Most people will eat cereal, ice cream, and sandwiches during a power outage. Using up the milk and finishing other perishable items is smart. But what if you want a real meal… options to bake bread, cook pasta & rice, and pan-sear steaks even when the electricity is out? There are many options for off-grid cooking but the majority are designed to be used outside, for example, solar oven, camping stoves, and gas grills. They need the sun or open ventilation to prevent carbon monoxide poisoning. Many people live in areas where good weather is rare so what options are available to safely cook indoors without electricity? Below is a list of several ideas.
Cook Indoors Without Electricity
Whenever you plan on using an open flame to cook indoors during a power outage, you should always have a carbon monoxide detector and fire extinguisher close by. If you would like to learn more about each method click on the photos below.
1. Tea Lite Oven
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2. Chafing Pans & Chafing Gel Fuel
3. Crockpot & Solar Panels
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4. Flameless Cooking System
The Barocook Flameless Cooking System is a good item to have in a power outage, on a road trip, or in an emergency kit. Especially if you have a baby because it can warm up water for a bottle anywhere, in any weather condition. I only have one flameless cooking system so I’ll use the chafing pan fuel to cook chili and this to bake cornbread.
5. Fireplace
6. Portable Heaters, Safe or Not Safe? You Decide!
The Mr. Buddy heater is approved for indoor use. However, there are MANY YouTube videos about how Ice Fishman use Mr. Buddy Heaters to cook food. Any changes to a heater or its controls can be dangerous. Any modifications or adding attachments are not recommended by the Mr. Buddy company and voids any warranties. They were not designed or safety tested for cooking. There are two methods most commonly used to turn portable heaters into cooking stoves.
The first is to attach a five-gallon Paint Roller Wire Grid to the top handle of the heater, illustrated in the video below. You should never cook directly on galvanized metal because of potential health risks so the workaround is to place food on tin foil.
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The second method is to pop off the front grill, starting with at the top. Once the safety grill is removed, turn it 180 degrees, placing the bottom of the grill in the top holes (see photo below).
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Related article: 10 Ways to Get Prepared
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Don’t forget about kerosene cooking stoves which can be used indoors (like kerosene heaters) and are used all over the world. A link to a vendor is: http://www.stpaulmercantile.com/index.php?main_page=index&cPath=73 but there are others.
Thanks, Jon! I don’t know of anyone that uses a kerosene cooking stove. Have you used one?
Hi Nettie! The Coleman PROPANE stoves make emergency food prep easy. Can be used indoors with plenty of ventilation and a CO detector