Tablespoons to ml Converter – Cooking Measurement Quick Tool
Convert tablespoons to milliliters and other common cooking volume units. Also covers teaspoons, cups, fluid ounces, and milliliters for precise liquid measuring.
UD5 Toolkit
The standard rule for 350°F is: Top coals = diameter + 3, Bottom coals = diameter − 3, giving a total of 2 × diameter. For a 12" oven, that's 15 on top and 9 underneath. Each additional top coal adds roughly 10–15°F; removing one lowers the temperature similarly.
Heat rises, so placing more coals on the lid ensures even heat distribution from above, mimicking an oven's heating element. The bottom coals provide steady conductive heat through the cast iron. The 2:1 ratio (top:bottom) is the classic campfire cooking standard.
Start with the 350°F baseline. For every 12–15°F you want to increase, add 1 coal to the top. For lower temperatures, remove 1 top coal per 12–15°F decrease. For example, 400°F requires about 4 extra top coals; 300°F needs about 4 fewer.
Standard briquettes burn for approximately 30–45 minutes before needing replacement. For long-cooking recipes like stews (2+ hours), plan to replace coals every 35–40 minutes. Lump charcoal burns faster and hotter, requiring more frequent adjustment.
Yes, wind significantly increases heat loss. In breezy conditions, add 1–2 extra top coals. In strong wind, add 3+ coals and consider using a windbreak. Our wind adjustment setting helps you compensate automatically.
Arrange coals in a ring around the outer edge of the lid, with 1–2 in the center for larger ovens. This prevents hot spots and ensures even baking. For bottom coals, space them evenly in a circular pattern slightly smaller than the oven's base.
Wait until briquettes are covered with white-gray ash (about 15–20 minutes after lighting). They should glow orange when you blow on them gently. Using coals too early (black with flames) creates uneven heat and soot.
At elevations above 5,000 feet, boiling points drop and heat transfer changes. Add approximately 1 extra coal per 2,000 feet of elevation to maintain the same effective cooking temperature. Water boils at ~203°F at 5,000 ft vs. 212°F at sea level.
Convert tablespoons to milliliters and other common cooking volume units. Also covers teaspoons, cups, fluid ounces, and milliliters for precise liquid measuring.
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