Range cooker in Canada?
#16
Re: Range cooker in Canada?
Is there the option of LPG?
As it has approaching twice the energy of natural gas, its very good for cooking, wok’s etc are much easier to use. Dual fuel cookers with lpg or natural gas can give you the best of both worlds, and a lot have low electrical power ovens, in the uk a normal 13a plug is used so for those who are only allowed 110 volts it should be workable.
As it has approaching twice the energy of natural gas, its very good for cooking, wok’s etc are much easier to use. Dual fuel cookers with lpg or natural gas can give you the best of both worlds, and a lot have low electrical power ovens, in the uk a normal 13a plug is used so for those who are only allowed 110 volts it should be workable.
#17
Re: Range cooker in Canada?
Looks like this one is the front-runner for Mrs Hurlabrick - a Thor 48" dual fuel (natural or LPG gas burners and electric ovens).
From Costco - Steep at $4999 + Tax though, but hey! At least I get a small percentage with my membership.
From Costco - Steep at $4999 + Tax though, but hey! At least I get a small percentage with my membership.
#18
Re: Range cooker in Canada?
It's the same size as ours but it's a ceramic glass top rather than the old fashioned but still good enough coils on our other one. She bought it only a few months before she joined us. It works.
But there still doesn't seem to be a way of having something cook for whatever start/end time you want to set if you're going out. That seemed to be a feature of even the most basic cookers in t he UK. It was certainly on the one I bought in 1984 for my new house and it was on those my parents had before that.
#19
Re: Range cooker in Canada?
But there still doesn't seem to be a way of having something cook for whatever start/end time you want to set if you're going out. That seemed to be a feature of even the most basic cookers in t he UK. It was certainly on the one I bought in 1984 for my new house and it was on those my parents had before that.
#20
Re: Range cooker in Canada?
Here, beyond the black stump, it's usual to have a gas stove and furnace. The propane truck goes everywhere. All the stoves (total of 3) I've purchased have been jetted for natural gas but supplied with jets and instructions for propane, same as furnaces.
At one house we only used propane for the stove. It was an era of serious cooking and yet the fuel cost was $75, a year.
At one house we only used propane for the stove. It was an era of serious cooking and yet the fuel cost was $75, a year.
Last edited by dbd33; Oct 1st 2017 at 11:19 pm.
#21
Re: Range cooker in Canada?
Every cooker I ever knew in the UK had the timed cook feature. When I bought my house in 84 I had to manage with a pop-up toaster and a contact grill (like today's panini grills) that had an adjustable hinge (for want of a better word) so that a shallow dish could be used for something resembling a casserole.
As soon as I could afford it I bought the cheapest cooker possible from either Comet or Curries. It had the timed cook feature.
I just took a look at BestBuy from low price and up and they have 23 models before you get to one that has it.
#22
Re: Range cooker in Canada?
#23
Re: Range cooker in Canada?
Just looked on the Costco website. Does Mrs Hurlabrick know you are a cheapskate? What's wrong with this one? https://www.costco.ca/Fulgor-Milano-...100294479.html
#24
BE Forum Addict
Joined: Feb 2013
Location: BC, Canada
Posts: 3,874
Re: Range cooker in Canada?
This got me thinking after I posted and I decided to switch them, so we did yesterday.
It's the same size as ours but it's a ceramic glass top rather than the old fashioned but still good enough coils on our other one. She bought it only a few months before she joined us. It works.
But there still doesn't seem to be a way of having something cook for whatever start/end time you want to set if you're going out. That seemed to be a feature of even the most basic cookers in t he UK. It was certainly on the one I bought in 1984 for my new house and it was on those my parents had before that.
It's the same size as ours but it's a ceramic glass top rather than the old fashioned but still good enough coils on our other one. She bought it only a few months before she joined us. It works.
But there still doesn't seem to be a way of having something cook for whatever start/end time you want to set if you're going out. That seemed to be a feature of even the most basic cookers in t he UK. It was certainly on the one I bought in 1984 for my new house and it was on those my parents had before that.
Every range that we have had in Canada has had the time feature .... from the el cheapo one in the apartment from 1968-72, to the Sears range we bought in 1972 and lasted until about 2010, and finally the Maytag that we bought as replacement.
