Due to some tips I've read in this forum over recent years, my menu for bushwalks has been steadily improving, and then has taken another giant leap forward after reading frank_in_oz' new book "
Food to Go".
(I am biased as I get a small commission if you buy after clicking that link).I thought I'd share some of the items on my menu for a recent 7 day walk, and also some of the tips I've learned to improve my menu substantially over the last few years. Some of these are off my own head, some from these forums and some from '
Food to Go'.
MENU IDEASFresh Stir Fry Veges and RiceThis is quite heavy so suitable only for short walks or for the first night of a longer walk. In our case, our first day was only short, so I was happy to carry it in. We cut up all our favourite stir fry veges and put them in a zip lock bag. Put a zip lock bag of rice in with them (to keep it separate from the veges in its own bag, but so that everything for the one meal is all contained in one bag). Optionally mix up your favourite stir fry sauces and spices an put them in a small container in the same main bag, if you don't like your veges plain. Use butter or oil for cooking.
Home Dried Bircher Muesli with Apple, Strawberries and HoneyThanks to 'Food to Go' for the idea, this was a really nice change to my otherwise usual breakfasts on long walks of cold cereals or hot porridge. Very light and easy to carry. Used our own home recipe for Bircher Muesli that we've been using for a long time anyhow, so didn't have to make it up specifically for the bushwalk - just made extra when we were going to have it for breakfast at home, anyhow. It dehydrated very well, and rehydrated quickly with just a little less flavour than the fresh version.
Home Dried Chicken Curry with RiceUsed a traditional Bengali recipe for this currey that's been in my family for years making up the spice mixes from scratch. I've been to scared to try dehydrating meat meals for years after a spag-bog disaster, but 'Food to Go' included enough tips and advice on how to make it work. This was one of the two best meals on our last walk, and probably the best dried meal I've had bushwalking ever. I'll definitely be doing this one again. We eat this meal at home (not dehydrated of course) quite often, so again it didn't require much extra work to make a larger batch when we were cooking it for dinner at home anyhow and then to put aside a couple of serves for the bushwalk.
Cous Cous, Veges and SalmonThis is one of my made up bushwalking recipes. Dehydrate a few veges (we used capsicum and carrot - both very easy to do, and added some commercial peas/corn). Put some cous cous in a bag with some stock powder. Put the veges in a separate bag. Place both bags and a commercial foil pouch or two of tuna or salmon into one larger bag to keep it all together. At camp, just rehydrate the veges, then cook up the cous cous and stock. Then mix the whole lot together (the fish will cool it down a bit, but not enough to be a problem for me). Yummo!
Home Dried Dahl & RiceThis is my brothers dahl (lentil curry) recipe and is posted in detail on
another topic. Rehydrates almost instantly, and quite tasty on it's own or as a side dish.
Pesto PastaThis is based on a meal that my wife started cooking at home occasionally a few months ago, and a few weeks ago I realised one night that it would be very easy to cook the same meal while bushwalking. On our last walk this was by far one of the two best bushwalking meals I've ever had (apart from heavy fresh meals). The only tricky bit is packaging the pesto so that the oil doesn't leak, but I've covered my solution to that in
another topic. Dehydrate a variety of veges (in our case this was capsicum, carrot, mushrooms), pack it up with some pasta (uncooked or cooked and dehydrated), some pesto, some pine nuts, and some salami, each in their own zip-lock bag to avoid mixing while travelling, and all bags in one big zip-lock bag to keep the entire meal together for easy access. At camp, rehydrate the veges (can be quick) and dice the salami. Cook and drain the pasta, then mix everything together. Absolutely delicious!
TIPSSeparate Rice or Pasta from Curry or Sauce, when Dehydrating and RehydratingWe didn't do this with a Pasta Neopolitan mean on our last walk, and it made it very difficult to rehydrate without being watery. Particularly for pasta which needs to be covered with water to rehydrate, but then needs to have the water drained off to avoid having excess water in the meal.
Cucumber and Snow Peas Keep it FreshSomebody on this forum mentioned carrying one cucumber and/or a bag of snow peas. These both last for quite a long time, and although having a bit of weight in them, are not too bad. They give any mountain bread sandwich (cucumber) or evening meal (snow peas) the crunch and taste of fresh food and are soooooo worth the extra weight.
Thin Titanium Pans are No Good for PancakesI had been warned by members of this forum, but I tried it anyway. Yes, my new thin titanium cookware is no good for cooking pancakes. They burn in the middle while being still runny at the edges. I had to eat scrambled pancakes for breakfast on the last day of my last walk. The old Trangia frypan (thick aluminium) has always worked great for pancakes every time. The titanium pan worked well for steak, but it is small, and only fits a small steak. I've yet to try it for eggs and bacon. I think the bacon will be OK, but not sure about the eggs.
Separate Scroggin Bag for Each DaySeems obvious, but I'd never done this before my last walk. My wife started doing this on her walk with a friend a while back. 'Food to Go' also recommends this and goes the extra step of making sure each bag weighs the right amount to make sure you have enough scrog for each day (we took 150g per person per day on our last walk, which was in winter, plus a few extra snacks not in the scrog bag). This would not suit everyone, but for those who like their scrog pre-mixed it sure makes it easy to make sure you don't run out, without having to even think about it while walking. It also means you can keep your day's scrog handy (eg, in your pocket) during the day while walking, so you can nibble on it at any time without having to scrounge around for it amongst other things.
At 60 grams Each, Why Not Take Two Stoves?If you do intend to take lots of fresh food (eg, on short walks) or do lots of complex cooking (cook from a variety of ingredients, rather than all in one pot, or simple rehydration), then two stoves makes a big difference. If you're carrying two pots and two gas cannisters anyhow, then the extra burner is only an extra 60g to carry (for my Kovea Supalite; 40g for another brand!). When I'm walking with a large group, I take my gas-converted large Trangia and a large wok, which means I can cook up a meal for 6 people all on the one stove. However, I can cook for an even larger group, or do some more interesting cooking, simply by adding the extra 60g burner to the kit. It even packs up inside the Trangia so takes up no space at all. So now on short walks, or with a large group, I can cook 1 kg of venison scotch fillet in the wok on the Trangia, while doing the veges in another pot on the other burner.
Home Dried Meals Without Any WorkIf you plan your meals ahead of time, dehydrating meals can be trivially simple if you just incorporate the cooking with the meals you're cooking for home dinners already. Just make sure that you organise to have the right meals at home during the weeks leading up to the walk, and cook enough extra for the bushwalking later. When serving out, be sure to dish out the bushwalking serves to the size required, then dehydrate them. This can be done for whole meals (eg, saucy curries) or separate ingredients (eg, chopped carrots).