Recently, I shared with my team my dadâs trick of using baling wire to secure cans of Van Campâs Pork and Beans to the manifold of our work trucks. The paper labels were first removed from the cans, of course, and we had to open the cans and eat from them wearing work gloves. But that didnât matter. We had hot lunch.
That trick works on the â50s-era trucks my father favored but not so well on modern vehicles. âToday, when you look under a hood, all you see is plastic and metal shields covering an engine,â remarks Rhode Island builder Mike Guertin. âThe â50s and â60s trucks had so much room around the motor, you could practically roast a whole hog off a straight-six manifold.â
Metal Drum, Dashboard, or Portable Warmer
Guertin once rigged up a 55-gallon drum with one end cut open and a piece of 6-inch duct as a short chimney at the other. âStoked with cutoffs (no precut studs at the time), weâd keep it going all day during winter. At breaks, it kept us warm inside and out. [Weâd cook] grilled sandwiches, foil-wrapped potatoes in the coals, hot soup in an old pot or a can resting on top the woodstove.â
Guertin also introduced us to the âmicrodashââan oven of sorts that a crew member he once worked with made out of a piece of foil-lined lumber fit between the dashboard and windshield. With his windshield facing south, this crew member would heat up whatever heâd packed for lunch, Guertin recounts. âUsually a sandwich but sometimes soup. Heâd put his food and left-over morning coffee in the âmicrodashâ an hour before lunch and enjoy a hot meal, provided the sun was shining.â
Pennsylvania builder Mark Clement is adamant about preparing healthy, hot meals for work. Clement argues his body is the best tool he owns, and he recalls former Tools of the Trade editor Rick Schwolskyâs comparison of career builders to professional athletes. When youâre in it for the long haul, itâs wise to watch your diet, Clement urges. âPasta, bagels, salad dressing … Theyâre the reason that bending over becomes a Herculean experience,â he quips. âEggs. Meat. Fruit. Vegetables. Thatâs firepower …â
âI just spent three weeks on the Extreme Makeover: Home Edition set as a project manager,â Clement adds, âand while craft services [the department on a film set that provides food and drinks to the cast and crew] existed, it was just OK … Brownies are fun, but my shift is 14 hours. Food is fuel.â
Back in his home state, Clement âcooksâ on the jobsite in a small food warmer (above). âItâs a soft-sided insulated bag with a heating element inside,â he explains. âBy placing the meal in a glass-bottom storage container with a snap-on, gasketed plastic lid, I plug that puppy in when I get to work and, in a few hours, I have piping hot food.â
To make that work more efficiently, Clement âmeal prepsâ once a week at home. âI can make eight to 10 meals in the exact same time it takes me to make one. I box them up and yank one out of the fridge as I walk out the door.â
Site-Made Cold Storage

Jake Bruton
Missouri builder Jake Bruton and crew regularly lean on a hot plate to wrangle up hot lunch. A companion to the hot plate in his jobsite kitchen is the cooler one of his project managers made out of scraps of Zip System R-Sheathing (see above). This has worked so well, that project manager now assigns making a Zip-R cooler to all his new hires. It doubles as a skill-building exercise. How cool is that?