None of them were very expensive, certainly not over $600>
The Maytag has a Delay button on the clock face where all the cooking choices are displayed.
Have you tried looking in the Instruction Booklet for your m-i-l's range to find the instructions for delayed cooking??
If lost, try going online and seeing what you can find.
#25
I still dont believe it..
Joined: Oct 2013
Location: 12 degrees north
Posts: 2,777
Re: Range cooker in Canada?
If you want a range cooker, it seems silly to spend a fortune on a domestic range cooker when professional grade gas or lpg ranges are actually a lot cheaper? In the uk i can buy a rangemaster ‘professional’ home range for 1600 pounds, but i can buy a much more powerful really professional range for less. I have a sous chef relative who always uses sealed ‘bullseye’ ranges, no visible gas flames, just a huge cast iron surface with different heats in different zones with huge burners beneath. Look at this
https://www.nisbets.co.uk/lincat-sil...-range/gj678-p
https://www.nisbets.co.uk/thor-6-bur...-range/gl173-p
OG8002/P | Lincat Catering Equipment
http://www.lincat.co.uk/products/ran...anges/og8005-p
https://www.nisbets.co.uk/lincat-sil...-range/gj678-p
https://www.nisbets.co.uk/thor-6-bur...-range/gl173-p
OG8002/P | Lincat Catering Equipment
http://www.lincat.co.uk/products/ran...anges/og8005-p
Last edited by uk_grenada; Oct 2nd 2017 at 8:40 pm.
#26
BE Enthusiast
Joined: Jan 2015
Location: Northern Ireland
Posts: 311
Re: Range cooker in Canada?
Hi Hurlabrick,
I empathise with you completely. We left our Alpha Range cooker behind and it seems here that kitchens are very much an after thought. It doesnt look like a lot of people here in Canada spend a lot of time baking cakes and breads or even the traditional sunday roast!!
Deep fried seems to be the order of the day unfortunately.
Our range cooker was oil fired which also heated our radiators and water. The bottom oven ran at 20% less than the top oven which was great for stews and casseroles. The top oven was great for things like the big bird at Christmas which just slid straight in there. If we ever get the chance over here I think we will design our own "Farmhouse Kitchen" some day. For now memories of those sweet aromas will have to suffice!!
I empathise with you completely. We left our Alpha Range cooker behind and it seems here that kitchens are very much an after thought. It doesnt look like a lot of people here in Canada spend a lot of time baking cakes and breads or even the traditional sunday roast!!
Deep fried seems to be the order of the day unfortunately.
Our range cooker was oil fired which also heated our radiators and water. The bottom oven ran at 20% less than the top oven which was great for stews and casseroles. The top oven was great for things like the big bird at Christmas which just slid straight in there. If we ever get the chance over here I think we will design our own "Farmhouse Kitchen" some day. For now memories of those sweet aromas will have to suffice!!
#27
Re: Range cooker in Canada?
I've had a brief look online and I found the same make that looks identical except for coils and it advertises no delay feature.
Those that do feature delayed cook, I can see many more buttons in the pictures.
In the duplex I used to have, the original cookers plus the two I bought as replacements over the years, they all had it but thinking about it now, they were like the UK ones I knew where it's on the clock with hands rather like an old alarm clock - except that you set the start time and either push the knob in or pull out so it will come on later.
Although smaller cookers, they were much more expensive.
Our old cooker - bought around 2008 for $350 (down from $500) - had a clock display and timer. No other buttons at all.
Maybe that's why it was $150 off
Last edited by BristolUK; Oct 2nd 2017 at 9:46 pm.
#28
BE Forum Addict
Joined: Feb 2013
Location: BC, Canada
Posts: 3,874
Re: Range cooker in Canada?
She hasn't found it yet but there just aren't enough buttons - just to set the time, temp and whether broiler or bake and off.
I've had a brief look online and I found the same make that looks identical except for coils and it advertises no delay feature.
Those that do feature delayed cook, I can see many more buttons in the pictures.
