Smelting in Minecraft involves cooking, melting, and burning items in a furnace. By right-clicking the furnace, you can access its smelting grid where smelting operations can be performed. It consists of a slot for the item to be cooked, a slot for the fuel, and a slot for the obtained item.
Each smelting operation takes 10 seconds (i.e., 10 minutes and 40 seconds per stack of 64). Smelting begins when the player places the item to be cooked and the fuel in the respective slots. It continues even if the smelting interface is closed, as long as there are more items to cook, sufficient fuel, and space in the output slot. The fire icon decreases to represent the remaining fuel time. When the fire icon disappears, another fuel item is consumed, and smelting continues. If all items are cooked, the furnace will stop when the currently used fuel is exhausted. If there is no more fuel, the furnace becomes inactive. If a smelting process was underway at that time, it will be canceled and must be restarted from the beginning.
While items are cooking, an arrow indicates the progress of the process. When this arrow is filled, the cooked item then appears in the right slot, and smelting continues as long as there are items to cook and fuel.
If the player moves too far from the furnace or goes to another dimension, the chunk will become inactive, and smelting will stop until the player returns. If the player uses a bed during smelting, it will proceed at the same speed as if the player were not sleeping, not speeding up the process. This is due to the fact that when the player sleeps, time does not pass, and the game simply generates day.
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Result | Ingredient | Experience | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Cooked Porkchop | Raw Porkchop | 0.35 | Feeds 8 (🍗🍗🍗🍗) versus 3 (🍗🍗🍗) for raw meat. |
Steak | Raw Beef | 0.35 | Feeds 8 (🍗🍗🍗🍗) versus 3 (🍗🍗🍗) for raw meat. |
Roast Chicken | Raw Chicken | 0.35 | Feeds 6 (🍗🍗🍗) versus 2 (🍗🍗) for raw meat, with a chance of food poisoning. |
Baked Potato | Potato | 0.35 | Feeds 6 (🍗🍗🍗) versus 1 (🍗) for raw potato. |
Cooked Cod | Raw Cod | 0.35 | Feeds 5 (🍗🍗🍗) versus 2 (🍗🍗) for raw cod. |
Cooked Salmon | Raw Salmon | 0.35 | Feeds 6 (🍗🍗🍗) versus 2 (🍗🍗) for raw salmon. |
Cooked Rabbit | Raw Rabbit | 0.35 | Feeds 5 (🍗🍗🍗) versus 3 (🍗🍗🍗) for raw rabbit. |
Cooked Mutton | Raw Mutton | 0.35 | Feeds 6 (🍗🍗🍗) versus 2 (🍗🍗) for raw mutton. |
Dried Kelp | Kelp | 0.1 | Feeds 1 (🍗). Can be used to make a dried kelp block. |
Result | Ingredient | Experience | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Iron Ingot | Iron Ore | 0.7 | Used to make other items. |
Gold Ingot | Gold Ore | 1.0 | Used to make other items. |
Glass | Sand Red Sand | 0.1 | Used to create transparent structures such as glass panes. |
Stone | Cobblestone | 0.1 | Used as a building material and to make other blocks. |
Bricks | Clay | 0.3 | Used to make bricks and flower pots. |
Nether Bricks | Netherrack | 0.1 | Used to make Nether bricks. |
Terracotta | Clay Block | 0.35 | Used as a building block. Also for making colored terracotta blocks. |
Cracked Stone Bricks | Stone Bricks | 0.3 | Used as a building block. Also found in fortresses. |
Glazed Terracotta | White Terracotta and other colors | 0.1 | Used as a building block. |
These ores can be smelted, but it is not really useful because the items produced can be obtained without smelting. Ores can be obtained by mining them with the Silk Touch enchantment. Sometimes it is more advantageous to mine them to recover more resources, such as with the Fortune enchantment. Moreover, smelting them will yield much less experience.
