You have a removable hob. In Great Britain they refer to any direct cooking surface as a "Hob". In a fireplace , if there is a a fixed or removable shelf to place cooking pots on....that is a hob. The English must not like new words.
Please continue to do more cooking at the cabin and what life was probably like in the 1800's. Your home should definitely be on the school's field trip list. I can't get enough of your videos. The one video about the - Salvage of the original log cabin and you marking the dates down is absolutely excellent.
You're an artist. That place is beautiful. Watched your build videos, you really took that build to a higher level. You should be very proud of your achievement.
Such a heartwarming peak into the old country of days gone buy. You represented it perfectly it seems. You've got a monument of sorts, great great job...wow.❤
I just saw your video on how much your place cost and I wanted to come here on my phone and tell you how clever you are and how much I am in awe of your lovely little place. I love to hear about the community and how they came through for you and you them that is the way life should be!! Lucky duck! Enjoy that beautiful fireplace and hearth and home. You deserve it!!
Thank you! Ive had this channel a long time but just started building it about 2 weeks ago. Hopefully it will take off. I’m going to try to post at least once a week
Do you find that, by slowing down your life on purpose, the the days last longer and you move toward the future at a much slower rate? I am very impressed with your work ethic and determination to build as you have.
Beautiful Table!!! Totally agree w/having the table full of great company, fellowship, and laughter. Thank you,again for sharing.... enjoy your videos of a simpler life. 🌿🕊🪵🔥
Beautiful , that is a fine kitchen and you've done an amazing job of bringing it back ! I'd love to join you for a cuppa and conversation about the work you've done ! Thanks for sharing
Great video and I love your cabin. I'm 65 and it reminded me of the times I set with my grandpa as a kid and he would tell me stories of his childhood, so thank you
Jerry Tyson... thank you so much for this way of living and letting live... I also love this wonderful honest way of living, but many can't and don't want this simple and valuable way of living... But we need this Feel-good effect of being... Thank you, thank you very much... Kind regards... Uta Katharina S.
I really enjoy your videos. I think because of the times we live in that your content is so appealing to me. Living simply is best. I enjoy seeing the process as well as the tools used for everyday life. We live in a small plantation house on the Big Island and weather is never really an issue for us, its generally pleasant which is why we chose to live here. If we had a cabin such as your we might try living like that. Thanks for putting this out there for us to enjoy.
These videos are amazing. There was so much more work involved in every tasks which in turn made it all the more meaningful to sit down and have a good meal.
Back to nature the healthy wealth living ....................where is the puppy ...lol my GSD puppy girl asking........God Bless The Hands of a builder and A Farmer....GOD BLESS THE CABIN.
most interesting video i have ever seen on fire place cooking you have made my day,iam living in ireland i bought an old stone cottage in co cork in 1986 there was an open hearth like yours i used to cook alot with the fier crane on the open fire,i cooked phesant and lamb in an oven pot and any other type of food i needed cooked .thank you so much for your video john mc namee .
My perfect cabin/kitchen 🤩 Love you doing the Show N Tell with various cooking tools! I’m just starting (newbie) to acquire some and learn hearth cookery.
I have some more unique items coming up, A little what is it game will be the next one. You are the only one I have told. Watch for it maybe sometime this weekend
Wow, very impressive. I like the slow down idea. I’m starting a cabin build on my new farm and looking for ideas. I have a small mill and lot of woods with different species. Those big beams and wide planks would be real nice.
What a blessed situation you have after all youve been through, people giving you gifts for your cabin? my Gosh, how cool is that! I could really get into doing that reviving old cabins!!
Howdy brother- I think we must be kin somewhere down the line. Cooking in the fireplace is a real pleasure. Even what I cook tastes good lol. Love how you have everything set up there. Have you thought about building an old style smoke house? I think you would really enjoy that. Which reminds me- I need to go get some bacon out of our smoke house. Great video. God bless
You should make an ice shack outside. Put your ice blocks inside the shack and cover the ice with saw dust. This will keep the ice blocks from melting even in the summer time.
That's a fantastic fireplace. I like the fact that it has a large firebox and has a dual use for both cooking and heat. My friend, Jeff, would love it to grill up his steaks.
@@logcabinlifestyle I come to Ohio a lot for the Woodcraft League, Let's get together in the Spring sometime... I may even have a little cast iron to add to your collection.
I stumbled across your channel and it’s so interesting and informational. It reminds me of My Self Reliance and your dedication to authenticity and embracing a slower way of life is refreshing.
