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mmmmm..... MUNCHIES!

Original Post
Elena Sera Jose · · colorado · Joined Mar 2012 · Points: 350

Im going on a couple of 2-4 day backpacking trips in the coming months at altitudes of 8-10,000 ft. I have a jet boil and another msr stove. What do you use to cook, and more importantly what do you like to eat? Im sick of the basic old freeze dried food and im not very creative. PLEASE HELP!

Mark Mueller · · Surprise, AZ · Joined Nov 2011 · Points: 185

Jambalaya with summer sausage

FrankPS · · Atascadero, CA · Joined Nov 2009 · Points: 276

If you want something other than "just add hot water" meals, you'll need to ditch the JetBoil. Pretty hard to cook or simmer on it. I used to use the Whisperlite, which gave me more options for cooking meals, but decided I'd just stick with the convenience of the Jetboil. So I opt for "just add hot water" and don't care if I have fine backcountry cuisine.

Woodchuck ATC · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Nov 2007 · Points: 3,280

There are some pretty exotic flavors now in the FD foods available. Lots of suppliers with delicious stuff. I love the FD experience as just an accepted part of my camping in the back country, so JetBoil and I have a good time.

Ryan N · · Bellingham, WA · Joined May 2009 · Points: 195

Bacon is always clutch in the moment when you are faced with a hunger so horrific that you truly believe that you can no longer go on. Fry some up before you go and have it ready for that very moment.

kirra · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Feb 2006 · Points: 530
Ryan N wrote:Bacon is always clutch in the moment when you are faced with a hunger so horrific that you truly believe that you can no longer go on. Fry some up before you go and have it ready for that very moment.
bacon rules

or skip cooking altogether & bring cans ~have Fun!
Elena Sera Jose · · colorado · Joined Mar 2012 · Points: 350

I don't know about bacon but I can go for dry meat like beef or turkey. Instant oatmeal may be our breakfast food for a week. I can personally live on chocolate.

Elena Sera Jose · · colorado · Joined Mar 2012 · Points: 350

Btw im looking for a sleeping bag western mountaineering or montbell 20° super lightweight and packable under $200

kirra · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Feb 2006 · Points: 530
Elena Sera Jose wrote:I can personally live on chocolate.
mmmm... choco-pure
Elena Sera Jose · · colorado · Joined Mar 2012 · Points: 350
kirra wrote: mmmm... choco-pure
very nice! cacao is also an antioxidant. im gonna bring dry milk too. dark chocolate can keep me going in the most severe conditions just like bacon does for some more experienced mountaineers here :)
Nathan Stokes · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Oct 2008 · Points: 440

Take a look at hawkvittles.com/ for more interesting options for FD food. Def cough up the extra coin for the not so mass produced varities of FD food. I got a hot pepper mac n cheese at EMS one time that was from some small organic company that was far better than MH or BP grade stuff.

My standby for backpacking is a box of flavored CousCous and turkey jerky. Boil the jerky with the couscous water and then enjoy. Tuna pouches are also good with toritillas and hummus.

Simon Thompson · · New Paltz, NY · Joined Apr 2011 · Points: 890

You can't go wrong with burritos for dinner. Bring some Zatterans(spelling?) Spanish rice mix, tortillas, cheese, and some hot sauce. Pretty cheap and mad tasty. Mac n' cheese mixed with canned tuna is another good one. You can take the tuna out of the can and put it in a ziplock for better packing. For breakfast if you have a little extra time you can make granola by frying the oatmeal in a little oil with brown sugar, cinnamon and nuts. I do that sometimes because I get incredibly bored with the texture of oatmeal.

BrianH Pedaler · · Santa Fe NM · Joined Aug 2009 · Points: 50

I always throw in a handful almonds to my oatmeal for more stick-to-my-ribiness.

Woodchuck ATC · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Nov 2007 · Points: 3,280

EatNGood' natural cookies, baked and created by Army Sgt.David Payne. Gluten free and vegan. Flavors like cranberry pecan and choc chip. 6 gm protein and 125 calories per serving. Include ingredients such as organic milled flax seed, organic buckwheat flower. Can be found online at eatngood.com or in mid Atlantic Whole food stores starting this fall. 12 pak of 1 oz. cookies goes for 7 bucks. Healthy and tasty snacks for sure.

Nick K · · Denver, CO · Joined Jul 2011 · Points: 30

Rice and dried lentils and throw in some cured sausage for some fat and extra protein. Or eat the sausage while you're waiting for the rice and lentils to cook.

Measure out the dried stuff into 1 small ziploc per meal and add spices to each bag as desired (you can vary the flavor for every night!). Bring the bags home after, rinse, and reuse. As a bonus, it never seems to stick to the pot the way oatmeal does.

This does work best on a stove you can simmer with.

MTN MIA · · Vail · Joined May 2006 · Points: 405

Get a food drier and dry the following:

Cooked bacon
Yogurt
Any fruit and veggie
And yummy smoothis
Home made beef stew
Any crockpot meal
Any fantastic hot dish you can think of

BigJuggsjohnson · · Unknown Hometown · Joined Jul 2012 · Points: 220

Princess Mia I don't cook neither is there anywhere to put a crock pot or a dehydrator. But thank you for ideas. Its gonna be Mac and cheese, granola , dry milk, instant rice pb packets. The trip is geared up to go in a week! !!!!! Thanx for your input!

MTN MIA · · Vail · Joined May 2006 · Points: 405

Sounds yucky!!! I think I would stick to FD.......
Have fun!!!

Tim Stich · · Colorado Springs, Colorado · Joined Jan 2001 · Points: 1,520

You have successfully dried beef stew in a food dryer? The one I had was pretty weak. I can't see it being able to do that.

RockinOut · · NY, NY · