☀️ Cook Clean, Travel Light, Live Bright!
The SolCook All Season Solar Cooker is a lightweight, foldable solar-powered oven delivering up to 1.5 kW of clean energy. Crafted from durable, UV-protected polypropylene, it offers versatile cooking options—baking, boiling, steaming, roasting—and doubles as a food dehydrator. Perfect for campers, hikers, and survivalists seeking eco-friendly, fuel-free meal prep with up to 12 hours of sunlight use.
Brand | SOL COOK |
Fuel Type | Sunlight |
Material | Polypropylene Fluteboard, commercial grade UV protected reflective film |
Product Dimensions | 28"L x 28"W x 28"H |
Power Source | Solar Powered |
Maximum Energy Output | 1.5 Kilowatts |
Item Weight | 4 Pounds |
UPC | 614324949275 |
Manufacture Year | 2017 |
Item Package Dimensions L x W x H | 18 x 14.5 x 4.5 inches |
Package Weight | 1.91 Kilograms |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 28 x 28 x 28 inches |
Brand Name | SOL COOK |
Model Name | Solar powered camping grill, portable outdoor solar cooker, foldable camping oven |
Color | Sunny Yellow. |
Number of Items | 1 |
Manufacturer | SolCook |
Included Components | Cooking Rack and Reusable Cooking Bags |
Size | Largest cooking area of any solar cooker |
D**I
Great, and yes, it works!
I've been solar cooking for several years now with an All-American Sun Oven, which I absolutely love. But I've always been intrigued by the All Season cooker for a few reasons: You can actually fit a turkey roaster in it, it looks cool and, I like gadgets and wanted to try it. I'm glad I did.I agree that the assembly instructions could be better, but that's no big deal. If you actually READ THE INSTRUCTIONS and watch the inventor's YouTube videos before frantically trying to put it together, you'll be fine.Here are my two favorite things about it: You can cook larger meals in it than other solar cookers, including a turkey, and you can use it from the time the sun rises because of the way the panels adjust for low-and high-sun conditions. Because of this unique adjustability, you don't need a leveling tray like you do in the All-American oven.This quickly got to 250 degrees. While it won't get as hot as the Sun Oven, it easily cooks and bakes things. Like with ANY and EVERY product, it takes a little time to fully learn how to use it. Take that time!Because of the adjustable panels, I'll be able to use this in the winter when the sun is low in the sky.The affordable price is another great thing about this solar cooker, especially if you want to buy one for a friend, child or relative to introduce them to joys and thrills of solar cooking.This thing is also portable, meaning light-weight. I don't always enjoy lugging the 25-pound Sun Oven out of the garage.I'm looking forward to cooking more stuff in this, especially a turkey. I might update this review later on.If you want to try solar cooking, this is a great start. I'm so glad that this cooker is out there.This is a great product and I recommend it to anyone who wants to try solar cooking.UPDATE. July, 19, 2025When I first reviewed the All Seasons cooker two years ago I basically said it was a good starter solar cooker. After two years of cooking with this thing, I'm now reassessing my original opinion. I now think that this is the best solar cooker out there. There are five reasons for my saying this: price/affordability. capacity, adjustability, versatility, and the customer service, meaning the accessibility of the inventor Jim LaJoie. I'll go through my reasons.Price. At just over $100, this is wonderfully affordable. Anyone can afford it. And the value and usefulness for the money is over the top. My first solar oven, the All-American Sun Oven, is now selling for $750! Seven hundred and fifty bucks. That's insane. That company a few years ago was selling two stackable, three-pound-capacity enamel pots for ninety-nine dollars. Crazy. It's so nice to see that LaJoie is keeping his American-made product affordable and not trying to force American customers to subsidize customers in other countries.Capacity. From what I can tell, this is the largest capacity solar cooker for the home market. I can fit--and I have--a full-sized roaster in this thing and cooked a seventeen-pound turkey. That's crazy good. The capacity of box cookers is limited by their inside dimensions, of course, and even the largest can't hold a full-sized roaster. Other panel and parabolic cookers can only hold a single pot. The All Seasons cooker beats them all when it comes to capacity.Adjustability. The panels are easily adjustable. You can easily slide them to catch the angles of the sun as it moves across the sky. And, because of this adjustability, you can cook with this thing from early morning to late afternoon. Not all solar cookers can do that.Versatility. You can cook with this in the fall and winter. By flipping this thing over you can adjust the panels to catch the sun when it's low in the sky in the fall and winter. I guess that's why it's called All Seasons.Finally, the inventor/owner Jim LaJoie. He is accessible. Jim has a YouTube channel and he promptly answers questions about how to use the All Seasons cooker. It's damn good customer service when the owner gets back to you.So, for all the reasons above--especially the price and capacity--this is the best solar oven you can buy. I'm glad I bought it, and I will buy another one just because I can.
