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engine block cooking

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by croxxedmember, Apr 22, 2010.

  1. croxxedmember
    Joined: Apr 16, 2010
    Posts: 159

    croxxedmember
    Member

    i want to know. know one i have met besides my dad has ever cooked any thing on a engine block. i haven't done it myself, but i have cooked two hot pockets on a black and yellow 1963 California license plate. i just put them under a very hot halogen track light. took a while, but it got the job done.
     
  2. pasadenahotrod
    Joined: Feb 13, 2007
    Posts: 11,772

    pasadenahotrod
    Member
    from Texas

    There were actually cook books about this subject which gave hints on where to and what to cook when doing the culinary thing under the hood. Mostly had to do with camping and hunting trips.
     
  3. Jmountainjr
    Joined: Dec 29, 2006
    Posts: 1,897

    Jmountainjr
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Not sure if you call it cooking, but back when military rations were in metal cans (C-rations) instead of plastic and I was driving in convoy I'd take a can of beans, stew, etc., make a small hole in one end to vent it and wire it on the engine exhaust manifold at one rest halt and remove it at the next to have hot chow.
     
  4. fast30coupe
    Joined: Nov 15, 2009
    Posts: 1,021

    fast30coupe
    Member
    from Illinois

    My uncle works construction and cook stuff on his cat. he just ****s it in tin foil and lets it heat up!
     
  5. spinalremains
    Joined: Apr 3, 2010
    Posts: 108

    spinalremains
    Member

    he ****s his cat???
     
  6. I remember when the Hot Rod magazine guys put some miles on Billy Gibbons Cadzilla, they were cooking hot tamales on the engine.
     
  7. junk yard kid
    Joined: Nov 11, 2007
    Posts: 2,717

    junk yard kid
    Member

  8. phukinartie
    Joined: Oct 8, 2008
    Posts: 965

    phukinartie
    Member

    My dad hauled equipment on the alaska pipeline he cooked off the manifold alot
    My buddy just bought a snowmobile [older] with a food warmer on the header
     
  9. spinalremains
    Joined: Apr 3, 2010
    Posts: 108

    spinalremains
    Member

    hey JYK- i think fast30coupe's uncle should read your signature
     
  10. croxxedmember
    Joined: Apr 16, 2010
    Posts: 159

    croxxedmember
    Member

    do you know if any are in braille?
     
  11. Jax2A
    Joined: Apr 14, 2009
    Posts: 420

    Jax2A
    Member

    Used to heat canned food up on my Jeep manifold while trail riding and camping as a kid. A can of Spaghetti-O's taught me that you need to make sure you vent them first. Clean up ****ed.
     
  12. Spooky
    Joined: Mar 3, 2001
    Posts: 2,525

    Spooky
    Member

  13. Model A Speedster
    Joined: Jan 31, 2010
    Posts: 52

    Model A Speedster
    Member

    I've cooked some good meals on a Model A Ford manifold. Marinate some stewing beef overnight, peel some potatoes, onions and carrots, wrap tightly in foil, and wire it to the manifold. You can start to smell it after about ten miles. It is fully cooked after about 30-35 miles (that would be about an hour in Model A time...). If not, re-wrap, rewire, and drive around the block a couple more times. What leaks out onto the manifold usually burns off after a while. Unwrap, salt and pepper to taste and enjoy! You can actually buy a manifold cooker from Snyder's 2010 catalog.
     
  14. croxxedmember
    Joined: Apr 16, 2010
    Posts: 159

    croxxedmember
    Member

    thanks for telling me the right place to cook the food. i can't really see, so it would be hard to find it myself.
     
  15. croxxedmember
    Joined: Apr 16, 2010
    Posts: 159

    croxxedmember
    Member

    thanks alot you guys. no one at my school knows how to do it. i am pretty sure their manafolds are covered with plastic shrowds and h**** symbols. i edited that because my mom taught me not to cuss. the h word is the worst of them all.
     
  16. 61bone
    Joined: Feb 12, 2005
    Posts: 890

    61bone
    Member

    Is that the Honda word?
     
  17. low-n-slo54
    Joined: Jul 25, 2009
    Posts: 1,919

    low-n-slo54
    Member

    hahahahaha!!
     
  18. impalabuilder
    Joined: Oct 6, 2007
    Posts: 106

    impalabuilder
    Member
    from NJ

    and his nephew brags about it

    :)
     
  19. 1950ChevySuburban
    Joined: Dec 20, 2006
    Posts: 6,185

    1950ChevySuburban
    Member Emeritus
    from Tucson AZ

    Reading the heading reminded me of how some of the old NASCAR guys would dig a big hole, toss a new block in it, then BBQ it. Seasoned the cast iron.
    There. How to do engine block cooking. ;)
     
  20. Ebbsspeed
    Joined: Nov 11, 2005
    Posts: 6,479

    Ebbsspeed
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    I've warmed up canned soup on the manifold of the tractor several times, never done any car cookery. I've also made fish in the dishwasher. Wrap fish, ****er and ****es in several layers of tinfoil, put it in the fishwasher along with the dishes, and when the dishes are finished, so are the fishes.
     
  21. mustangsix
    Joined: Mar 7, 2005
    Posts: 1,541

    mustangsix
    Member

    Me too. Worked good except for that one time I forgot the vent hole and had beenie weenie all over the engine compartment of my jeep. My driver was not pleased......:mad:
     
  22. croxxedmember
    Joined: Apr 16, 2010
    Posts: 159

    croxxedmember
    Member

    yep, shhhh! in my shop, that is a 5$ cuss word.
     
  23. croxxedmember
    Joined: Apr 16, 2010
    Posts: 159

    croxxedmember
    Member

    that is awsome! can you do it like a bad*** and have the fish come out on the plate ready to eat?
     
  24. SlamIam
    Joined: Oct 8, 2007
    Posts: 468

    SlamIam
    Member

    Thought everybody cooked on their engine. Dad had to stay at work until 5pm the night before Trout season opened, but he always had our dinner ready when we hit our favorite camp spot next to the river at 9pm. The stove was a 46 Dodge flat 6.

    Some people fastened wire baskets on the engine so the food wouldn't fall off.
     
  25. I used to drive 10 yard dump trucks.
    Head for the asphalt plant, pick up 14 tons of 1/2 inch rock asphalt (at 350 degrees when it comes out of the chute) toss my burrito or whatever (wrapped in foil, of course) in the back, drive 20 minutes back to the jobsite, and voila! nice hot lunch...
     
  26. 303racer
    Joined: Aug 23, 2006
    Posts: 584

    303racer
    Member

    ive cooked a can of soup on my slead in the back county
     
  27. walker
    Joined: Dec 29, 2008
    Posts: 236

    walker
    Member

    "he just ****s it in tin foil and lets it heat up" Man thats rough, and I thought I ate some tough meals, I just set mine on the exhaust manifold for a while before lunch.
     
  28. narlee
    Joined: Dec 7, 2009
    Posts: 240

    narlee
    Member

    I worked for the railroad and it was common to heat things up on the engines.
     
  29. roddinron
    Joined: May 24, 2006
    Posts: 2,676

    roddinron
    Member

    Back in the 70's during the van craze, we'd travel a lot to van fests, and we cooked on the motor all the time. My wife would tell me what needed more heat or less, and I'd place them strategically along the manifold. When our caravan group reached the van in, we'd "circle the wagons" and chow down. We made some really good meals that way!:D
     
  30. Buick59
    Joined: Mar 3, 2001
    Posts: 1,995

    Buick59
    Member
    from in a house

    WHAHAHHHHTTT! ****** cats is a crime!!
     

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