Product Features
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![]() The Coleman camping oven is designed to sit on a two- or three-burner camping stove. |
About Coleman
More than 100 years ago, a young man with an entrepreneurial spirit and a better idea began manufacturing lanterns in Wichita, Kansas. His name was W.C. Coleman, and the company he founded would change life in America. A man plagued with such poor vision he sometimes had to ask classmates to read aloud to him, Coleman saw a brilliant light in 1900 in a drugstore window that stopped him in his tracks. He inquired about the light inside and discovered he was able to read even the small print on a medicine bottle by the illumination. The lamps had mantles, not wicks, and were fueled by gasoline under pressure instead of coal oil. Soon afterward, Coleman started a lighting service that offered a "no light, no pay" clause--a big step forward for merchants who were burned by inferior products that rarely worked--and drew substantial interest from businesses that wanted to keep their lights on after dark.
In the ensuing years, Coleman expanded its product line well beyond lanterns. The company's current catalog is thick with products that make spending time outdoors a pleasure. There are coolers that keep food and drinks cold for days on end, comfortable airbeds that won't deflate during the night, a complete line of LED lights that last for years, powerful portable grills that cook with an authentic open-grill flame, and much, much more. Coleman has truly fashioned much of our outdoor camping experience, and expects to do so for generations to come.
Product Details
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
78 of 78 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Happy Baking; Happy Eating; Happy Camping!,
By Flo Smith (Houston, TX) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Coleman 5010D700T Camp Oven (Sports)
I have seen these ovens on store shelves most of my life. I was certain that a little aluminum box could not function as an oven. But recently, we were embarking on a 10-day camping trip, and I was going to need to bake while we were there. I am pretty adept at baking with coals from a campfire or a charcoal fire, but on the trip in question, there was a burn ban in effect. What to do? I got on Amazon and read reviews about the Coleman Camp Oven, and decided that if my original opinion was correct, Coleman wouldn't still be making this little gem.
I purchased the oven and it arrived when promised. We took it to the campground, and were totally amazed at how beautifully it worked. We baked brownies, biscuits, potatoes, cornbread and even gluten-free hamburger buns and rolls. Everything was wonderful. The oven was easy to set up and use. But it is not like baking at home in your regular oven. Tips you should know: > Only use the oven on a camp stove. Try to get your stove as level as possible. > Start warming it up with a low flame, and increase the stove flame as the oven begins to pre-heat. > Plan to use small bakeware. Coleman suggests 8x8 pans. Here are some products that we found worked well: * Nordic Ware Toaster Oven Baking Sheet * Ekco mini muffin pan for 12 muffins * Fox Run Set of Four English Muffin Rings (for the burger buns) on the baking sheet * MSR Blacklite Fry Pan * 8x8 foil pan > After your food is in the oven, you really need to watch the temperature gauge from time to time. The longer it bakes, the more likely you will need to adjust the stove flame to regulate the temperature inside the oven. This is NOT set-it-and-forget-it baking. > We found that timing was pretty close to baking at home, as long as the temperature was constant. > Try not to peek too often. Peeking lowers the internal temperature. Look when you need to & that's all. > Clean up spills (outside and inside) as soon as the oven cools. Don't let gunk bake on during the next use. The oven folds up quickly when it is time to pack up. We keep it in its original box, and it is ready to go! I still love the thrill of accomplishment of baking using a campfire, but this little oven is a great addition for those times when a fire is not convenient. May we all have many years of excellent campground baking! Happy Camping! Happy Baking! Happy Eating!
36 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A worthwhile addition to your camp,
By
This review is from: Coleman 5010D700T Camp Oven (Sports)
I have had a coleman camp oven for many years. The coleman camp oven will add a new dimension to your camp cooking. This little folding steel box (about a 1 foot square area) will allow you to bake items that you wish you could have had with your camp meal in the past. It's easy to unfold and set up and then easy to refold and pack away. It has an adjustable shelf to accomodate various size items. It fits over the burner on your camp stove and will take up about half the area of a two burner stove. Turn up the heat on the stove burner and monitor the temperature guage on the oven door, when oven is at the desired temperature put whatever item you want to bake into the oven and then wait...wait... wait. Thats probably the main drawback to this oven is that it takes a long time to bake anything in it. However if you want biscuts or other baked item with your meal then the Coleman camp oven is about the only game in town. All in all the Coleman camp oven is a worthwhile addition to your camp cooking equipment.
22 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wonderful Camp Oven,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
A friend of mine said these were great, so I finally picked one up here (I found out later that the local Walmart has them for about the same price).
It arrived quickly, and I took it with me on a Columbus Day weekend campout in my pop-up trailer. I used it twice, once for brownies, and once for peach cobbler. Both times the desserts came out fantastic. I set the oven on my Coleman Road Trip grill. It sat nicely on one of the two burners. One thing I noticed, though. The temperature gauge seemed to register a bit lower than the actual temp. When I cooked the brownies the recipe called for 350 for 30 minutes. I cooked them for about 35 minutes with the gauge never going over 300 and they were fine. Also note that it isn't very huge; you can't put a whole cookie sheet or lasagna pan in it. So keep your ideas small and compact. It folds down into a nice compact square. It is now a part of my camping kitchen, and I look forward to many a baked goody.
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