

In a November 2015 post, BBchBum suggested the Omnia Oven as an option for making baked goods on the stovetop. After reading additional reviews, I thought I’d take a leap of faith and buy one of these gizmos BEFORE we take delivery of the T@b.
BBchBum is right: the Omnia is pricey, but it is also compact and lightweight. The instruction booklet is vague because it depends on what you are using as a heat source. In addition, the oven has no temperature gauge.
My first attempt, Potatoes Au Gratin was a miss because I overfilled the oven; the flavor was there but the taters were a tad underdone. Even so, hubby ate 3 helpings. My next attempt was with a 12.4 oz can Pillsbury Cinnamon Rolls. Playing it safe, I only used 6 rounds, evenly spaced, in the Omnia and “baked” them over a medium gas flame for 25 minutes. Though the Omnia booklet states, “baked items may appear paler than items cooked in a conventional oven,” our rolls came out absolutely perfect! Next time out, I will be using all 8 rolls.
Omnia offers several recipes on their website at http://omniasweden.com/en/recipes/ but many of the measurements are in metric.
If you are using an Omnia on your T@b stovetop, I would appreciate your advice and perhaps a recipe or two.

Best regards
HamTab







https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PSaGHKdIheE) I know that many of you T@B owners cook inside, but this is a suggestion for those of us who still enjoy cooking and baking outdoors when camping. One helpful thing that I found out quite a while ago is that each charcoal briquet changes the temperature about 25 degrees. Using that rule-of-thumb, I've been successful baking cinnamon rolls and corn bread. I'm anxious to see what's in store down the road. Watch for me on the open road and I'll be happy to share.