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Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Sun Jan 19, 2014 8:01 pm
by Hirsch
I have not touched those since they were first introduced in around 1980 or 1981. There was a reason we called them "Meals Ready for Ethopians". Give me their predecessor the good old C-rat anytime.

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Tue Jan 21, 2014 3:54 pm
by fishr3
When I'm kayak camping and want to save on space and weight I take Moutain House dried food, and other dry foods and snacks plus a 10 pack of flour tortillas. I tend to avoid cannned foods and "wet" food beacuse of the added water weight. Instant coffee and oatmeal makes a quick breakfast. I use a metal cup so I can set it by the fire to keep coffee warm. I use a katadyn backpacker water filter to pump water from a "clean" source or just boil the heck out of it. If the water is just too nasty, I bring along a Stearns water sack. My picky kids like the Mountain House spaghetti with meat sauce. The Moutain House scrambled eggs with ham and peppers makes a nice breakfast taco.

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Fri May 09, 2014 9:25 am
by Pablo
Midcoast Mark wrote:Sardines & saltines!
Trust me, it is a whole lot better and nutritious than you think.
And you have you choice of flavors: mustard, olive oil, catsup, louisiana hot sauce.
No refrigeration required, good protien, omega 3s, carbs, salt.
Not a sardine fan but you reminded me of a Lenten Friday lunch that is pretty good.
Take a small can of tuna in water. Open drain then add some Miracle Whip and either chopped pickles or chopped nacho jalepenos.
Eat on wheat crackers. Hmmmn, good!

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Tue May 27, 2014 12:03 pm
by 2ACR
My vote is for the Hobo meals. I can eat them the whole time I'm out camping. I make mine at home and brown any raw meat then freeze them. You can limit the need for a cooler or limit the amount of ice needed by browning the meat and freezing the packages. I will mix and match so they aren't all the same. Use any meet you want to eat. it doesn't have to be ground meat and get crazy with the ingredients. My favorite is ground pork sausage, fresh squash, fresh green beans, peppers, onions, taters add some BBQ sauce and cream of onion or mushroom soup. Mix together, wrap it up, freeze it and when the fire is hot toss it in.

Other easy meals for backpacking and kayak camping can include:
-Popcorn (pack the corn in some tin foil and fold some spare foil to make a popping pan and cook over the fire or use a backpacking stove)
-Anything freeze dried works if you have access to a water source and filter system
-Ramen noodles are easy, light and cheap
-Tortillas and pita bread can help make some awesome light weight meals.
-Pancakes are pretty easy if you have a pan. I usually ditch the pot for a light weight steel pan that can be used in the campfire.
-Bars and trail mix
-Oatmeal
-Grits
-Jerky can be eaten alone or added to other ingredients. Mix and match ramen with jerky
-Whatever you catch can be cooked over the fire. With a little practice campfire food will make everything else just plain.

I always bring foil and some spices if I am doing anything outdoor related (not really when day fishing) just in case I decide to have a wild meal.

Unfortunately the best meals are heavy unless you can acquire the meat while you're out there.

here is a website for some good meals if you get into really extended trips. http://www.backpackingchef.com/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Sun Jun 22, 2014 10:18 am
by nmYAK4fish
Fried Chicken will last for days...just go get a bucket of popeye's chicken and put it in a couple gallon ziplock bags and keep it in the cooler. The best thing about the chicken is it tastes better everyday until its gone, and its even better cold.

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Sun Jun 22, 2014 11:30 am
by Fishinintx
Course everyone knows about Stripes Famous Burritos....We buy em by the dozen when beach fishing. Great snack and they hold well. Spam is good as well. Smoked sausage does hold well in a cooler as well as summer sausage.

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Fri Aug 15, 2014 4:25 pm
by Shadowman
Instant oatmeal packets. Just add a little hot water. It's tasty, comes in many flavors, and is good for your cholestoral.

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Tue Sep 16, 2014 2:30 pm
by Tomkat07
As a kid we used sardines. Beanie weenies and chips. Still sounds pretty good :).

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Mon Nov 03, 2014 7:55 am
by HuntFishKids
Hunting we do stake on a stick [if we kill].If not we do kill some kind of meat rabbit,bird or some thing. We do take veggies.

When fishing we do fish on a stick. We always catch some kind of fish.Some days we eat small but that is the cost of a bad day fishing.We have eaten so many difrant types of fish.Most all of it is good roasted over a fire.

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Wed Sep 09, 2015 4:15 pm
by GatorSnatcher
I take usually my 17hmr along with a 7mm Rem Mag. Rarely will I take food with me when camping. There are so many wild edibles that blow the food purchased off the shelf away...If you're lucky enough to catch some fish along the Texas coast while camping, then there is a bush with leaves that taste of Lime and Pepper...a few of those sprinkled over a fish on the half shell with some wild onions and garlic and you've got a gourmet meal fit for a king.

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Wed Sep 09, 2015 5:38 pm
by Tombo
You said easy, not taste good that's why I mentioned MRE's. If I get hungry enough, peanut butter and jelly taste like steak.

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Thu May 05, 2016 1:59 pm
by aggiejon
I like to take leftovers from family supper from time to time and put them in vacuum seal bags and freeze them. I've always got a small cooler on the kayak (my go to is a small thick-walled styrofoam cooler that my wife had at work that they receive vaccines in), I'll toss them in. If I'm camping, I usually carry a small one burner propane stove. And bring a saucepan with a lid. Fill it with water, boil, drop bag inside, cut it open and eat. The only cleanup you have to do is lick your utensil clean, you can reuse the water once it cools for drinking, or cooking the next meal. And the only trash you have to pack is an empty plastic bag.