In the duplex I used to have, the original cookers plus the two I bought as replacements over the years, they all had it but thinking about it now, they were like the UK ones I knew where it's on the clock with hands rather like an old alarm clock - except that you set the start time and either push the knob in or pull out so it will come on later.
Although smaller cookers, they were much more expensive.
Our old cooker - bought around 2008 for $350 (down from $500) - had a clock display and timer. No other buttons at all.
Maybe that's why it was $150 off
I've had a brief look online and I found the same make that looks identical except for coils and it advertises no delay feature.
Those that do feature delayed cook, I can see many more buttons in the pictures.
In the duplex I used to have, the original cookers plus the two I bought as replacements over the years, they all had it but thinking about it now, they were like the UK ones I knew where it's on the clock with hands rather like an old alarm clock - except that you set the start time and either push the knob in or pull out so it will come on later.
Although smaller cookers, they were much more expensive.
Our old cooker - bought around 2008 for $350 (down from $500) - had a clock display and timer. No other buttons at all.
Maybe that's why it was $150 off
Yes, that's what our older ones had. This Maytag is a bit more complicated!!
I haven't actually worked out how the delay works ...... I tried it once, and it didn't come on when I wanted it to. But I'm not worried, because I'm usually in the house, and the times we need timed cooking is much less now than when we were working.
#29
BE Forum Addict
Joined: Feb 2013
Location: BC, Canada
Posts: 3,874
Re: Range cooker in Canada?
Hi Hurlabrick,
I empathise with you completely. We left our Alpha Range cooker behind and it seems here that kitchens are very much an after thought. It doesnt look like a lot of people here in Canada spend a lot of time baking cakes and breads or even the traditional sunday roast!!
Deep fried seems to be the order of the day unfortunately.
Our range cooker was oil fired which also heated our radiators and water. The bottom oven ran at 20% less than the top oven which was great for stews and casseroles. The top oven was great for things like the big bird at Christmas which just slid straight in there. If we ever get the chance over here I think we will design our own "Farmhouse Kitchen" some day. For now memories of those sweet aromas will have to suffice!!
I empathise with you completely. We left our Alpha Range cooker behind and it seems here that kitchens are very much an after thought. It doesnt look like a lot of people here in Canada spend a lot of time baking cakes and breads or even the traditional sunday roast!!
Deep fried seems to be the order of the day unfortunately.
Our range cooker was oil fired which also heated our radiators and water. The bottom oven ran at 20% less than the top oven which was great for stews and casseroles. The top oven was great for things like the big bird at Christmas which just slid straight in there. If we ever get the chance over here I think we will design our own "Farmhouse Kitchen" some day. For now memories of those sweet aromas will have to suffice!!
True!!!
Sunday roast dinner is very much an English thing, and has never really been as important here among non-English. Plus, it was never Sunday lunch as I remember it being in the UK ............... Sunday is for going out and doing things.
We've been here almost 50 years, and during that time, we might be invited out to dinner on any night of the week and be given a roast, but we were among the very few who had a habit of always having a roast on Sunday evening.
We still do have roast dinner on Sunday .....but buy much smaller roasts than we used to, there's only the two of us.
I wouldn't say that deep fried was the order of the day at home ......... but it is more likely to be anything other than a roast.
Nor do most people bake much other than cookies (biscuits to you) and muffins ............ although the "back to the earthers" are doing much more. People are much more likely to buy artisan breads from the local small bakery ........ well, they are here in BC!!!
One thing you do have to watch out for is the inside size of the oven when buying a new range ............. some are much smaller than the outside dimension would suggest because of the thick insulation and will never take a bird. Ours will take up to a 12 lb turkey for Thanksgiving and Christmas, with casseroles of sweet potatoes, stuffing etc etc on the bottom shelf. That was one reason why we bought the Maytag!
#30
Re: Range cooker in Canada?
Sometimes I have to work around watching the footie on the telly but it's easy enough to do bits and pieces before kick off and at half time or just eat a bit late. Occasionally I'll ask MIL to put something on at whatever time. Or if it's a really big game and I don't want to keep missing bits or possible extra time, I'll ask MIL to cook. Or order half price pizza from Domino's.
MIL and the stepkids have been converted. If we don't have a roast type dinner on a Sunday, stepdaughter especially misses it.