When I’m ready to build my own Cabin would love to take the dimensions of your fireplace and double the length of it for a great big cast iron pot like you mentioned. The only thing I’d change is add firebrick to protect the back half and sides of the stone.
This video will give you a lot of the math you need. The things you need to know before building a fireplace, fireplace talk, the how to. czcams.com/video/P8ohmQqkJVw/video.html
I'm in the UK and just looking for ideas on how to cook over an open fire. Heat is so expensive now, we had the chimney renovated and are using the fireplace to keep warm. Took a massive delivery of wood the other day, so that's one woman and two kids moving it all from the sidewalk through the house, to the yard. We live in a little row house. Its Victorian. We are so lucky the fireplaces weren't ripped out, all we had to do was get a new chimney pot, inspect the chimney, sweep it, and fix up the cement under the grate. Our major issue for cooking is the size of the grate. It was built for coal, I suspect. There is no facility for cooking at all, its tiny. I currently have toasting forks and that's it. Any "crane" would have to be self supporting. There is nowhere to hang a hook. NOTHING. The only thing I can think of is to have a welder make a rack.
I was interested to see your varying methods of cooking in your fireplace. I have a conventional air tight wood stove I usually use for cooking during the heating season. I may cook on the stove, but very commonly cook in the stove, right on the hot coals or fire. There is no room for the kind of equipment you use in your fireplace though.
So epic! So amazing! Look at all those durable, strong and beautiful items. They will last for hundreds of years compared to those plastic weak products they make these days. Is this is your main source of heat in log cabin?
I would like to meet you Sir! Huge respect for you!!! You reminds me of my Dad… He is very skill full person like you but his right hand is paralysed since 2005.
Way cool. My mom had a wood cookstove and icebox at the farm we lived at when I was a baby until I was toddling. We had a generator so we had one electric lamp and it also powered the round screen black and white TV. News, variety shows like Bob Hope and Red Skelton and an hour or two of cartoons if we were good on Saturday. My mother had a pet Alligator snapping turtle as the icebox guardian and he lived in a drip tray underneath and was as big as it before we moved to town and my brother and dad carefully returned him to the pond. I am looking at the size as I was trying to recall how big he was. My child brain inflated hi size a bit. Mom's was probably about the same dimensions as yours or darn close so the Monster just barely fitting under it was the size of a salad plate not a serving platter. He still could snap a piece of kindling in two. My other brother would walk me towards the Monster. As I was learning to walk and he would rush out and try to bite my toes. Mom grabbed a piece of kindling and went after Steve from beside the stove. Then he started again, being a boy and teasing me. Since I would scream bloody murder. Ken my eldest brother took a piece of kindling and put it near said monster and he snapped the thick stick in two. Steven got the point. That traumatic event scene was how as young as I was momma having the wood cookstove and an icebox. Nobody rummaged around in the icebox but her. Ice was delivered back then along with the milk. We didn't have indoor plumbing of any kind either. As I was reminded when we went back to visit the place many years later. There was a well pump in the yard. It was a small two story place. More like an enclosed loft upstairs with two rooms. It was made of wooden boards, but just the basics. Kitchen, living and dining room and my parents room. Two rooms up a steep staircase. Kids room and Aunt Lois had the other. She taught school down at the one room school house on the section road just past the turn off from the driveway. She was my dad's aunt and had come to Oklahoma as a teenager to teach with her brother and his new wife. She was the curator of the local pioneer museum. I don't recall if there was a fireplace in that old farmhouse. Probably. It just isn't in my memories. I know there were lots of similar iron tools and cast iron pots and tools in the museum in Ponca City. We visited it a lot since Aunt Lois was one of the curators and was usually there until she got too old. I thought of her like a mother not a great aunt. So, I grew up around antique fireplace stuff and other antiques including my aunt. She raised me my first year or so of life when she wasn't teaching or seeing her beau. Your cabin has brought all of those memories back dear. Thank you. Even for those of the Monster.
This set up is legendary! This is my dream kitchen right here.
Thank you my friend!
You have a removable hob. In Great Britain they refer to any direct cooking surface as a "Hob". In a fireplace , if there is a a fixed or removable shelf to place cooking pots on....that is a hob. The English must not like new words.
Very nice to know. I’m more like that guy from the sticks that doesn’t use big words.
I have never seen a fireplace draw the smoke out so well ! Great workmanship ! Thanks for sharing your video.
Thank you!
