We are now the proud owners of a Kelly Kettle
Posted by Fiona Nevile in Allotment, Reviews, Save Money | 14 commentsSuddenly at the Milton Keynes get together, Jean and Roy (aka Gottaknit and Seth) stepped forward and offered me a large mysterious object – wrapped in a dustbin liner with a very tight knot.
“Here is a late birthday present Fiona. You’ll need this on the allotment!”
The package was bulky. As I struggled to open the parcel I wondered what was inside. I could feel cardboard and something hard. Could it be metal? Some sort of feeder?
Imagine my delight when I finally peeped inside the box and found a Kelly Kettle lying on a nest of twigs and tinder dry split wood!
I’ve been longing for a Kelly Kettle for ages. Hot water from just a handful of twigs! Perfect in a power cut and of course up on the allotment. As you know I was thrown out of the Brownies before I could ever become a Girl Guide but open air cooking is appealing. Danny has always excited by the prospect of cooking over camp fires. As a child he played with them in Ireland but this Kelly Kettle was the first chance that he’d had to experiment with woodman skills as an adult.
This one was used by Roy when he worked out in the woods. He used it to make soup and hot drinks.
“It holds enough water for four mugs so you can invite friends to tea!”
Strange though it may seem, such an old fashioned pursuit as asking other plot holders over for a cup of tea is a large part of allotment life. Super hostesses like The Chicken Lady proffer a slice of homemade cake as well. We have been saved from dehydration from the kindness of smiling friends and strangers. Now it would be our turn with a green environmentally friendly twist.
Immediately we returned home I set the Kelly Kettle up in the fireplace. We were astonished how quickly it boiled – just four minutes. Apart from these impressive results it is fun and easy to use. A Kelly Kettle is a key part of a superb survival kit.
I have to admit now that I love poking through camping shops. The cleverness of the gear – travelling light with the essentials that will provide most comfort far from home. I also need to share the fact that I have only been camping once – The Isle of White Music Festival 1970. The year when Leonard Cohen first played on the island. As far as I remember we didn’t even make a drink or cook.
The Kelly Kettle accompanied me to the allotment the next day. I sat outside our shack drinking a cup of tea within minutes. No one else was around so it was a private yet triumphal moment. That evening I ventured onto the internet and discovered that you can cook using a Kelly Kettle too. There is a nifty little device that sits in the top flue to hold a small pan. The base can be used to cook on as well. Once the fire is going well, slightly bigger pieces of wood can be carefully placed so that they drop down into the fire pit as they burn.
Danny began to plan quick one pot meals for the winter when we are building our pallet shed.
“I’m going to make a generous flue in the shed so that we can move the Kelly Kettle inside.”
You can actually buy cooking sets that can be carried inside the kettle. But we are going to experiment with our own racks and cooking pots for the time being.
The Kelly Kettle comes in three sizes. The Trekker, the Scout and The Base Camp. Ours is the latter.
Thank you so much Roy and Jean (aka Gottaknit). This is a fabulous present that will get constant use up on the allotment. As my fingers fly across the keyboard Danny is sorting dry fuel for tomorrows cooking enterprise. Watch this space!
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we own 2 kelly kettles. Our friends prompt us to buy one. Be bought one and then were gifted on. We love them, used them in many kitchen renovations. and when the electric or the gas goes out.
Next thing on our list of emergency stuff is an old phone, that doesnt need electricity, in case of the electric blowing. It has happened once and we couldnt ring an electrician, both mobiles dead…. analogue one.
What a brilliant piece of kit. Another ‘must have’ item. Now all I need is the allotment……
Lucky you, I’m saving up to buy a small one at the moment, and yesterday I looked at this on you tube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SQtsePL20DY&feature=mfu_in_order&list=UL
I hope I do better when I eventually get mine, but I can see myself in the same situation.
Isn’t it great when someone gives you something you know you will love and use often.
What a wonderful and practical gift! Lucky you 🙂
I’m not what I’m more jealous of – your Kelly Kettle or the fact you’ve seen Leonard Cohen…
We have a shop over here (Canada, you know, where Leonard Cohen is from 🙂 ) that sells them, so it might just have to go on the wish list!
Yet another ingenious gizmo I’d never heard of. Now I need a halogen oven AND a Kelly kettle.
Stunning gift! We call them rocket stoves here.
And clever to add a flue and see if you can use it in the shed in winter… Now you’ve given me an idea 🙂
Given the weather since the meet-up an icecream maker would have been more suitable !
I’m itching to buy one of these for my hubby for Christmas 🙂 I think yours would be too heavy and bulky for his ultra-lightweight rucksack, but the Trekker looks perfect!