Fig. 1.
It is shown open and out of its setting in [Fig. 1], and there seen as a hollow cylinder of sheet-iron, which, for ordinary use, may be about 18 inches in diameter and 24 inches long, closed permanently at one end, and by a hinged double door of sheet-iron (dd) at the other. The doubling of the door is for the purpose of retaining the heat by means of an intervening lining of ill-conducting material. Or a single door of sheet-iron, with a panel of wood outside, may be used. The whole to be set horizontally in brickwork, as shown in [Fig. 4], the door-front being flush with the front of the brickwork. The flame of the small fire below plays freely all round it by filling the enveloping flue-space indicated by the dotted lines on [Fig. 4]. Inside the cylinder is a shelf to support the dripping-pan (d) [Fig. 1], which is separately shown in [Figs. 2] and [3].
Fig. 2.
This dripping-pan is an important element of the apparatus. [Fig. 3] shows it in cross section, made up of two tin-plate dishes, one above the other, arranged to leave a space (w) between. This space contains water, half to three-quarters of an inch in depth. Above is a gridiron, shown in plan, [Fig. 2], on which the meat rests; the bars of this are shown in section in [Fig. 3]. The object of this arrangement is to prevent the fat which drips from the meat from being overheated and filling the roaster with the fumes of burnt—i.e. partially decomposed, fat and gravy, to the tainting influence of which Rumford attributed the English prejudice against baked meat. So long as any water remains the dripping cannot be raised more than two or three degrees above 212°.
Fig. 3.