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Sunflair Mini Portable Solar Oven

$157.50

(2 customer reviews)

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  • #1 Portable Solar Oven from Alaska to Afghanistan! Cook from sun-up to sundown.
  • Includes: 1 solar oven thermometer, 1 trivet, 1 collapsible silicone pot, and a handy stuff bag. No assembly required. Easy to use. Sets up and stores in seconds.
  • Cook where open flames are not allowed. Possible to cook in some vehicles. (Cook Responsibly!)
  • World’s lightest and easiest solar oven; floats and dries quickly; folds to the size of a laptop; hiking, boating, fishing, beach, construction sites, RV-ing, tiny houses, camper trailers, educational learning, emergencies, bug out bags, and zombie apocalypse.
  • Meets FDA, EU, and Prop 65 standards

Additional information

Brand

Sunflair

Control Type

Knob

Included Components

Carry Bag

Item Weight

1.25 pounds

Power Source

Solar Powered

Product Dimensions

13 x 5 x 11 inches

Department

unisex-adult

Manufacturer

Sunflair

Item model number

FBAMini

Is Discontinued By Manufacturer

No

Date First Available

February 27, 2015

2 reviews for Sunflair Mini Portable Solar Oven

  1. Shel S

    I have been getting into solar cooking lately and bought this mini version to take with me camping. I have found this a great way to heat up items. I really like the compact size of it. Easily fits in the car and I can justify the space used. I have used it to make baked apples, warm up pre cooked or canned foods, and I even put my cold brew coffee in the night before and used the sunrise to warm up my coffee. This did work, it just took a couple hours so not perfect for early risers but if you are going to sleep in worked just as I hoped. Didn’t have to use the stove to make coffee. Just pulled it out of the solar oven. So far the highest temperature I have been able to get it to is 225 degrees. What I plan to do for my next trip is freeze some left overs in round dishes to take with in the cooler. Freezing it round makes it easier to just pop it in the round bowl it comes with. Then I can easily have the solar oven warming it up for lunch or dinner while I am out enjoying my surroundings.

    It was easy to assemble and seems to be quite sturdy in it’s contraction. Time will tell how sturdy it really is.

    On a side note when I was using my large American Sun Oven to dehydrate some mushrooms on a whim I threw some in this mini to see what would happen. It worked great! I liked the way they came out even better than the ones in my larger oven. I flipped the mini around so the zipper was on the top and vented out the moisture. Of course you couldn’t use this to make large quantities. But if you just had one or two pieces of fruit that were going bad and you don’t want to pull out your large dehydrator for just one trays worth of food you could easily use the mini. No sense in letting your unused fruit go bad and end up throwing it away when you can easily use the mini to preserve it. And for the cost of it I wanted to make sure I can save as much money as possible as to make it ‘pay for itself’. I put the sliced mushrooms on a small cooling rack I had already and placed that on the black tray that comes with it. This way there are air underneath the fruit as well.

    My only constructive feedback is that it is pretty expensive. While I have enjoyed it so far it is on the upper range of what I want to spend on ‘toys’ and would be a bigger fan if it wasn’t so expensive. Not the kind of thing you can easily give as a gift in this price range.

  2. churro

    I received the mini Sunflair oven last night. I am no stranger to solar cooking, but have only used home made cookers so far. This one seemed a little small to be efficient, but mostly I wanted the collapsible silicone pot, so…

    Today at 1:55 pm I threw two eggs (in the shell, no water) in the silicone pot good sun. and set it in the driveway facing the sun. Ambient temperature about 32 degrees, no wind. A little less than 2 hours later, after 2 minor adjustments to face the sun and tilt it forward for the low sun, I decided to check the eggs, with little hope that they were cooked. To my surprise, they were perfectly hard boiled. Not bad for late afternoon in mid-winter. Happy with my purchase, and looking forward to more fun. I’ll probably buy the full sized version soon.

    Update: if you want higher cooking temperatures, place the pot inside a turkey roasting bag available at any grocery store. This also helps contain the steam coming off the food s theres less condensation on the clear front panel of the cooker. The bag puffs up, helping th keep the clear panel from drooping onto the pot inside. Maybe some of the reviewers who complained about low temps could try this out.

    Another update: where this thing really shines (pardon the pun) is heating MRE’s and preparing freeze dried meals. MRE’s often contain 2 pouches of food best consumed hot, but only one chemical heater, so I ended up with some leftover pouches and no heaters. I dropped one on the trivet in the sunflair and 30 minutes later it was almost too hot to eat. I think 20 minutes would be enough for a hot meal. Freeze dried meals placed in the silicone pot with cold water and placed in the oven come out more thoroughly hydrated and plenty hot than when using boiling water. Takes 30 minutes to an hour, but worth the wait, especially when you account for the ease of set up and no monitoring necessary. Great for camping during wildfire danger. Still love this thing, though still think it’s too smal for household use. Still want the bigger one…
    For those having trouble, consider the size. It’s fine for re-heating and very simple cooking on clear days, but beans and othe things will take a looonnngg time. My brother-in-law has the bigger one, but gave up on it because it was “too hot”. I have played with lots of designs of solar cookers, and consider this one a good accessory, not a go-to cooker. Worth the money, but if you are new to solar cooking, get the bigger one, make your own (search for Teong Tan’s designs) or try the All Season Solar Cooker. Also, the temperature inside the pot will be higher than outside the pot, so don’t trust it entirely, check the food temp after a while. There’s a learning curve. It works, but learn how it works.

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