Please continue to do more cooking at the cabin and what life was probably like in the 1800's. Your home should definitely be on the school's field trip list. I can't get enough of your videos. The one video about the - Salvage of the original log cabin and you marking the dates down is absolutely excellent.
Thanks Susan! Much much more to come.
You're an artist. That place is beautiful. Watched your build videos, you really took that build to a higher level. You should be very proud of your achievement.
Thank you!
Such a heartwarming peak into the old country of days gone buy. You represented it perfectly it seems. You've got a monument of sorts, great great job...wow.❤
Awesome, you have all the bases covered with that fireplace.
Thank you!
I just saw your video on how much your place cost and I wanted to come here on my phone and tell you how clever you are and how much I am in awe of your lovely little place. I love to hear about the community and how they came through for you and you them that is the way life should be!! Lucky duck! Enjoy that beautiful fireplace and hearth and home. You deserve it!!
you should have a million views for each video they are so interesting
Thank you! Ive had this channel a long time but just started building it about 2 weeks ago. Hopefully it will take off. I’m going to try to post at least once a week
Nice cabin!
Do you find that, by slowing down your life on purpose, the the days last longer and you move toward the future at a much slower rate?
I am very impressed with your work ethic and determination to build as you have.
Yes, I couldn’t believe sometimes just how long a day is.
The fireplace is absolutely amazing! What a wonderful job you did. It truly warms my heart to see it all. Thank you for sharing your works.😊
Thank you!
Beautiful Table!!! Totally agree w/having the table full of great company, fellowship, and laughter. Thank you,again for sharing.... enjoy your videos of a simpler life. 🌿🕊🪵🔥
Cool fire place for cooking. I want a fireplace in my kitchen too. I do have plenty of flagstones and sandstone to utilize.
Beautiful , that is a fine kitchen and you've done an amazing job of bringing it back ! I'd love to join you for a cuppa and conversation about the work you've done ! Thanks for sharing
I’m sure we can do that at some point
Great video and I love your cabin. I'm 65 and it reminded me of the times I set with my grandpa as a kid and he would tell me stories of his childhood, so thank you
Love that ice box.
Jerry Tyson... thank you so much for this way of living and letting live... I also love this wonderful honest way of living, but many can't and don't want this simple and valuable way of living... But we need this Feel-good effect of being... Thank you, thank you very much... Kind regards... Uta Katharina S.
You are most welcome. And thank you!
The fireplace cooking accoutrements are awesome ! And your ethic / philosphy is right on !
Thank you
I really enjoy your videos. I think because of the times we live in that your content is so appealing to me. Living simply is best. I enjoy seeing the process as well as the tools used for everyday life. We live in a small plantation house on the Big Island and weather is never really an issue for us, its generally pleasant which is why we chose to live here. If we had a cabin such as your we might try living like that. Thanks for putting this out there for us to enjoy.
Thank you and your welcome❤️
Id love to do some cooking on your fireplace setup. that rotatory is a winner!
These videos are amazing. There was so much more work involved in every tasks which in turn made it all the more meaningful to sit down and have a good meal.
Thank you!
Back to nature the healthy wealth living ....................where is the puppy ...lol my GSD puppy girl asking........God Bless The Hands of a builder and A Farmer....GOD BLESS THE CABIN.
Phenomenal video! You are amazing!
most interesting video i have ever seen on fire place cooking you have made my day,iam living in ireland i bought an old stone cottage in co cork in 1986 there was an open hearth like yours i used to cook alot with the fier crane on the open fire,i cooked phesant and lamb in an oven pot and any other type of food i needed cooked .thank you so much for your video john mc namee .
Wow John! Love your story. I really hope to come to Ireland some day! Thank you so much for the kind words!
Love your ideas ESPECIALLY with the slow down comment, thanks for sharing
I really enjoy watching this, thank you so very much.i love it
You are most welcome
Excellent job 👍
My perfect cabin/kitchen 🤩 Love you doing the Show N Tell with various cooking tools! I’m just starting (newbie) to acquire some and learn hearth cookery.
I have some more unique items coming up, A little what is it game will be the next one. You are the only one I have told. Watch for it maybe sometime this weekend
@@logcabinlifestyle 🤗 Wonderful!
Love it! Thank you for sharing! 🙏🏻
Jerry,
Another great explanation video. Thank you for taking the time to film, edit and post this video
What a super beautiful cabin ! God Bless !!!
Thanks William!
Great cabin set up I like your pioneer mind set. God bless wilderness people
Thanks Ray!
