Mark F wrote:Think about food textures as well as taste. One of the things I am often seeking is food that is crisp and crunchy. I often carry the small packets of potato chips - great kJ per gram so these can be carried for a few days depending on your willpower.
Things I have included are tinned fruit or juice, corn chips and salsa. Fizzy drinks can also be good if you can cool them.
GBW wrote:It just so happens I'm preparing food drops right now filled with goodies for a rest day at each drop...here's a pic.
Bill P wrote:Great to see it laid out like that GBW. ! The fruit packs look good. What's the canned item?
Cauchs wrote:Don't mean to send this thread off course, but is that a message on top of the drums for inquisitive eyes GBW? What do you write to convince them to leave it be?
paidal_chalne_vala wrote:Ordinarily I would never eat those ready to eat Indian dishes that come in a foil sachet but after 2 weeks of the same old you ,let me guess, know what on a long trek I would welcome those heat and eat Indian dishes. Check out the MTR range at an Indian grocery shop.
http://www.mtrfoods.com/products/ready-to-eat
I live on plain yoghurt at home so if there was anyway to add that to a food drop I would like to know. I did eat dried and salted Yoghurt balls in Uzbekistan. They were yukky!.
Moondog55 wrote:A packet of freeze dried strawberries and a small bottle of orange liqueur and a tetrapack of UHT cream Although I had to make do with Tang
GBW wrote:Do those buckets look familiar Mutley?
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