http://solarcooking.org/heat-retention/ret-heat.htm
Once food is heated to boiling, cooking can continue in an insulated box
Daily cooking [on a stove or over a fire] frequently includes a long simmering period which is required for many beans, grains, stews, and soups. The amount of fuel needed to complete these cooking processes can be greatly reduced by cooking with retained heat. Even today, in some parts of the world, a pit is dug and lined with rocks previously heated in a fire. The food to be cooked is placed in the lined pit, often covered with leaves. Then the whole thing is covered with a mound of earth. The heat from the rocks cannot [easily] escape and the food is cooked very slowly.
Another version of this method consists of digging a pit and lining it with hay or another good insulating material. A pot of food which has previously been heated up to a boil is placed in the pit, covered with more hay and earth, and allowed to cook slowly with the retained heat.
This latter method is the direct ancestor of the “Haybox Cooker,” which is simply a well-insulated box or basket lined with a reflective material into which a pot of food previously brought to a boil is placed. The insulation greatly slows the loss of conductive heat, and the shiny lining reflects the radiant heat back into the pot. This works best when the pot fits snugly into the insulation with no air in between.
Such a box or basket can easily be made of inexpensive, locally available materials. It can be wooden, or cardboard, or any combination. Hay, straw, rushes, feathers, sawdust, rags, wool, shredded paper, etc. are all good insulating materials.
Principles to be kept in mind are these:
- Insulation should cover all six sides of the box.
- The box should be airtight.
- The inner surfaces of the box should be of a heat-reflective material.
There are some adjustments involved in cooking with haybox cookers:
- Less water should be used since it is not boiled away.
- Less spice in needed since the aroma is not boiled away.
- Cooking must be started earlier to give the food enough time to cook at a lower temperature than on the solar cooker or over a fire.
- The food should boil for several minutes before being placed in the box. This ensures that all the food is at boiling temperature, not just the water.
- Haybox cookers work best for large quantities, as small amounts of food have less thermal mass and cool Preheated stones could always be put in together with the pot to prove the additional thermal mass needed to keep the temperature up over a long period of time.
(This above portion of this article was excerpted from Cooking with the Sun, State Technical College, Altötting, Neuötting Str. 64 c, 84503, Altötting, Germany)


February 14, 2014 at 9:06 am
What would be a good substitute for hot rocks?
I have a 6-liter vacuum cooker. I don’t really need a pot this big; I am just one person. If I make small batches of stew, for example, there’s not enough thermal mass to carry the cooking process through to the end.
I would like to add thermal mass to the pot to make sure there’s enough retained heat to finish the cooking process. I’ve thought of smooth rocks, metal cubes, or really anything dense, not-toxic and non-crumbly (we only have sandstone around here).
Two-inch stainless steel spheres would be great, They could be added in with the other ingredients and “cooked” and then fished out at the end. But they’re quite expensive. I’ve wracked my brains on this one and have yet to come up with a cheap and effective solution.
November 2, 2022 at 11:31 am
That’s a great “out of the box” question and I’ve actually wracked my brain on the matter too. Here’s some thoughts for consideration:
(-) Use a ziplock storage bag or other container filled with water that can act as a thermal mass but fit comfortably inside the pot with the smaller portions of food you are cooking. The bag of water will help cook the food but can be removed when done without too much affect on the food. (-) I have a 6-liter and a 4.5-liter thermos cooker and I’ve had a round soap stone made that fits the diameter of the inside of the 6L outerpot. I can heat it up and place it in the bottom of the 6L outerpot and then use the 4.5L innerpot (with my small batch of food) and fit it inside the 6L outerpot over top the stone and it will use the heat of the soap stone to cook the smaller sized portion of food.