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- Earth_oven abstract "An earth oven or cooking pit is one of the most simple and long-used cooking structures (not to be confused with the masonry oven). At its simplest, an earth oven is simply a pit in the ground used to trap heat and bake, smoke, or steam food. Earth ovens have been used in many places and cultures in the past, and the presence of such cooking pits is a key sign of human settlement often sought by archaeologists, and remain a common tool for cooking large quantities of food where no equipment is available.Earth ovens have been used in various civilizations over the world, and are still commonly found in the Pacific.To bake food, the fire is built, then allowed to burn down to a smoulder, and the food is placed in the oven and covered (this can be used for bread-baking, for example, and has been used in some cultures for soldiers on military expeditions). Steaming is similar; fire-heated rocks are put into a pit and are covered with green vegetation to add moisture, large quantities of food, more green vegetation (and sometimes water) if more moisture is needed to create the steam that is needed to cook the food, and then a final covering of earth is added over everything. The food in the pit can take up to several hours to almost a full day to cook, whether by dry or wet methods.Today, many communities still use cooking pits, at least for ceremonial or celebratory occasions: the Indigenous Fijian lovo, the Hawaiian luau, Māori hāngi and the New England clam bake. The central Asian tandoor, used primarily for uncovered, live-fire baking, is a transitional design between the earth oven and the horizontal-plan masonry oven, essentially a permanent earth oven made out of clay or firebrick with a constantly burning, very hot fire in the bottom. In modern times, earth ovens are sometimes used for outdoor cooking and recreational meals in lieu of an open campfire.".
- Earth_oven thumbnail Samoa_umu.JPG?width=300.
- Earth_oven wikiPageExternalLink sec_cook.html.
- Earth_oven wikiPageExternalLink watia.
- Earth_oven wikiPageExternalLink P199_13436.
- Earth_oven wikiPageExternalLink phenom_nov97.htm.
- Earth_oven wikiPageExternalLink pit.html.
- Earth_oven wikiPageExternalLink index.php?m=83&s=&i=1793.
- Earth_oven wikiPageID "3168896".
- Earth_oven wikiPageRevisionID "600362979".
- Earth_oven hasPhotoCollection Earth_oven.
- Earth_oven subject Category:Cooking_appliances.
- Earth_oven subject Category:Cooking_techniques.
- Earth_oven subject Category:Earth_oven.
- Earth_oven type Appliance102729965.
- Earth_oven type Artifact100021939.
- Earth_oven type CookingAppliances.
- Earth_oven type Device103183080.
- Earth_oven type Instrumentality103575240.
- Earth_oven type Object100002684.
- Earth_oven type PhysicalEntity100001930.
- Earth_oven type Whole100003553.
- Earth_oven comment "An earth oven or cooking pit is one of the most simple and long-used cooking structures (not to be confused with the masonry oven). At its simplest, an earth oven is simply a pit in the ground used to trap heat and bake, smoke, or steam food.".
- Earth_oven label "Earth oven".
- Earth_oven label "Erdofen".
- Earth_oven label "Horno de tierra".
- Earth_oven sameAs Erdofen.
- Earth_oven sameAs Horno_de_tierra.
- Earth_oven sameAs m.08ws5w.
- Earth_oven sameAs Q473594.
- Earth_oven sameAs Q473594.
- Earth_oven sameAs Earth_oven.
- Earth_oven wasDerivedFrom Earth_oven?oldid=600362979.
- Earth_oven depiction Samoa_umu.JPG.
- Earth_oven isPrimaryTopicOf Earth_oven.