C**S
Truly impressive! ...but you might want the small one
Like many, I was astonished at how well this lightweight contraption cooks food. (in February, no less!)It cooks food in the morning, in the evening, in the winter, and at more reasonable times of sunlight too. I have adjusted the cooker as suggested to achieve a three-hour cooking window, placed a pan of chicken in it, and left at 1:00 p.m. to go back to work. I came home at 5:00 p.m. to well-cooked chicken, still warm.The design lends itself to so many adjustments that it is possible to capture maximum solar energy at any time of the day or year. Of course, adjusting it frequently will achieve the most cooking energy, but setting it ahead of the sun and leaving it for a 2-3 hour period has worked well enough for me.I most like the ingenuity of this cooker. It's pretty incredible that through intelligent design, plastic board and a shiny surface can be transformed to meet a universal human need--cooking food. It seems like that, with just a few uses, it can be considered a climate change gain. I would love to see this cooker distributed to areas of the world where women have no choice but to cook over open fires.This cooker is not an insulated oven, however, and I think some people have that expectation. There are ovens out there, and they are good, too, but they are not very portable. They are bigger than a suitcase and fairly heavy. I find that the turkey bag and the double bowl set-up does a fairly good job of retaining heat and creating an oven-like environment. It's a trade-off, but to be able to fold this down to an inch-thick and easily store it is worth it!As for the size, well, are you really sure that you want the large one? All the YouTube videos I watched were of the smaller one (on the right in the second photo). The larger one is the only one that is being sold now, and that's what I ordered, not realizing the distinction. (It is clearly stated that this a new, larger cooker, so it was my mistake.)I contacted the manufacturer because, aside from other issues, I couldn't get the large one through my 22-inch door, short of disassembling it each time. I suspect that RVers may have narrow doors, as well, and this might be an issue, in terms of just getting it out of the rain, or out of sight until the next day. I purchased the smaller one which, as you can see in the third photo, I can, with a little scrunching, get through my door. (I have a friend who wants the larger one, so its all good for me.)What I found, though, by having both of them for awhile, was that the smaller cooker is more maneuverable and more 'human-sized". The larger cooker is harder to adjust. Forget the wing nuts, use chip clips, but even then, it's not as easy. It's not because it is badly designed, it's because you can't make human arms longer. It's just harder to hover over the top of the larger one and reach everything. The larger one also doesn't have quite as much of a stable non-moving base. This increase in size does have some trade-offs, but, apparently, everyone wants the larger size and immediately started choosing it over the smaller size.For me, however, the smaller size, with a 12 x 12-inch cooking space works quite well. I would so rarely need to use the 12 x 17-inch cooking space that the slightly increased awkwardness of adjusting it and hauling it around isn't worth it. So, if you want the smaller size, you will need to contact the manufacturer. He said he has about 100 (well, 99, since I bought one) left.Overall, both of these cookers are really phenomenal. They are intriguing, fun to use, and reasonably priced.
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