Sounds interesting.
Any pictures Ian?
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fair comment, but I'm not talking about watching the roast, I'm talking about watching the bush telly - the fire itself :D I guess some music would drown it out, but any noise from an electric motor is too much IMHO.
when I was living in Oz and camping frequently, the fire was started, the food went on and the camp went up in that order, by the time you sit down to eat, it's already dark (in winter) or still day light for another 3 hours (in summer).
A mate acquired a 240 volt commercial spit roast assembly at a liquidation auction. It will accomodate a pig, a sheeep or a hindquarter of beef. To cook a pig for serving late afternoon/early evening you start in the morning at least 6-8 hours cooking time. He roasted a smoked and cured hindquarter of beef once. This took twelve hours. This is export stuff for the European gourmet trade. "Donated" by a waterfront worker in return for some Bobcat work. A keg of Guiness, a four gallon of bulk red, and a good time was had by all.
Hi Guys
No worries, I will take a few photo's and see if I have the intelligence
to figure out how to upload them. Stevo and Camo, if you want I will bring it up to the Hinterland Hotel next Thursday night if you want and you can have a gander.
Cheers Ian
PS. I want royalties :)
avalookathisantellmewatchathink!
I have a grill plate that sits on top of the angles you can see inside the lid so
we can cook in a saucepan or frypan (bacon & eggs:woot:) or I can pull it out set up a row of heat beads in a wire basket that sits in the bottom like a cob cooker and do a roast on the spit. I have also just sat the camp oven on the grill plate and done a roast in that,with the stainless steel holding the heat I can cook a roast for a family of four in about 1-1/4 hrs.The cross bar
can be lowered to just above the closed lid and locked into place so you can carry it away when not required. It was a work in progress for about 6 months until I thought it was right;)
Cheers Ian