heat. Anything like hay, shredded news paper, rice hulls, cotton balls, corn husks etc will work as long as it packs loose and creats air spaces.
 
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Step 1: Get a container

Pretty much anything will do, i got this box at a army surplus store. A cardboard box will do as well, some people have even dug a hole in the ground and used that.
sclausson says: Sep 26, 2010. 10:39 AM
I have a book called "The Fireless Cook Book" 978-1-4290-1146-4 ISBN which is a reprint of a 1913 Drexel Institute book with instructions and recipes. It is still available.
pedleyfigg in reply to sclaussonOct 7, 2012. 9:01 PM
http://archive.org/details/firelesscookbook00mitcrich

Available to download for free.
Thursday Next in reply to sclaussonJan 15, 2011. 6:18 PM
unfortunately it's 31 dollars for the cheapest one on amazon.
Davidfromcali in reply to Thursday NextJan 28, 2011. 8:19 PM
Check abebooks.com first. Much better prices almost all the time. Many books on fireless cookery.
Today they have 140 million books for sale.
Thursday Next in reply to DavidfromcaliJan 29, 2011. 5:24 PM
I'll check it out. I have a lot of gift card money in my amazon account, that's why I looked there first.
sclausson in reply to Thursday NextJan 16, 2011. 10:01 AM
have you checked at your library? some libraries will order books
Thursday Next in reply to sclaussonJan 29, 2011. 5:23 PM
To use the library in my area would cost me 90 dollars a year. I live outside the service area.That's the way it sometimes in poduck city, Indiana
soapmaker says: Apr 22, 2007. 7:54 PM
Glad to see this article! You can make a more permanent version of this with polyester quilt batting and cotton yardage. Mine's 20 years old, still on its original batting, and still cooking perfectly.
meddler (author) in reply to soapmakerApr 23, 2007. 11:38 AM
Hmmm, now that's a good idea. I have heard of people using thick sleeping bags before, my wife just happenes to have a box of batting that's just sitting there. I see the good ship larceny on the horizon
soapmaker in reply to meddlerApr 23, 2007. 3:09 PM
Heh! Sounds like a plan to me. We just lined the cooker box with fabric, made the nest of batting (using the pot we knew we'd mostly cook with to set the dimensions of the well within the nest), lined the well with more fabric, and popped together a 3" thick pillow for the top. The whole process, not including letting the glue dry (behind the foil liner), took about 2 hours and that's with hand-sewing the pillow as our sewing machine was broken at the time. Best two hours I've spent on a home improvement project!
Angelwings2ltd in reply to soapmakerJul 25, 2012. 8:30 PM
hmmm. . . makes me wonder how well it would work for making CPOP or soap paste . . . you have given me some ideas!
ClayOgre says: Mar 5, 2011. 4:33 AM
I wonder what would happen if one used a pressure cooker for this...for stuff that takes a longer time even with a pressure cooker. You could bring it up to pressure, leave it for a minute or two, then pop it into the box. The lid would certainly fit tight enough, and, if insulated, I bet it would take a while for the pressure to come down. On the other hand, you can't fill a pressure cooker more than 2/3 of the way full, so that might be a factor.
lukeyj15 says: Jun 25, 2010. 8:35 PM
this would be great on camps etc. even on bikes, canoes etc. Get the meal started before you leave and the meal cooks while you ride/paddle. eat when you arrive.
meddler (author) in reply to lukeyj15Jun 26, 2010. 12:45 AM
I have never been able to prove it , but some oldtimers think if it sloshes around to much it won't cook as well. I can't say for sure.
Morgo says: May 21, 2010. 5:53 PM
I'm toying with the idea of making one, but I'm wondering if it can act more like a crock pot with the addition of heated bricks as an additional heat source. what do you think?
meddler (author) in reply to MorgoMay 22, 2010. 10:24 AM
Hmmmm, I never thought of that. I think it would work, maybe if the inside is lined with foil. Bricks or rocks retain quite a lot of heat for a long time. If you try it tell me how it worked.
aiden120000 says: Aug 1, 2006. 4:34 AM
i like soup
johnlvs2run in reply to aiden120000Aug 13, 2009. 5:14 PM
Excellent idea and photos. Thanks for sharing.
acmuis says: Oct 30, 2008. 8:16 AM
In the old days they would heat the pot and just put it in bed till dinner time.
neuralstatic says: Oct 18, 2007. 4:18 PM
