The Aga is a much-desired British kitchen appliance for the
affluent. It's a heavy cast iron
gas cooker (i.e., “stove” in American) with ovens and cook-plates; it stays on
constantly during the colder months of the English fall/winter, keeping the kitchen warm and toasty. We have one here at Spencer
House, and I am considering it a lot recently since our conventional oven
conked out on us Sunday night (and now it appears we’ll need an entire
replacement). So, I’ll be cooking more on the Aga.
| Spencer House Aga |
| The boiling plate open; simmering plate closed |
| Hotter oven open; bottom oven closed |
So far I’ve fried sausage and bacon (the English kind – not real
crispy) on top of the Aga. I learned quickly that the left top burner gets a lot hotter than the right one. Turns out the left burner is the boiling
plate and the right one is the simmering plate.
The other day I also decided to try my hand at boiling spaghetti on the
Aga. To speed things up, I heated up my
water in another British kitchen staple: the electric kettle. Boy, these things really do the trick. I might have to get one when I get back home…
| |
| Typical English Electric Kettle |
Anyway, getting back to the prestige of the Aga – they are
quite pricey. For our version, a
2-oven/2-top plate cooker, folks in England will need to shell out about 4995GBP
(that’s about $8215 USD). $8000 for a
stove, you say! Well, it’s even more if
you try to buy one in the US – you’re probably looking at $12,000 and up! I see on the Aga website that Harvey Lumber Co. in Columbus used to be a non-servicing Aga dealer (are they still? are they still there?). There’s also a dealer – Inscape Design Studio
– in Americus! Maybe Jimmy (in Plains) has one in
his kitchen.
For an entertaining Aga video go to: http://www.aga-ranges.com/products/traditional-aga-cookers/2-oven-(gas).aspx
I remember first reading about the Aga in Toast: The Story of a Boy's Hunger (http://www.amazon.com/Toast-The-Story-Boys-Hunger/dp/1592407064/ref=tmm_pap_title_0?ie=UTF8&qid=1391102825&sr=1-1). I looked it up online and thought it sounded interesting, but alas, way too hot to be useful here in NOLA :(
ReplyDeleteNot practical for Columbus either -- more like a Canadian thing...
ReplyDelete