Very clever for the time. Love your channel. Interesting and educational!
FANTASTIC
What else ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Greetings from Maastricht
The Nederlands
Just great knowledge I so amazed.
Followed the build. You did a fantastic job.
Greetings from Ukraine! Thank you - for discovering USA from unavailable for us side, Great! So much creativity from 1800th to present!
Greetings!!
Would love to have a large stone fireplace, old school, in my log cabin/home. For warmth and cooking, and for the lovelieness of it all 🥰 So cozy.
Thank you.
The woman who married this man is a genius. He's a treasure.
Actually the woman who married me left me after 20 years. I’m divorced.
Fantastic. Absolutely fantastic!!!
Great cabin ,u r so talented!!! Will into some more of ur videos!!
Exceptional!! I want one!
Wow, very impressive. I like the slow down idea. I’m starting a cabin build on my new farm and looking for ideas. I have a small mill and lot of woods with different species. Those big beams and wide planks would be real nice.
Beautiful place!
Thank you
What a blessed situation you have after all youve been through, people giving you gifts for your cabin? my Gosh, how cool is that! I could really get into doing that reviving old cabins!!
Thanks Timothy!
Howdy brother- I think we must be kin somewhere down the line. Cooking in the fireplace is a real pleasure. Even what I cook tastes good lol. Love how you have everything set up there. Have you thought about building an old style smoke house? I think you would really enjoy that. Which reminds me- I need to go get some bacon out of our smoke house. Great video. God bless
Yes, brother. No smoke house for me. I wouldn’t have the money to buy meat to put in it. I have some cool projects coming up though
Just found your channel! Absolutely beautiful! I like how you explain what you are doing!
That dream cabin is a time capsule....beautiful taste....
Thank you
Never heard of those cranes but wondered how people cooked in fireplaces. Hear ya on the slow living! 👍🇨🇦😎🔥✌
Awesome video there eh! The more I watch ur stuff just confirm that I will need a fireplace in my future log cabin... thanks for sharing
Your very welcome! There really are part of the cabin dwelling life.
Best wishes from Ireland 🇮🇪
You should make an ice shack outside. Put your ice blocks inside the shack and cover the ice with saw dust. This will keep the ice blocks from melting even in the summer time.
well done sir! well done!
Awesome video
That's a fantastic fireplace. I like the fact that it has a large firebox and has a dual use for both cooking and heat. My friend, Jeff, would love it to grill up his steaks.
Yes, we’ve done some great steaks in it
Just came across your site and watched several of the shows. Thanks for the enjoyment.
Your welcome and thank you! Hopefully many more shows to come!
loved this, thanks!
Your very welcome
Thank you for your presentation and beutiful work
I love to have a cabin like this,
Great techniques - thanks for sharing
Thanks Carol!
Beautiful job, I'd liked to visit. I'm right in Butler PA
You are welcome sometime
@@logcabinlifestyle I come to Ohio a lot for the Woodcraft League, Let's get together in the Spring sometime... I may even have a little cast iron to add to your collection.
That Table reminds me of the one from the Waltons looks great.
Great Job and good advice
Oh my YES! That is the best life!
I love the cabin and how you have set things up. Oh the oil lamps on your wall is nice. The oldest lamp I have is a C T Ham from early 1900s.
👍👍😊 Great video Jerry
Thank you
I stumbled across your channel and it’s so interesting and informational. It reminds me of My Self Reliance and your dedication to authenticity and embracing a slower way of life is refreshing.
What a cool place. And that massive breakfast skillet is awesome. I need one.
Great vid!
Thank you for sharing.
That is awesome! I'd trade my stupid modern house for that set up any day! Great video!
I love it!
You are amazing! Thank you for sharing this information!
Thank you and your welcome. Stick around I have a lot more to share
I’d definitely love a cabin like yours, with a bedroom that has two doorways on a wall.
Thanks Mary
new favorite channel
Thank you 🙏
Amazing! Very, very Amazing.
you are a Genius!!
Aww, thanks!
When I’m ready to build my own Cabin would love to take the dimensions of your fireplace and double the length of it for a great big cast iron pot like you mentioned. The only thing I’d change is add firebrick to protect the back half and sides of the stone.
This video will give you a lot of the math you need.
The things you need to know before building a fireplace, fireplace talk, the how to.
czcams.com/video/P8ohmQqkJVw/video.html
Wow way nice !!!
Beautiful❤
Man you are really a handyman.....
Thank you!
