jonw wrote:I just bought the 5.5L model from SaratogaJacks and will experiment with it over the winter at home.
Also thinking it will by easier, cleaner, lighter, and more efficient than camping with a DO, although
perhaps not as flexible.
Will report back later...
Maybe JonW and I have started a trend by buying the SaratogaJacks 5.5 liter thermal cookers for home and camping. It seems to me to be the right size for a single person or a couple. Big enough to cook for two and to have leftovers for another meal. The information at Amazon.com says it weighs 8 pounds. Much lighter than a 10" or 12" Dutch Oven. There are two cooking pots with this cooker. One is 5.5L and the other one is 2L. The 2L one fits inside (on top of) the 5.5L pot.
It will be very different than cooking with charcoal and a Dutch Oven. I can quickly heat the cook pots on my propane stove when I camp. Then put them inside the insulated outer pot and go about my day (or night) until meal time hours later. I'm anticipating it will be more of an "everyday" cooker than my Dutch Ovens which I think I'll continue using on special occasions.
Here is the Amazon.com link for the 5.5L SaratogaJacks thermal cooker and reviews for it:
amazon.com/Saratoga-Jacks-Thermal-Cooker-Deluxeand Lodge Dutch Ovens for comparisons sake:
Lodge Dutch OvensAmazon says the shipping weight of a 12" Lodge DO is 21 pounds. That is about 2-1/2 times heavier than the 5.5L thermal cooker. The Amazon reviews and Q&As will answer many/most of your likely questions. People seem to be well satisfied. SaretogaJacks cost about half the price of many other, slightly more efficient, thermal cookers. That's more than good enough for me to try one out.
One answer to a question on Amazon wrote:
Just went and measured it. It's about 11 inches tall (the whole thing not just the pot) and 10 inches wide. How many people? I guess that depends on what you are making. I fairly regularly make a lentil stew and we generally have enough for 2 meals for myself and my girlfriend. If you just use the bigger pot and not the inner small one certainly you could feed 4-6 people I think, depends on what you are eating I suppose. It's almost 6 quarts if that helps.
Measurement of the actual pots are 8 inch diameter by about 6 1/2 tall for the big one, and the inner is like 7 1/2 by 3 inches tall. With the pots together they are basically the identical volume for each part you can actually cook in EG the bigger pot has about a 3 inch deep by 8 inch diameter space still available. The more full it is to begin with the better, in fact if you were to use it to cook a smaller meal I'd suggest you put boiling water in the top pot to take up space and add heat.
The size seems compact enough to easily fit/store in a teardrop galley.
