Kitchen stove
A kitchen stove, cooking stove, cookstove, or cooker is a kitchen appliance designed for cooking food.
Stoves use direct heat for cooking and have an oven for baking. The design uses wood, coke or anthracite for fuel. The basic idea is that the stove completely encloses the fire inside its iron body. There are still many traditional stoves made, which burn wood or solid fuel. Many also have back boilers for domestic heating.
Gas stoves are different, because they have open flames on top of the stove, whereas the original stoves have hidden flames. Modern gas stoves were developed already in the 1820s, but these were isolated experiments. At the Great Exhibition in London in 1851, a gas stove was shown, but only in the 1880s did this technology start to become a commercial success. The main factor in this delay was the slow growth of the gas pipe network. Gas and electric stoves have largely replaced solid fuel stoves.
Kitchen Stove Media
A stove at Holzwarth Ranch, Colorado
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Indonesian traditional brick stove, used in some rural areas
An 18th-century Japanese merchant's kitchen with copper Kamado (Hezzui), Fukagawa Edo Museum
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Section of Rumford fireplace, invented by Sir Benjamin Thompson.
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A 19th-century stove made in Budapest exhibited in the Međimurje County Museum, Croatia
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Early gas stoves produced by Windsor in Mrs Beeton's Book of Household Management, 1904.
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Australian patent (1905) for an "electric cooking stove", also known as "The Kalgoorlie Stove".
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A modern 3-oven AGA cooker