Very knowledgeable and informative. Really nice work!!!
Super Cool
just came across your channel.. love it.. thank you
Aww thanks. Welcome! I’m kinda new at this so some of it might be a little rough around the edges
Beautiful table
I'm in the UK and just looking for ideas on how to cook over an open fire. Heat is so expensive now, we had the chimney renovated and are using the fireplace to keep warm. Took a massive delivery of wood the other day, so that's one woman and two kids moving it all from the sidewalk through the house, to the yard. We live in a little row house. Its Victorian. We are so lucky the fireplaces weren't ripped out, all we had to do was get a new chimney pot, inspect the chimney, sweep it, and fix up the cement under the grate. Our major issue for cooking is the size of the grate. It was built for coal, I suspect. There is no facility for cooking at all, its tiny. I currently have toasting forks and that's it. Any "crane" would have to be self supporting. There is nowhere to hang a hook. NOTHING. The only thing I can think of is to have a welder make a rack.
Great job man , I love ,
I dig it!
Amazing job on everything
Thanks Matt
I was interested to see your varying methods of cooking in your fireplace.
I have a conventional air tight wood stove I usually use for cooking during the heating season. I may cook on the stove, but very commonly cook in the stove, right on the hot coals or fire. There is no room for the kind of equipment you use in your fireplace though.
Very nice. Thank you.
Awesome
Just discovered this channel . Great content !
Thanks Paul!
I have that wooden bowl at the end of your video, kool item, perfect for making bread.
Really good video, and very informative.
Thank you 👍
Your welcome!
❤❤❤Le Bonheur❤❤❤
So epic! So amazing! Look at all those durable, strong and beautiful items. They will last for hundreds of years compared to those plastic weak products they make these days. Is this is your main source of heat in log cabin?
I use it more for cooking. I have a potbelly stove on the other side. I don’t use any heat unless it’s below 55-60 degrees fahrenheit
I would like to meet you Sir! Huge respect for you!!! You reminds me of my Dad… He is very skill full person like you but his right hand is paralysed since 2005.
Aww, thank you!! If your ever around Lisbon stop in or something
Great! There are vertical spits w a pan to catch the drippings, as well.
I’m filming with one right as we speak
Way cool. My mom had a wood cookstove and icebox at the farm we lived at when I was a baby until I was toddling. We had a generator so we had one electric lamp and it also powered the round screen black and white TV. News, variety shows like Bob Hope and Red Skelton and an hour or two of cartoons if we were good on Saturday. My mother had a pet Alligator snapping turtle as the icebox guardian and he lived in a drip tray underneath and was as big as it before we moved to town and my brother and dad carefully returned him to the pond. I am looking at the size as I was trying to recall how big he was. My child brain inflated hi size a bit. Mom's was probably about the same dimensions as yours or darn close so the Monster just barely fitting under it was the size of a salad plate not a serving platter. He still could snap a piece of kindling in two. My other brother would walk me towards the Monster. As I was learning to walk and he would rush out and try to bite my toes. Mom grabbed a piece of kindling and went after Steve from beside the stove. Then he started again, being a boy and teasing me. Since I would scream bloody murder. Ken my eldest brother took a piece of kindling and put it near said monster and he snapped the thick stick in two. Steven got the point. That traumatic event scene was how as young as I was momma having the wood cookstove and an icebox. Nobody rummaged around in the icebox but her. Ice was delivered back then along with the milk. We didn't have indoor plumbing of any kind either. As I was reminded when we went back to visit the place many years later. There was a well pump in the yard. It was a small two story place. More like an enclosed loft upstairs with two rooms. It was made of wooden boards, but just the basics. Kitchen, living and dining room and my parents room. Two rooms up a steep staircase. Kids room and Aunt Lois had the other. She taught school down at the one room school house on the section road just past the turn off from the driveway. She was my dad's aunt and had come to Oklahoma as a teenager to teach with her brother and his new wife. She was the curator of the local pioneer museum. I don't recall if there was a fireplace in that old farmhouse. Probably. It just isn't in my memories. I know there were lots of similar iron tools and cast iron pots and tools in the museum in Ponca City. We visited it a lot since Aunt Lois was one of the curators and was usually there until she got too old. I thought of her like a mother not a great aunt. So, I grew up around antique fireplace stuff and other antiques including my aunt. She raised me my first year or so of life when she wasn't teaching or seeing her beau. Your cabin has brought all of those memories back dear. Thank you. Even for those of the Monster.