AY Honors/Dutch Oven Cooking/Answer Key
Dutch Oven Cooking
Introduced in 2006
North American Division
DISCLAIMER: The requirements listed for this honor are those proposed to the NAD. The NAD has accepted the honor, but have not yet released the official requirements. It is not known whether the official requirements differ from the proposed requirements, but once that information is available, this page will be updated.
1. Earn the Cooking honor.
The answers for the Cooking honor can be found in the Household Arts section of this wikibook.
2. Give a brief history of Dutch ovens and their role in American history.
The first Europeans coming to the Americas brought dutch ovens with them, including Columbus, who had one listed on his manifesto, and the Pilgrims who landed at Plymouth Rock.
Dutch ovens were so highly prized in early American history, that Martha Washington has been said to have listed her dutch ovens in her will.
Lewis and Clark brought a dutch oven with them on their overland expedition to the Pacific Ocean, and the mountain men that followed them used them as well.
The dutch oven shown here was owned by Mrs. Ott, of Petersburg, Illinois. It was featured in an article in Magazine in 1896. "These Dutch ovens were in many cases the only cooking utensils used by the early settlers. The meat, vegetable, or bread was put into the pot, which was then placed in a bed of coals, and coals heaped on the lid."
3. Know the difference between a bread oven, a stew/meat oven, pot/stove top oven and a camp oven.
4. In what way are ovens sized?
Dutch ovens are sized by diameter, depth, or capacity:
Diameter | Depth | Capacity |
8” | 2 quarts. | |
---|---|---|
10” | 4 quarts. | |
12” | 6 quarts. | |
12” | 8 quarts. | |
14” | 8 quarts. | |
14” | 10 quarts. | |
16” | 12 quarts. |