The most commonly used fuel for cooking stoves in 1900 was wood.
Optimus of Sweden manufactures cook stoves specifically designed for cooking outdoors, such as when camping. They also carry accessories such as cookware safe to use with their cook stoves, tools for turning and skewering food on the cook stove and fuel for the stove including propane, butane and isobutane.
cooking stoves, lamps, trains ran on it.
You can't cheat. Codes have been disabled on FB and MS. You can use faster stoves such as Lightning Stoves & the 50% Stoves. (Cut cooking time by 10% or 50%) You can use spices. (Speed up by 1hr, 6hrs, 12hrs or instant cook) :-)
There are many examples, depending upon the use. Most often, liquid fuel is described as an option as compared to solid fuel. Rockets are one example where both solid and liquid fuels may be used. Liquid hydrogen is the common rocket liquid fuel. Cooking stoves can use solid or liquid fuel, in addition to gas. The most common cooking stove liquid fuel is alcohol.
You can use butane as a fuel for portable stoves and cigarette lighters
Stoves, bbqs, ovens,... Pretty much what other countries in the west use.
ADVANTAGES OF GAS STOVEaccurate cooking temperatureevenly distributed heatlower heat emissionsfaster cooking timedo not use power
Most camping stoves use propane.Propane is a three-carbonalkalinea formula called C3H8, normally a gas.
No, not unless the stove was made and sold to you as being able to use gasoline as a fuel (some army camping stoves will do this but normal household stoves are not designed for this fuel).
Not exactly, propane {LPG} uses an open flame for cooking, same as Natural Gas or wood fires or butane stoves. To use petrol, {oil, or natural gasoline, or even bitumen tar} special stoves are used that do not expose the food to the fumes from the flame. Much like a wood stove, coal stove or pellet stove, these stoves are sealed and you cook atop a cast iron or soapstone stovetop much like you would an electric stove. ** natural gasoline a.k.a. white gas or Coleman stove fuel, is highly volatile and not recommended for indoor use. "Coleman" stoves using white gas, are specifically designed for the use of a pot which separates the fumes from the food. These stoves are expressly designed for camping and have been generally replaced with propane stoves. ***Sterno fuel is jellied "natural gas" or more correctly methyl alcohol (poisonous), some similar fuels use ethanol as well. It is not petrol.
Most countries use petroleum (in cars) and natural gas (in cooking stoves).
If not, We burn our hands.