If We Have A War: 6 Outside Cooking Products
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If We Have a War: 6 Outside Cooking Products Every Household Needs. War, whether it arrives on our shores or disrupts the fragile systems we depend on, has a way of reminding us how thin the line is between comfort and crisis. Fuel pipelines, electrical grids, and supply chains are all targets, and they have all failed before during times of conflict.
The single most urgent skill your household can develop right now is the ability to cook a hot, nourishing meal outside, without electricity, without natural gas, and without a trip to the grocery store. The good news is that the right outside cooking products make this not only possible but surprisingly straightforward. Below are six tools that belong in every serious family preparedness plan, each proven and capable of feeding your family when everything else breaks down.
Matt reminded us to: Remember to cut the gas lines off should the neighborhood take damage before open flames. 4 in 1 Wrench Tool

If We Have A War: 6 Outside Cooking Products
1. The Sun Oven

Of all the outside cooking products available to the preparedness-minded household, the Sun Oven stands alone in one critical respect: it requires no fuel whatsoever. Harnessing direct sunlight through a series of reflective panels, a quality Sun Oven, such as the flagship All American Sun Oven, reaches temperatures between 360°F and 400°F, hot enough to bake bread, roast meat, cook rice, and even pasteurize water. In a war scenario where fuel becomes scarce, rationed, or weaponized, the sun remains the one resource that no enemy can cut off. Please note that where I live, I can only get mine to reach 350°F.
The cooking process with a Sun Oven is slower than conventional methods, generally running about the same time as a conventional oven, but it requires little attention once positioned. You may have to adjust the unit’s position slightly as the sun moves across the sky, but that’s an easy step. You place your pot or baking dish inside the insulated cooking chamber, angle the reflectors toward the sun, and step away. The oven holds heat remarkably well, and because it uses no open flame, it produces no smoke — a meaningful tactical advantage if you need to avoid drawing attention to yourself or your location.
Sun Ovens are also extraordinarily durable. The All American model is built with a heavy-gauge anodized aluminum interior and a tempered glass door that can withstand years of outdoor use. For long-term outside cooking, particularly in sunny climates across the American West and South, this is the cornerstone tool around which the rest of your cooking kit can be built.
The prices got up to $750.00, and now you can’t even get one. Check garage sales, eBay, or Google the phrase “All American Sun Oven”. I asked people for years to get one; those who did are sleeping well at night, trust me, I know. Keep in mind that in some locations, this product doesn’t work due to limited sunshine, so you’ll have to go a different route. They may have gone out of business. It’s a real shame, it’s a great product.
2. The Dutch Oven

The cast-iron Dutch Oven is arguably one of the oldest and most battle-tested outside cooking products in human history. Armies, pioneers, and homesteaders have cooked with these heavy, lidded pots for decades, and for good reason: they are essentially indestructible, they distribute heat with extraordinary evenness, and they can do virtually anything; bake, braise, fry, simmer, boil, and roast, over any heat source available, including an open wood fire, charcoal, propane, or even coals dug directly from the ground.
The camp Dutch Oven differs slightly from its kitchen counterpart in one important way: it has legs. Those three short legs allow it to sit directly over a bed of coals, and the flanged lid, flat with a rim around the edge, lets you pile additional coals on top, effectively turning the pot into a two-zone oven capable of producing biscuits, cobblers, casseroles, and stews that would be at home on any restaurant table. A 12-inch Dutch Oven will comfortably feed a family of four to six people.
For emergency outside cooking, the Dutch Oven pairs beautifully with whatever fuel source you have available. It works with firewood you scavenge, charcoal briquettes stored in your garage, or the wood fire in a Volcano Stove. Its weight, typically 10 to 15 pounds, is its only real drawback, making it less suited to bugging out on foot, but for sheltering in place, there is no more versatile or reliable outside cooking vessel on this list.
I prefer the 6-quart cast-iron Dutch oven with the rim around the lid with legs. Great for stacking other Dutch ovens on top to cook at the same time outdoors. 6-Quart Dutch Oven
3. The Volcano Stove & Grill

The Volcano Stove is one of those outside cooking products that, once you understand what it does, you wonder how you ever planned an emergency kit without it. It’s a collapsible, three-fuel cooking system that burns wood, charcoal, or propane interchangeably; switching between fuels takes only a few seconds and a simple adjustment to the fuel feed. In a wartime scenario where one fuel type may become unavailable at any given moment, that flexibility is worth more than almost any other single feature.
The stove itself is engineered as a truncated cone, hence the name, with an opening at the base for fuel and a grated cooking platform at the top. The conical shape creates a natural draft that draws air upward through the fire, producing a highly efficient burn that uses significantly less fuel than an open campfire while generating more concentrated, usable heat. This efficiency matters enormously when supplies are limited or when wood must be gathered by hand.
Beyond its triple-fuel design, the Volcano is remarkably versatile as an outside cooking platform. Its top grate accommodates a standard Dutch Oven, a cast-iron skillet, a stockpot, or a griddle plate, making it a true outdoor kitchen hub. A dedicated Volcano Grill attachment transforms it into a full BBQ grill capable of cooking everything from burgers to fish. The stove breaks down flat for storage and is made from heavy-gauge steel with a powder-coat finish that resists rust. For a family sheltering in place through an extended crisis, the Volcano Stove may be the single most important outside cooking purchase on this entire list.
The Volcano Stove is awesome. You can use charcoal, wood, and propane.
4. The Butane Stove

