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  2. Aroma Housewares - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aroma_Housewares

    In 1977, Peter Chang founded Aroma Housewares in Southern California focusing on ovens. By 1981, Chang had expanded to nine locations across San Diego and Los Angeles counties. Aroma introduced their first electric product in 1988, the Aeromatic Turbo Oven. Aroma added rice cookers in 1992 which became their most popular product.

  3. Roasting pan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roasting_pan

    A large roasting pan with a removable rack and a non-stick surface coating. A roasting pan or dripping pan is a piece of cookware used for roasting meat in an oven, either with or without vegetables or other ingredients. A roasting pan may be used with a rack that sits inside the pan and lets the meat sit above the fat and juice drippings.

  4. Rumford roaster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rumford_roaster

    The Rumford roaster is an early cast iron oven, invented by Sir Benjamin Thompson, Count Rumford, [1] around 1800. [2] It was part of his development of the kitchen range, which gave more control of the cooking and saved fuel. [3] He published his research in 1805. [4] The Rumford roaster is a cylinder of cast-iron set into a brick wall.

  5. Coffee roasting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coffee_roasting

    15th-century coffee roasting pan and stirring spoon from Baghdad Free standing tin coffee roaster. The first known implements for roasting coffee beans were thin, circular, often perforated pans made from metal or porcelain, used in the 15th century in the Ottoman Empire and Greater Persia.

  6. Roasting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roasting

    Slow-roasting pig on a rotisserie Tudor style roasting meat on a spit. Roasting is a cooking method that uses dry heat where hot air covers the food, cooking it evenly on all sides with temperatures of at least 150 °C (300 °F) from an open flame, oven, or other heat source.

  7. Roaster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roaster

    Roaster may refer to: A device for coffee preparation. Corn roaster; Convection roaster; Pig roaster; Hot Jupiter, a type of extrasolar planet; One who participates ...

  8. List of American cast-iron cookware manufacturers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_American_cast-iron...

    From the early 1900s through the 1970s, Birmingham Stove & Range foundry produced a line of cast-iron pans that are described as "unmarked" as they had no manufacturer logo or other identifying mark. These "unmarked" cast-iron skillets and pans from Birmingham Stove & Range are widely available and used on a daily basis, even in the present day.

  9. Cast-iron cookware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cast-iron_cookware

    An American cast-iron Dutch oven, 1896. In Asia, particularly China, India, Korea and Japan, there is a long history of cooking with cast-iron vessels. The first mention of a cast-iron kettle in English appeared in 679 or 680, though this wasn't the first use of metal vessels for cooking.