Result | Ingredient | Experience | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Diamond | Diamond Ore | 1.0 | Used to make other items. |
Lapis Lazuli | Lapis Lazuli Ore | 0.2 | Used for dyeing wool and for enchanting tools and armor. |
Redstone | Redstone Ore | 0.7 | Used to design circuits or other electronic devices. Also used in the alembic and to make other items. |
Coal | Coal Ore | 0.1 | Used to design torches or other essential elements. Also used as fuel. |
Emerald | Emerald Ore | 1.0 | Used for trading with villagers. |
Nether Quartz | Nether Quartz Ore | 0.2 | Used to make other items. |
Result | Ingredient | Experience | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Iron Nugget | Iron Sword, Iron Pickaxe, Iron Axe, Iron Shovel, Iron Hoe, Iron Helmet, Iron Chestplate, Iron Leggings, Iron Boots, Iron Horse Armor | 0.1 | Used to make an Iron Ingot. |
Gold Nugget | Golden Sword, Golden Pickaxe, Golden Axe, Golden Shovel, Golden Hoe, Golden Helmet, Golden Chestplate, Golden Leggings, Golden Boots, Golden Horse Armor | 0.1 | Used to make a Gold Ingot. |
Result | Ingredient | Experience | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Green Dye | Cactus | 0.2 | Used as dye. |
Charcoal | Various types of Logs and Wood | 0.15 | Used to craft torches or other essential items. Also used as fuel. |
Sponge | Wet Sponge | 0.15 | Absorbs water around it. If a lava bucket is used as fuel, it will be filled with water at the end of cooking. |
Popped Chorus Fruit | Chorus Fruit | 0.1 | Used to make Purpur Blocks and End Rods. |
Lime Dye | Sea Pickle | 0.1 | Used as dye. |
Once a fuel item starts burning, it cannot be stopped, but it is possible to remove items to cook at any time during cooking. Waste can be avoided by being careful to always keep items to cook as long as the fuel is consumed.
The lava bucket and coal block can burn more than 64 items while the furnace can only contain 64. To use them efficiently, it is necessary during the process, to add items to cook and remove cooked items. These manipulations can be done manually or using hoppers (note that these make the player lose the cooking experience - in 1.14 one can acquire the experience of all previously cooked items by manually retrieving an item from the furnace).
Fuel | Burning Duration | Number of Operations | Quantity to light a furnace all night | Duration per wood block | Quantity to burn a stack of 64 items |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1,000 s (16 min 40 s) 20,000 ticks | 100 | 100 | 0.54 | — | |
800 s (13 min 20 s) 16,000 ticks | 80 | 5,120 | 0.68 | — | |
200 s (3 min 20 s) 4,000 ticks | 20 | 1,280 | 7.5 | — | |
120 s (2 min) 2,400 ticks | 12 | 768 | 4.5 | — | |
80 s (1 min 20 s) 1,600 ticks | 8 | 512 | 6.75 | — | |
80 s (1 min 20 s) 1,600 ticks | 8 | 512 | 6.75 | from 23.7 s to 80 s | |
60 s (1 min) 1,200 ticks | 6 | 6 | 9 | ? | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 96 | 36 | 15 s | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 96 | 36 | 15 s | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 96 | 36 | 60 s | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 96 | 36 | 30 s | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 96 | 36 | 36 s | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 96 | 36 | 15 s | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 96 | 36 | 40 s | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 96 | 36 | 20 s | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 96 | 36 | 15 s | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 96 | 36 | 10 s | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 96 | 36 | 7.5 s | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 96 | 36 | 6.9 s | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 96 | 36 | 40 s | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 96 | 36 | 7.5 s | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 96 | 36 | 7.5 s | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 96 | 36 | — | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 96 | 36 | 120 s | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 96 | 36 | ? | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 1 | 36 | 80 s | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 96 | 36 | 34.3 s | |
15 s 300 ticks | 1.5 | 1 | 36 | 80 s | |
10 s 200 ticks | 1 | 1 | 54 | from 5 s to 10 s | |
10 s 200 ticks | 1 | 16 | 54 | 19.2 s | |
10 s 200 ticks | 1 | 16 | 54 | 19.2 s |
All this information was retrieved from the official Minecraft Wiki.