Speed, simplicity, and convenience are the hallmarks of the butane stove, and in an emergency outside cooking situation, those qualities have real value. When you need to boil water fast, heat up a meal for a sick family member, or cook something quickly before dusk, a butane stove delivers instant, controllable flame at the turn of a knob, no kindling, no lighter fluid, no waiting for coals to ash over. For outside cooking in the immediate aftermath of a crisis, butane stoves bridge the gap while longer-burning systems are set up.
A standard single-burner butane camp stove uses butane canisters that are inexpensive, widely available, and store for years without degrading. A single canister typically provides between 1 and 3 hours of cooking time, depending on the heat setting, so storing a case of 12 to 24 canisters gives you meaningful cooking capacity over an extended period. Butane performs best in mild temperatures; however, below 32°F, it begins to struggle, so in cold-weather emergencies or winter conflict scenarios, propane or multi-fuel options should take precedence.
The butane stove shines as a precision outdoor cooking tool for small meals and tasks that require precise heat control: sautéing vegetables, making sauces, simmering soups, or scrambling eggs. Some companies produce compact, wind-resistant models built for serious outdoor use that feel far more substantial than budget camp stoves sold in discount stores. Stock several spare burner heads along with your canisters, and include a butane stove in every outside cooking kit as the quick-response workhorse of your setup.
Every family needs a Butane Stove with Butane Fuel stocked.
Propane: Please store all propane tanks upright, not on their sides. Preferably away from your house, not in the garage, and somewhere they will stay dry. Rust is bad on them.
5. The Thermal Cooker

The thermal cooker, sometimes called a wonder cooker or fireless cooker, is perhaps the least well-known outside cooking product on this list, and that’s a genuine oversight in the preparedness community. The concept is simple and nearly magical: you bring your food to a boil or a vigorous simmer on any heat source, then transfer the cooking pot into a heavily insulated outer container that traps the heat inside. The food continues cooking entirely on retained thermal energy for the next two to eight hours, with no additional fuel required whatsoever.
In practice, this means you can prepare a pot of beans, stew, soup, or whole grains in the morning using your Volcano Stove or butane burner, seal it in the thermal cooker, and return to a fully cooked, piping-hot meal at lunchtime or dinner without spending a single additional BTU. For outside cooking in a fuel-scarce environment, that is a transformative capability. It effectively multiplies the productive output of every other fuel-burning stove in your kit.
High-quality thermal cookers are built with stainless steel inner pots that are dishwasher safe and designed for tens of thousands of cooking cycles. The outer insulated cases are typically hard-sided, with secure-latching lids that prevent heat loss and make the entire unit portable. A thermal cooker is also silent and produces no light, smoke, or detectable output after the initial cooking phase, another quiet tactical advantage for households that need to maintain a low profile during civil unrest. Every outside cooking system should include one.
Every family should have a Thermal Cooker, trust me, I use mine a lot.
6. The Kelly Kettle

Hot water is the foundation of survival cooking. It makes instant meals safe to eat, rehydrates freeze-dried food storage, sterilizes wounds, purifies drinking water, and provides the psychological comfort of a hot cup of tea, hot chocolate, or coffee in genuinely miserable circumstances. The Kelly Kettle, an Irish-designed, chimney-style water boiler manufactured since the 1890s, is the fastest and most fuel-efficient outdoor cooking tool ever devised for the sole purpose of boiling water quickly from virtually any biomass fuel.
The design is a double-walled aluminum or stainless steel kettle with a hollow fire chamber running up through its center. You build a small fire in the base using twigs, pine cones, dry leaves, bark, or any small dry biomass you can gather, then place the kettle over it. The chimney effect draws air up through the hollow core at high velocity, intensifying the burn and directing heat directly into the water surrounding the chamber. The result is that a 1.6-liter Kelly Kettle boils water in three to five minutes using only a small handful of sticks, no purchased fuel required.
This matters in a wartime, outdoor cooking scenario because it means your hot water supply depends on nothing more than your ability to gather small, dry debris from your surroundings. Forests, parks, backyards, and rural properties provide a continuous supply of natural fuel at no cost. The Kelly Kettle also supports a small pot attachment for its chimney top, allowing you to cook a simple meal or warm food simultaneously while boiling water below, a true two-course capability from a device that weighs less than two pounds. It’s the outside cooking tool that should live in every bug-out bag, every shelter-in-place kit, and every vehicle emergency bin in your household.
A Kelly Kettle is awesome for boiling water or cooking a small pan of soup. It uses free fuel, such as dried leaves, pine cones, and dried small branches from bushes or small trees.
My Series On If We Have A War
If We Have A War: 30 OTC Medications To Stock
If We Have a War: What Skills Will Homemakers Need?
If We Have A War: Stock These Ten Foods Now
If We Have A War: 25 Personal Hygiene Products
If We Have A War: Stock These Cast-Iron Pans
If We Have A War: Stock Paper Products Now
If We Have A War: Stock These First Aid Items
If We Have A War: Will You Have Enough Water?
If We Have A War: 6 Outside Cooking Products
If We Have A War: Stock These Cleaning Products
If We Have A War: What You Need To Grow Food
The Bottom Line
War, grid failure, or societal disruption doesn’t announce itself with enough lead time to improvise. The households that’ll feed themselves and their neighbors during the next major crisis are the ones building their outside cooking capability today, stocking the Sun Oven, seasoning the Dutch Oven, staging the Volcano Stove, changing the butane canisters, filling the thermal cooker, and keeping the Kelly Kettle dry and ready to light.
Final Word
These six outside cooking products are not luxuries. At the wrong moment, they are the difference between eating and not eating. Start acquiring them now, learn to use each one before you need it, and rotate your fuel supplies regularly. The time to prepare is always before the emergency arrives. May God bless this world, Linda