And for lunch its usually a Czech sandwich - summer sausage, cheese, onion, and saltine crackers

Can do stew, chili, casseroles, really anything. Beef stew is my personal favorite. Same concept as what restaurants do using boiling bags for food. Better than viennie weenies and MREs.

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Mon Aug 01, 2016 6:18 pm
by Brutus261
I make home made MRE's for 3-4$ a meal. I use ramen, or crackers, canned or bagged tuna, spam, trail mix, bullion, chocolate, dehydrated vegetables.... Whatever will keep a long while. I put whatever combo in a vacuum seal bag then vacuum seal it. I can easily pack a dozen meals that need minimal prep and are very portable

Re: RE: Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Fri Mar 23, 2018 3:33 am
by jdawgsworld
Brutus261 wrote:I make home made MRE's for 3-4$ a meal. I use ramen, or crackers, canned or bagged tuna, spam, trail mix, bullion, chocolate, dehydrated vegetables.... Whatever will keep a long while. I put whatever combo in a vacuum seal bag then vacuum seal it. I can easily pack a dozen meals that need minimal prep and are very portable
Sounds like a really cool idea

Sent from my VS500PP using Tapatalk

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Fri Mar 23, 2018 4:10 am
by Tombo
Ad a moderator, I took an oath to block Spam! Just kidding of course :D

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Fri Mar 23, 2018 5:44 am
by Tombo
I will say it since no one else has. MRE's, not much on taste but very efficient.
To me, tasted pretty good after fishing most of the day.
The wife unit, will not allow them in the house due to having been in the Air Force and forced to consume them. :D

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Mon Sep 10, 2018 10:26 am
by Reefmonkey
Occasionally I'll do real cooking while car camping, and then on the other end when doing certain ultralight backpacking I do no more cooking than heating up water on an Esbit stove, but most of my camping food falls in between these two extremes, where I want a hot meal but not a lot of cleanup or having to worry about getting raw foods cooked all the way through on a pack stove or over a fire. That means heating up preprepared stuff. I cook chili, soups, stews, and even meat at home and vacuum seal them in the Foodsaver. I can make them weeks ahead and throw them in the freezer, and just put them in the ice chest when it's time to go, pull them out, cut open the bag and heat them up in a pot or pan when I'm ready to eat. I smoke a lot of meats and fishes at home that then get put into foodsaver bags and frozen. Smoked pork chops are a favorite, good for breakfast or dinner, and smoked redfish makes a nice appetizer on some bagel chips with a little sour cream (in the squeeze bottle) and premade pico de gallo.

Quesadillas are easy to make in camp, just have a nonstick pan, some tortillas (I like the parcooked Guerrero ones that you puff up in a dry pan), some shredded cheese, some precooked meat per above, and salsa - there is a really good brand of salsa you can get at HEB that comes in a pouch.

If you want to do a "fancier" breakfast, the precooked, shelf-stable bacon that has been out for a while now is really handy, as is Bisquick's jug of pancake mix that you just fill the jug the rest of the way with water and shake, then pour onto a hot pan.

For ultralight backpacking I'll occasionally resort to the Backpacker's Pantry or Mountain House freezedried dinners. They're better than they used to be, but still a pale substitute for real food, and kind of pricey at that, There are a lot of premade meals you can find in the grocery store that are almost as light, almost as easy to make while backpacking, and taste a lot better. Lipton makes several pasta dishes that are easy to prepare even when backpacking. On a backpacking trip out in the Guadalupe Mountains last year my buddies and I had a great meal with Pace Ready Meals heated in a pot over a Pocket Rocket, and a bag of tortillas (in this case I used completely precooked tortillas to save fuel)
https://www.pacefoods.com/Product/Products/Ready-Meals

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Mon Sep 10, 2018 11:18 am
by Tombo
nmYAK4fish wrote:Fried Chicken will last for days...just go get a bucket of popeye's chicken and put it in a couple gallon ziplock bags and keep it in the cooler. The best thing about the chicken is it tastes better everyday until its gone, and its even better cold.
You are correct, I love cold chicken, particularly the legs. Legs are easier to eat while fishing. Makes a great slick!

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Wed Dec 19, 2018 11:54 am
by Pop751
phoenixphishing wrote:Vienna sausages! Yeah they're not great, but they're a tradition in my family for all fishing trips. We normally do alright, so they may bring good luck too.
Get some packets of Taco Bell hot sauce and take them along. For me it makes a Vienna sausage a lot easier to eat.

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Sat Dec 22, 2018 8:13 am
by Ron Mc
the traditional fishing lunch is Beach Cliff fish steaks in LA Hot Sauce eaten on crackers and handled with your knife.
Complimented with a Ballast Point Sculpin IPA, sold in cans.

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If you have anything for a burner, Kielbasa is a perfect camp store.
You can grill it (and heat a can of Ranch Style beans), you can split it and fry it, and goes nicely with scrambled eggs.

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Thu Jan 16, 2020 11:06 am
by Pop751
StarKist Tuna Creations (they come in several flavors), Mountain House freeze dried meals, Vienna Sausage (only eaten with Taco Bell hot sauce. The packets are handy and easy to carry.)

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Tue Jun 23, 2020 10:37 am
by lhargraves43
Ive also been looking for camping recipes around the internet. I keep them in a small notebook that I bring every time I go out camping. Its proven to be quite useful and its makes camping trips a bit more fun.

Re: Easy camping food

Posted: Fri Jun 26, 2020 11:12 pm
by Bibila
egg, ham, spam, some nuts for snacks, and a Campbell vegetable soup those are the easy camping food on my list. :D