+Mike & Jess Posted August 24, 2010 Share Posted August 24, 2010 This should be a simple 2 day Bike, Hike, (and maybe swim) back country trip. Our packs (my travel partner and mine) need to keep our small and narrow as the bush is going to be dense, and we're covering ~8km of bushwhacking. We will be traveling stove less and only cooking on a fire. This pretty much kills off anything that requires added hot water. What meals (dinner and Breakfast mainly) would you recommend that could either be cooked on a fire, or served non-heated? Quote Link to comment
+Gratusin Posted August 24, 2010 Share Posted August 24, 2010 Just got back from a backpack where I made some instant "healthy" pudding. All you need is a pack of instant pudding, but I added a scoop of protein powder, 2 tablespoons of chia seed, and a tablespoon of almond meal. Delicious and full of protein. Quote Link to comment
+Mike & Jess Posted August 24, 2010 Author Share Posted August 24, 2010 Just got back from a backpack where I made some instant "healthy" pudding. All you need is a pack of instant pudding, but I added a scoop of protein powder, 2 tablespoons of chia seed, and a tablespoon of almond meal. Delicious and full of protein. Did you use powered milk and water? This sounds like it would be a good lunch desert with loads of benifit. Quote Link to comment
+Gratusin Posted August 25, 2010 Share Posted August 25, 2010 (edited) Just got back from a backpack where I made some instant "healthy" pudding. All you need is a pack of instant pudding, but I added a scoop of protein powder, 2 tablespoons of chia seed, and a tablespoon of almond meal. Delicious and full of protein. Did you use powered milk and water? This sounds like it would be a good lunch desert with loads of benifit. Sure did. Actually, since I'm on the "primal" diet (and can't find many sugar free alternatives) the full recipe is below Backpacker Pudding 1/3 cup dry milk 1 scoop protein powder 1.5 T pectin 1T almond meal 2T chia seed 2T splenda (cup for cup) 2/3 cup water Keep dry ingredients separate. Add water when needed and wait 30 minutes. I made up this recipe and hope it works! Edited August 25, 2010 by SKBeatdown Quote Link to comment
+briansnat Posted August 25, 2010 Share Posted August 25, 2010 The foil packets of tuna are light weight and you can eat right from the packet. They also make foil packets of marinated chicken breast and salmon that aren't half bad. You might even be able to heat the packets in the coals (though I've not tried that). Quote Link to comment
SlayerOfBunnies Posted August 26, 2010 Share Posted August 26, 2010 The foil packets of tuna are light weight and you can eat right from the packet. They also make foil packets of marinated chicken breast and salmon that aren't half bad. You might even be able to heat the packets in the coals (though I've not tried that). +1 on that. Also, bagels with PB & J (or honey or whatever) could work. Also, summer sausage - toasted with a stick - yummy! Out of curiosity why does 'cooking over a fire' preclude heating water? Seems like a canteen cup of some sort or a tin can (or fire heated rocks in your water containers, etc.) would make heating water over (or next to) a fire trivial. Quote Link to comment
+Chokecherry Posted August 28, 2010 Share Posted August 28, 2010 When I did more camping we did it almost exclusively without a stove (lugging anymore stuff with just turned me off). We were able to successfully heat water on/near fires with a simple pan. Don't need a particularly deep one. Or big one. You just need a little thing to heat water in. Anyhow, if you don't want that I agree jerkies and summer sausage, bagels or bread with topping of choice. But I would consider bringing a small pan/cup to heat water in and expand your options. Quote Link to comment
OwlJones Posted September 1, 2010 Share Posted September 1, 2010 If your water source is natural - river, lake, spring, whatever - you should always, ALWAYS boil the water before using/drinking. I don't care if it's the most pristine looking spring-fed creek you've ever seen....get a few animals in or around it doing their thing in the woods ( no, not THAT thing. ) and you'll be wishing you'd taken the 5-10 minutes to boil your water. Do not ask me how I know this. Just trust me. Quote Link to comment
+Mike & Jess Posted September 1, 2010 Author Share Posted September 1, 2010 (edited) Thanks for the suggestions. I am bringing a small pot with me (need to confirm it is not too small). For the tinfoil tuna and other meats, I think I may repack them in actual tinfoil just incase I want to heat them on the fire. I know alot of these packages have a plastic coating on them which would not be good heated over a fire. We will have plenty of clean lakes along the trip, so I did pick up one of these filtering bottles (Pristine Microbiological Filter Water Bottle) I look forward to more meal ideas as I am always open to suggestions. The big thing now is, how to store the food when there is not bear bag trees available. I think I will be resorting to using a pine tree to mask the potental smell of the food. (Everything will be double zip-locked as well.) Edited September 1, 2010 by Mike & Jess Quote Link to comment
