Showing posts with label dakota. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dakota. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 1, 2016

Dakota Rocket Silo version 3 0

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We love our Dakota Rocket Silo--it helps us cook outside, put our pruning brush and small-diameter dead trees to good use, render wax, make biochar, and do lots of fun things.  But the original and rebuilt designs had one flaw that cropped up during extended use:


The piece of ground between the holes gets baked pretty good, and eventually weakens and starts crumbling, which makes the chimney part not level.  It might not be as much of a problem with wider cinder blocks where more of the support comes from the sides.

But weve got skinny cinder blocks, so we took out the middle part and built a brick foundation.  Theyre not fire bricks, so they probably wont last too long, but they were free!  This setup lets us keep the in-ground aspect that we like so much, but hopefully will stay level for longer.  Plus, it looks kind of Petra-esque.

We fired it up, and sure enough, it burns like a champ.  Next test: will it stay level through a winter?

JalapeƱo popper, anyone? (They took a LONG time to cook this way, but they were really good!)


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Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Dakota Rocket Silo

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Weve been looking for a way to move canning operations outside during the heat of the summer.  Not only does it help keep the house cooler, theres just something especially liberating about processing food outside.  Maybe its because theres so much more room than in our tiny kitchen.  Maybe its because we use combustion heat directly, which is more efficient than, say burning coal to produce heat to boil water to generate electricity that generates heat on an electric stove.  Or maybe it just feeds the soul of our inner caveman...

Anyway, until recently, we had no such capacity around The Lab to do outdoor canning.  Then we cobbled together a couple projects to remedy the situation.  On the docket for today: the Dakota Rocket Silo.  Its a combination of one well-known homestead technology (the rocket stove), and a similar, but lesser-used technology (the Dakota fire hole).  Essentially we built a Dakota fire hole and added a cinder block chimney to turn it into an underground rocket stove.  But anything related to underground rockets has to be called a silo.  Hence the full name.

Profile view of what the Dakota Rocket Silo (DRS) would look like if we sawed right down the middle of it and a couple feet deep into the yard.

Heres what it looks like in real life.  The two pieces of angle iron hold the pot off the cinder blocks so the air can still flow well.  Wait!  No!  Katie, thats not a biffee!! (EDIT: Katie says, "You can take that part out right now, buster!")

Before starting a fire, its a good idea to make sure the bricks are level--we dont want a pot full of hot jam becoming unbalanced and tipping over!  Then wed have to lick off the grass.

...Fire in the hole!

How long does it take to boil a quart of water?  When the DRS is still heating up (and making smoke), a little under 12 minutes.  Once its good and hot, considerably less than that.  Accompanying the fire is a wheelbarrow full of old fence wood and our mobile kitchen.  All in all, not a bad way to start a Thursday.  Ok, Jake.  Time to go into work.

Later that night...


Hey, look! A successful batch of plum jam, cooked outside over a wood fire. It was so tasty, Katie let herself be persuaded to have a piece of toast, even though it was way past her bedtime.  We didnt take any pictures during this batch, but we learned quite a bit.  Well do a follow-up post on that soon, but for now, suffice it to say that cooking jam outside by flashlight, and then coming back into a nice cool house is one of the more awesome sensations weve had all summer.

Have you canned outdoors?  What is your setup like?  Let us know in the comments below!


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