i was waiting to see in which step this cooker cooked the food. well ti's not, it's an insulator only. which is a good thing in itself. i'd recommend using fibreglass insulation attached to the walls of the box, with the backing toward the center. you won't have to shift it around so much with every use, and they don't call it insulation for nothing.
T-Terrible says: Jul 16, 2007. 8:58 PM
i use a big cooler and a quilt.. great for chicken stock.
meddler (author) says: Jun 25, 2007. 2:37 AM
Well, it's simply a cooking method that you can use if you have a limited supply of fuel. Be it wood,propane or gas, this method helps you to extend those fuels by using less energy. I mean if you don't have any concerns about saving fuel by all means use the stove from start to finish.I use this method for camping mainly.
Timmymtd says: Jun 24, 2007. 8:14 PM
I dont see why you would want to do this, If you bring it to a boil on a stove. Why take it off? Only plus I see is less energy. Still in that sense, ill give it a plus.
meddler (author) says: May 29, 2007. 9:21 PM
I have heard of people using thick sleeping bags as well,I'm gonns see if my wife will make a (cooker bag)out of left over quilt and batting material.And i have used the thermos method as well works very good, i keep a look out for wide mouth stanly's at garage sales. For some reason i still like the box don't ask me why i just do.If your in a situtation where conservation of fuel is important you can't beat this method.
kd says: May 29, 2007. 2:01 PM
Hey guys, I cook this way often. Heat your food up to a boil over med heat, cover, simmer until heated thru, then wrap in insulating material. You don't need a box; I have just wrapped it in an old polyester quilt 3 inches thick all round and it works great. Beans simmer for 20 min, wrap for 3 hrs. Rice simmers 5 min, wraps for 1 1/2 hrs. You can cook most grains in a thermos even, just heat to boil, pour into preheated thermos, cap it and let is sit a couple hours. I only use about 1/10-th the fuel that way, and if I use several pots I can do a whole meal using the same amount of fuel I used to use for a single dish!! Even soybeans (notoriously long cooking) did cook this way, I just had to reheat them after the first 3 hours, and re-wrap for another 3 hours. Nice in that the food won't burn, the house does not get overheated in the summer, no way for it to catch fire or burn someone by spillage...I could go on and on. Im in the process of converting many of my crock-pot recipes now to use either a 'haybox' or a thermos to cook in to save $$$. Try it, you will love it.
meddler (author) says: Apr 24, 2007. 6:04 PM
When i was stationed at Fort Riley, Kansas i was going to make a double cooker out of an empty C4 wood box, they would usually let me have a small wood ammo crate here and there, but not the C4 box. They reused them and had to keep records on the number recived and sent back.I am going to keep my eyes open for a childs wood toy box at garage sales etc. The quilt batting idea would work on that pretty good i think.Although, that would be an awfull lot of soup or stew to make,(for me and mine) maby a good idea for a soup line for the homeless or a poor orphanage in 3rd world countries? I saw a web site once (can't remember it)where a guy made a solar oven out of a refrigerator for a very poor south american orphanage which coulden't afford a large oven, it would bake 40 loaves at a time.
meddler (author) says: Sep 23, 2006. 9:29 PM
Sure , you heat your soup or stew on a stove to boiling let it go a bit then put it in the cooker. This was done during ww2 to conserve cooking fuel and not use as much during cooking.
dcshoeco33 says: Sep 23, 2006. 3:39 PM
you dont need any fire?
meddler (author) says: Aug 2, 2006. 2:36 AM
I can't remember the site i found on this, but the guy who wrote it said you could do 5 or 6 pots of beans the haybox way for the same amount of energy it would take to do one pot on a stove from start to finish. Although with some beans you have to boil it up a second time to get it done.
meddler (author) says: Aug 1, 2006. 10:50 AM
so do i,i use this alot when i have things to do. After i set it up i just leave it till supper. This was my first instructable hope it wasn't to lame.
fungus amungus in reply to meddlerAug 1, 2006. 9:43 PM
Cool stuff. Takes much less energy this way.
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