Under the Choko Tree By Nevin Sweeney

Making a Fabric Stored Heat Cooker (Wonderbag)

I have always wanted to try out a stored heat cooker based on an insulation filled fabric bag. They are light and easily portable, cheap to make and from what I can gather work tolerably well. A friend of ours has one she keeps in a cane basket and it looks pretty good and she likes it. So we got together with some friends one Saturday afternoon and made one, it was lots of fun and we had a great time. I would recommend it as a great activity for friends and family and you get a stored heat cooker at the end of it. For more details on how to use a stored heat cooker, have a look here.

We got the original idea for a “Wonder Bag” from the New Life, New Purpose Blog.

The basic idea is that you cut out two circles of fabric, place one on top of the other and sew a small circle in the centre which becomes the bottom when filled with polystyrene foam bean bag beans. Then sew a dozen or more radiating lines from the central circle, out to the circumference of the circle. Fill each segment formed by the stitches with polystyrene beads and sew the open end shut. Sew on a draw string around the circumference of the circle and then draw it up tight around the pot you wish to cook in. Then make up a circular “cushion” filled with beans to sit on the top, inside the draw string, to prevent heat being lost through there.

Simple hey?

The pattern can be downloaded here.

This is how we made ours, in a bit more detail –

1. Get hold of the fabric you want to use.  (You will need at least two and a half metres of cloth.)

2.  It should be capable of putting up with contact with pots at 100⁰C so a natural 100% cotton fibre material is probably best, for the inside at least. Fold the material in half and draw a 95cm circle on the fabric by putting a pencil in the centre, tying string onto it and then place some tailors chalk or soap at the 100cm mark on the string. Using the pen as a pivot, draw the circle with the tailors chalk or soap.

Setting out

3. Cut out the circle, this will give you two disks of cloth. Turn the cloth so that the “wrong Sides” are together so that the pattern side of the cloth will be visible from inside and outside the bag.

4. Choose the pot you will be using inside your wonder bag and place it directly in the centre of your circle. Trace around the bottom of your pot with the tailors chalk or soap so that you have a circle drawn in the centre of the cloth disks the same size as your pot. This will most likely give you a circle 150mm – 200mm diameter.

The beans

5. Sew the two disks together using the centre circle but leave about 50mm unstitched, then use this gap to fill the centre circle with polystyrene beans until it is 20-25mm thick. Then sew the 50mm gap closed to form a central disk.

6. Lay out the cloth disks on a flat surface and draw 12 lines with the chalk or soap from the central circle out to the circumference of the cloth disk so that they are roughly equal distance from each other.

7. Sew each line through both cloth disks from the circumference of the disk, into the central disk, forming 12 segments. Leaving a 2cm seam allowance fill each segment with bean bag beans. We found the easiest way to do this was to get hold of a 1 or 2 litre plastic or glass jug, pour the beans from the plastic bag into the jug then fill a segment using the jug(s). The 2 cm seam allowance will leave enough room to sew the segment shut. It works best if you fill one segment and then sew it shut before starting on the next one. Or the beans get EVERYWHERE!

8. Once all segments have been filled and sewn shut sew bias binding around the circumference of the bag. When we did ours the bias binding turned out to be about 35cm short, but rather than add on the extra, we simply hemmed it and it allowed us to pull in the top a bit tighter.

9. When the bias binding is in place, tie some cord or ribbon (we used thin ribbon) onto a safety pin and push it through the inside of the bias binding to form a draw string. It is just a case then of slowly working the draw string so that the edges of the segmented disk is drawn up into a cup shape around the pot to be used for cooking.

10. To make the top pillow cut out two disks of the same cloth as the cooker, a bit larger than the opening at the top of the cooker, ours came out at 260mm in diameter. Pot the disks right side together and sew around the edge leaving 9-10 cm unsewn. Turn the sewn disk inside out so the fabric is right side out and fill with bean bag beans. Then sew the opening closed to stop the beans escaping.

The top

Your wonderbag is now complete and ready to start cooking in!

 

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