Eureka Ignite Plus Camping Stove
Eureka Camp Kitchen

Eureka Ignite Plus Stove Review: Dual-Burner Group Camping Cooker

$159.95

Price checked June 10, 2026 — confirm on the retailer site.

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Buy for group camping trips where you need reliable fuel control and fast setup; skip it if you're backpacking solo.

Eureka Ignite Plus Camping Stove

$159.95 Price
2 burners, 10,000 BTU each Burners
23″ L × 12.8″ W × 4″ H Dimensions
12 lbs Weight
Propane Fuel Type
Dual 10K BTU Simmer Control Thick Steel Build Push-Button Start
Best for: Dual-burner group camp cooking at established campgrounds with flame-control precision
A two-burner propane stove engineered for group meals at established campgrounds. Delivers consistent simmer control and 90-minute runtime, making it a standout for car-camping crews planning elaborate camp dinners.
Store the stove in your vehicle at Yellowstone and other bear country—propane stoves, utensils, and empty fuel canisters all need to be locked away when not actively cooking.
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Overview

The Eureka Ignite Plus Camping Stove is a two-burner propane cooktop built for groups who want restaurant-quality flame control at the campsite. Constructed from thick-gauge steel with independent simmer control on each burner, it transforms camp cooking from campfire-dependent improvisation to actual meal prep. Whether you're feeding a family of four or cooking for a group of hiking buddies, the stove's stable platform and 10,000 BTU burners deliver consistent heat for everything from delicate eggs to boiling water for coffee, minus the unpredictability of an open flame.

Who It's For

Buy this if you're car-camping with family or friends and want reliable, flame-controlled cooking at established campgrounds. It's ideal for groups planning multiple-course meals where simmer precision matters. Skip it if you're backpacking (weight and bulk make it impractical), solo camping on a tight budget (the two-burner capacity is overkill), or cooking only occasional freeze-dried meals. Also not ideal if you camp in designated wilderness where liquid-fuel stoves are preferred over propane.

Key Features

  • Simmer Control on Both Burners: Each 10,000 BTU burner adjusts from a light simmer to full output, letting you cook delicate foods without charring them. This independent control makes it practical for cooking multiple dishes simultaneously—crucial when feeding a group with varied prep times.
  • Push-Button Ignition: Eliminates the need to carry matches or a lighter. One press and you're ready to cook, even in wet or windy conditions. Faster than striking a match when you're hungry and daylight is fading.
  • Stainless-Steel Drip Tray: Catches spills and grease, then rinses clean. Unlike bare steel, it resists rust even when wet—critical for campground use where moisture is inevitable and maintenance is minimal.
  • Fits Two 12-Inch Pans: The 23-inch-wide surface accommodates a pair of standard cast-iron skillets or large pots side-by-side. This dual-pan capacity is why groups choose it over single-burner alternatives.
  • JetLink Compatibility: Connect the output to other Eureka stoves for expanded cooking surfaces. Note: the Ignite Plus must be the last stove in the chain, not the starting point. Useful if you expand your camp kitchen later.

On the Trail

Picture a July weekend at Bridge Bay Campground in Yellowstone with eight friends. By 6 p.m., you've unloaded the Ignite Plus from your truck and placed it on a picnic table at your site. Two cast-iron skillets sit ready. While one person sears elk steaks on the left burner at full heat, another softens mushrooms on the right at a gentle simmer, waiting for the meat. A thermometer confirms the steak is perfectly done—not overcooked like camp-stove meals often are. The independent burner controls mean the mushrooms never burn while you wait. After dinner, you lock the stove, pans, and fuel canisters in your vehicle (a Yellowstone requirement for bear safety) and relax. Tomorrow morning, the same setup will deliver perfectly fried eggs and toast. This is what reliable camp cooking looks like—no campfire smoke, no burnt edges, just predictable flame.

Pros & Cons

Pros
  • Independent simmer control on both burners for precision cooking.
  • Thick steel construction withstands years of camp use.
  • Stainless drip tray eliminates rust and simplifies cleanup.
  • Stable footprint with rubberized feet grips uneven ground.
  • Push-button ignition works in wind and wet conditions.
Cons
  • 12-pound weight limits it to car-camping and established campgrounds, not backcountry.
  • Propane fuel not included; expect to buy fuel canisters separately at most outdoor retailers.
  • Two-burner layout wastes capacity for solo campers or those cooking one-pot meals.
  • Propane-only design means you can't switch to liquid fuel if canisters become hard to find.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do national parks allow propane stoves like this one?

Yes. Propane stoves are permitted in Yellowstone, Yosemite, and Great Smoky Mountains even when campfires are restricted or banned. However, check your specific park's fire restrictions before your trip—rules can change seasonally. At bear-country parks like Yellowstone, you must lock the stove and fuel away when not cooking.

How long does a 1-pound propane canister last?

Roughly 90 minutes at full output on both burners. If you're using simmer on one burner and high heat on the other, it stretches longer—often to 2+ hours. For a full weekend, most groups carry 3–4 canisters. Buy them at outdoor retailers or sporting-goods stores.

Can I connect two Ignite Plus stoves together with JetLink?

No. The Ignite Plus is designed as the last stove in a JetLink chain—you can connect it to *output from* another Eureka stove, but not vice versa. If you want expandable capacity, add a different Eureka model as the primary source and connect the Ignite Plus to it.

Bottom Line

Buy for group camping trips where you need reliable fuel control and fast setup; skip it if you're backpacking solo.

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Related Reading

Eureka Ignite Plus Camping Stove

Eureka Ignite Plus Stove Review: Dual-Burner Group Camping Cooker

$159.95

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