+briansnat Posted September 1, 2010 Share Posted September 1, 2010 For the tinfoil tuna and other meats, I think I may repack them in actual tinfoil just incase I want to heat them on the fire. I know alot of these packages have a plastic coating on them which would not be good heated over a fire. Not sure if re-packing them is a good idea. The minute you break the seal it's the same as opening a can. Since they are thin, I don't think they'd need very long in a fire. Just enough to heat them through. Quote Link to comment
+Mike & Jess Posted September 1, 2010 Author Share Posted September 1, 2010 For the tinfoil tuna and other meats, I think I may repack them in actual tinfoil just incase I want to heat them on the fire. I know alot of these packages have a plastic coating on them which would not be good heated over a fire. Not sure if re-packing them is a good idea. The minute you break the seal it's the same as opening a can. Since they are thin, I don't think they'd need very long in a fire. Just enough to heat them through. I'll take a look at them and see if they can go straight in the fire. Quote Link to comment
+Chokecherry Posted September 1, 2010 Share Posted September 1, 2010 Thanks for the suggestions. I am bringing a small pot with me (need to confirm it is not too small). For the tinfoil tuna and other meats, I think I may repack them in actual tinfoil just incase I want to heat them on the fire. I know alot of these packages have a plastic coating on them which would not be good heated over a fire. We will have plenty of clean lakes along the trip, so I did pick up one of these filtering bottles (Pristine Microbiological Filter Water Bottle) I look forward to more meal ideas as I am always open to suggestions. The big thing now is, how to store the food when there is not bear bag trees available. I think I will be resorting to using a pine tree to mask the potental smell of the food. (Everything will be double zip-locked as well.) If your bears there are any like ours here you could do numerous ziplocks and put in the trunk of a car with an entire pine tree and they'll still pick up the smell and find a way into the trunk. Around here most camping places sell various things to keep your food safe from bears. You probably can do a little search online for something like that. Quote Link to comment
+ReedKyCacheFinders Posted September 8, 2010 Share Posted September 8, 2010 Thanks for the suggestions. I am bringing a small pot with me (need to confirm it is not too small). For the tinfoil tuna and other meats, I think I may repack them in actual tinfoil just incase I want to heat them on the fire. I know alot of these packages have a plastic coating on them which would not be good heated over a fire. We will have plenty of clean lakes along the trip, so I did pick up one of these filtering bottles (Pristine Microbiological Filter Water Bottle) I look forward to more meal ideas as I am always open to suggestions. The big thing now is, how to store the food when there is not bear bag trees available. I think I will be resorting to using a pine tree to mask the potental smell of the food. (Everything will be double zip-locked as well.) If you have a lake near by & if you pack a pon or pan big enough. Why not get water from the lake & boil that & then throw these Bag foods into it to heat up?? Then you won't have to worry so much about the Plastic in there is any in the bag's. Plus, The water will be boiled to use to wash off your body if you have sweated some during your hike. Just my 2 cents. Quote Link to comment
+Mike & Jess Posted September 8, 2010 Author Share Posted September 8, 2010 If you have a lake near by & if you pack a pon or pan big enough. Why not get water from the lake & boil that & then throw these Bag foods into it to heat up?? Then you won't have to worry so much about the Plastic in there is any in the bag's. Plus, The water will be boiled to use to wash off your body if you have sweated some during your hike. Just my 2 cents. Not a bad idea. We'll be camped on the shore of a lake. Quote Link to comment
+ReedKyCacheFinders Posted September 8, 2010 Share Posted September 8, 2010 If you have a lake near by & if you pack a pon or pan big enough. Why not get water from the lake & boil that & then throw these Bag foods into it to heat up?? Then you won't have to worry so much about the Plastic in there is any in the bag's. Plus, The water will be boiled to use to wash off your body if you have sweated some during your hike. Just my 2 cents. Not a bad idea. We'll be camped on the shore of a lake. You could even put Can Soups that you like in Zip Loc's & heat the same way. Be more light weigh packing the trash out. Just place them in Lock n Locks so not to get holes poked in them before you get to heat them up. If you have something as far as Left Over you have cooked at home. Place in Zip Loc's & freeze them. Heat them up for your dinner on your first nite as they should be thawed by the end of the day. Quote Link to comment
+Criminal Posted September 9, 2010 Share Posted September 9, 2010 MRE's Exactly what I was thinking. Don't make it harder than it needs to be. Quote Link to comment
ATMouse Posted September 9, 2010 Share Posted September 9, 2010 http://www.freezerbagcooking.com/ I love this site - and lots of the recipes you can get the stuff you need in grocery stores. Quote Link to comment
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.