what cooker if money was no object

I am staggered that nobody has asked 'what do you want to cook?' In my opinion, this is a crucial factor. Do you want to heat soup and make porridge, or prepare things a bit more interesting?
 
Just throwing this out there....
If money was no object, I'd never cook again and eat out all the time!
If I got caught out on the boat I'd BBQ on the Magna.

haha! you know me so well!


I am staggered that nobody has asked 'what do you want to cook?' In my opinion, this is a crucial factor. Do you want to heat soup and make porridge, or prepare things a bit more interesting?

We want to cook what everyone else wants to cook. Usual day to day food for two to six people.
Money is no object to the OP
Well, not quite true. I said IF money was no object.... I'm just trying to find out what our options are and whether it's worth saving up for something really ace. We have loved the Wallas and like Gladys said elsewhere, it has probably last 20 years (and is still limping along) - so we would seriously consider spending the money on another one.
 
I am staggered that nobody has asked 'what do you want to cook?' In my opinion, this is a crucial factor. Do you want to heat soup and make porridge, or prepare things a bit more interesting?
What can you cook on a gas cooker that you can't on a Taylors or an Origo?
 
What can you cook on a gas cooker that you can't on a Taylors or an Origo?

The question is not the range of food you can cook, but the capacity. Cooking for 6 on a typical yacht cooker of any type is a challenge unless you want to restrict yourself to one pot type meals.
 
The question is not the range of food you can cook, but the capacity. Cooking for 6 on a typical yacht cooker of any type is a challenge unless you want to restrict yourself to one pot type meals.
What does the fuel type have to do with the cooking capacity? I could easily produce a good tasty meal for 6 on our Origo. Although finding somewhere for the diners to sit would be a problem :rolleyes:
 
What can you cook on a gas cooker that you can't on a Taylors or an Origo?

It's not so much what you can cook but how well. I currently have an Origo style meths cooker. Firstly it's quite thirsty and also a little slow. However my main issue is that the pan never reaches a sufficiently high temperature to cook some items. Most of the time this is not real issue but in my experince gas enables you to cook at a slightly higher temeperature required for some things where browning of meat, for example, is required. Compare frying steak on an Origo with gas and you'll see and tase the difference.

I appreciate that most people are not trying to create a Michelin star level of cuisine but the cooking temperature can make a big difference to the taste of food; it might go some way to boosting crew moral on a dark cold miserable night.
 
It's not so much what you can cook but how well. I currently have an Origo style meths cooker. Firstly it's quite thirsty and also a little slow. However my main issue is that the pan never reaches a sufficiently high temperature to cook some items. Most of the time this is not real issue but in my experince gas enables you to cook at a slightly higher temeperature required for some things where browning of meat, for example, is required. Compare frying steak on an Origo with gas and you'll see and tase the difference.

I appreciate that most people are not trying to create a Michelin star level of cuisine but the cooking temperature can make a big difference to the taste of food; it might go some way to boosting crew moral on a dark cold miserable night.
I can't say I have noticed anything like that, however 12 years eating food cooked by RN cooks has probably done irreparable damage to my palate. :(
 
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