I’ve got several of these items and lots of propane for the grill as well as a trash can full of charcoal and lighter fluid. Remember to cut the gas lines off should the neighborhood take damage before open flames.
Hi Matt, its such a great feeling to have a stash of propane and charcoal with starter fluid. Great reminder on the gas lines. I am going to add that to the post, thank you! Linda
Scary times. I am glad we are prepared. I prefer the thermal cooker for most uses. It only needs to be cooked for a short time. Thanks for the good advice as usual.
Hi Janet, I wish every family would get one. They can be used for so many things. Road trips, power outages, family reunions, ball games!!! Love them! Linda
I’m interested in buying a thermal cooker and think this would be a great addition to my preps.
Hi Paula, you would love it, its great for so many things. Linda
I love the SunOven product, been using it for years
Hi Mark, I’m glad to see you love your Sun Oven. Linda
We have a gas grill the connects to the house natural gas but I am realizing that isn’t sufficient. A sun oven would be very iffy here….. back to the drawing board.
Hi Chris, oh you are lucky to have your gas grill hooked up to your natural gas line, love it! Linda
Hi Linda
Thank you for your very informative articles. I have a question about the propane stove. How should the propane canisters be safely stored?
Thank you!
Linda H.
Hi Linda, Please store all propane tanks upright, not on their sides. Preferably away from your house, not in the garage, and somewhere they will stay dry. Rust is bad on them. Thank you for your kind words, Linda
We have a propane cook stove in the house, a propane grill, a cast iron Dutch oven, and can always make a wood fire. We also have a big house propane tank, several grill tanks and a bigger tank for the generator. Plus propane fireplace (2), one for each end of the house. I do know how to bake cornbread on the stove top. Thanks to my grandmother.
If anyone prays, please pray that the government doesn’t take money from the Railroad Retirement fund to give to social security again. They borrowed 14 million years ago and refused to pay it back. The Railroad employees paid it back. This is theft! The government aka tax payers did not put any money in. Only railroad employees. If this happens, social security keeps going, but Railroad retirement gets cut.
Hi Deborah, I will send you a private email. I had some changes on my website today and I need to know if you get this email. You are prepared for sure. I think everyone should be worried about pensions, social security, etc. We need our government leaders to get together and pay those workers NOW! How would they feel if they didn’t paid. It’s not right. Linda
I have several of these, enough that we will be fine. Others I have easy ways to make something similar.
I have not tried out the Strawbox cooking yet, but I may get motivated to try this summer. You probably already have everything you need to make this simple straw box cooker: an ice chest/cooler; a folded bath towel (or use a thick layer of newspaper such as the big Sunday edition); a blanket or two (or a stack of old towels); a heavy pot with lid that fits inside the cooler. Do a google search for strawbox or hay box cooking and you will find multiple methods of making one. The thermal cooker will be smaller and probably more efficient but for those of us who can’t afford it yet, this will work until you do. I bought some thermal food jars and we can mix flavored or speciality oatmeal the night before and it will be ready to eat in the morning. Or we can mix the hot water with dehydrated/freeze dried meals in the morning and it will be ready by dinner. Each one only cooked a single serving so you have to be prepared for that.
For those of us without a Sun Oven, there is an old scout method of turning a cardboard box into an oven that would work. If you do a google search you can find directions on how to make one. The first time I saw one was on a scout camping trip and one group pulled one out and a gallon bag with a sausage and egg breakfast casserole that they poured into an aluminum pan and baked in the oven. It was pretty amazing. To make one, you need a good sized carboard box, a roll of heavy aluminum foil, a rack of some sort, something to hold the rack up, a pie pan to hold charcoal. For the rack, a cookie cooling rack will work.
I have the one burner butane stove plus a two burner propane camp stove. Outside we have a fire pit with a grill plus a propane grill. Hubby just bought a small camping fire pit with grill that runs on propane. This allows us to have a campfire when you can’t burn wood or charcoal due to high fire danger.
Hi Topaz, you have some great ideas, I love them! We need to know how to cook with different items when we have a disaster or power outage. Good job!! Linda