If these toy pots are aluminum then you really shouldn’t be cooking with them. It’s not good for you body, poisonous if you cook anything acidic.. You can use stainless steel all day long.
I’ve been thinking of getting this set for my kit. I will probably season the pans because I suspect the surface isn’t polished like quality cookware. It’s the polish that makes cookware safer for cooking. Less porosity means less opportunity for bacteria to become established. I’m hoping that seasoning will accomplish the same end as high polish. Otherwise, 316 stainless steel is regarded as safe for cooking. Maybe IKEA’s warning is to avoid liability if children actually use these for cooking and are injured? I don’t know the answer but I shudder at the thought. I had never heard of putting hot dogs in spaghetti until my daughter married a Hoosier. Apparently it’s a thing in Indiana.
@@dianeclemmer1344 I have since purchased a “stainless steel” item that was made in China. Notably, a grill with folding legs for campfire cooking. The legs warped on the first use. That shouldn’t have happened to food grade stainless steel at that temperature. I have heard that the quality standards in China are very poor. I’m inclined to believe it. I don’t know the country of origin, but I wouldn’t cook with those toy pans. Who knows what could leech out into your food. Especially if you cook something acidic.
@@gins8781 exactly what I was thinking about! I don't know where they were made? Ikea sells it! It is cute! And just the right size for what they want! Some of the camping equipment is better than others! I was kinda impressed with the Stanley even heat! Made nice! I try not to buy anything from China! Don't know what or how it's made?
This list is useful too, what you guys think?: *survivalinnature.com/top-10-best-survival-cooking-gear?9i* It really helped me choose the right item 5:52
Hey mind if I ask, what do you recommend for CR123A and AA and AAA cheap/good storage? Those I can find on Amazon but just wondering if you had any other ideas for those. Thanks for this video Im seriously thrilled about this haha.
I just spent several hours trying to find a CR2032 holder.... If you made up a batch of those I bet you could sell a ton of them.... Great idea... Thanks.
You can't store them on top of each other that's the whole point. When you do that, they drain each other. I love your idea but you can only put one battery in each lens side.
Even if you have a stack of batteries in series, + to -, + to -, etc if if the top terminal of the top battery and the bottom terminal of the bottom battery are not in contact you are not creating a closed circuit and thus no drain. Or as others have put it simply, place a piece of paper in between each battery cell and you have isolated every one of them in the stack. Simple and cheap. By the way, this idea is brilliant. Thank you very much for the video post!
That cook-set is not for cooking it's very toxic, Ikea didn't let me buy it since it's not stainless steel, it's stainless still plated on iron. Hobo stove is ok but the rest you can play with.
@@xask0wuz0here Makes sense as children would probably want to play with real food and Ikea knows that. Making it safe would be in their best interests.
I use cast iron all the time. I would just treat it like ceramic: silicone utensils, no harsh scrubby, etc. Seasoning it first, like a Commenter suggested, seems like a good idea.
Bowl pan also known as a wok. The cooking utensils that are made for this, are worth it for the spatula. I carry the full set car camping and partial kit for hotel staying. For hotel camping pairs well with a travel hot pot. Don't ever use hotel appliances. I've seen every bodily fluid, yes EVERY bodily fluid possible in a coffee pot one time or another...50/10 for ew factor.
For those talking about the handles, they provide the option to have a cord slip through them to tie then together then slip inside a sack for taking on the trail and storing.
Did you try frying in the pan? Will things stick, since it's only a layer of steel? You could use the 'wok' pan, you had the sauce in, to eat out of, it would be good to hold with the long handle.
But it’s NOT ‘Food grade Stainless Steel’ hence being capable of leeching bad stuff into whatever your cooking, Pretend cook pots for kids, makes a damn good Hobo Stove tho,
It's not just a pasta strainer, it's a steamer. The round bottomed pan is a Wok and if you are packing ultra light it's all you really need. The pot and lid are nice if you want to make soup. The only reason I might bring the flat pan was if it works as a lid for the Wok. I would leave the steamer at home. No one I know picks and steams fresh vegetables on the trail. That candle thing is too well ventilated to work as a windscreen.
At 3.29 into the vid the main cookpot of the DUKTIG 001.301.67 set is put on top of a ORDNING 300.11.32 Utentisl holder- Aka IKEA HoBo stove... Q: Will the cook-pot "NEST" within the Hobo stove? ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-oIo5rwKHYdA.htmlm28s
where did you get the bag that you are using for your cook kit it looks like it works out real well I think I will buy one and buy one of those cook kits God bless have a great day
It probably has something to do with the metal formulary. In a play setting even with a kid chewing on it there probably isn't an issue but add heat. It's a similar Idea to BPA in plastic. At room temp BPA leaches at such a slow rate that it is safe but add heat and the leach rate increases 55+ percent. www.scientificamerican.com/article/plastic-not-fantastic-with-bisphenol-a/