Trail Cooking: Rub a bar of soap on the outside of a pot - TopicsExpress



          

Trail Cooking: Rub a bar of soap on the outside of a pot to protect it from burning over an open fire. The soot sticks to the soap instead of the pot, which wipes off. Keeps your gear looking new! Since no everyone may be experienced enough at first to “wing it” with some dishes, use a sharpie to write the recipe and cooking directions on the zip top bags that contain your ingredients. Or make a note on paper and put it in the bag with the stuff. Choose the right stove for your trip. Every hiker will need to carry a stove with some waterproof matches or lighters because the rain will keep you from cooking over a fire sometimes. Cold temperatures call for an MSR Windpro! But if it is the time of year when the wind is even more brutal you may want to carry a Bruton Raptor for its four leg stability and concentrated flame. Clean dishes using snow, since it acts as both a scrubber and rinser. Leave no trace, remove big scraps first and then scatter the snow. For a fabulous desert, dehydrate fruit pie: Crumble it up, thinly spread the pieces around the dehydrators circle, and turn it on for the night. Viola! Crispy pie crumbles! Rehydrate with just enough water to soak it through, but they taste great dry too! Bring essential spices, chicken bouillon for savory flavor and cinnamon for sweetness. You can carry an all in one spice canister that weighs nothing too, available at most any hiking /camping store. Put the canister in a zip lock bag though to keep moisture out. Rehydrated meals will often become mushy. But a handful of nuts such as sunflower kernels will add crunch and tastes great in most all dishes! Carry bamboo chopsticks, they are cheap, lightweight, sustainable, heat-resistant, and easy to clean; and they would work great for serving pasta, toasting marshmallows, frying food without scratching pans, stirring stuff, getting hot water into corners of freeze-dried bags and more. No matter what your style on the trail is when it comes to cooking always remember that perfection comes through practice. Go slow when you cook and try not to cook over flames, better to cook over hot coals. Sometimes time is a factor on the trail and fatigue at the end of a hiking day, but even just a handful of coals removed from the main fire can cook a meal for one. Above all else, enjoy the trail life, enjoy the food and even though it is winter it is a good time to get out and hike and cook over an open hot campfire.
Posted on: Sat, 26 Oct 2013 02:38:32 +0000

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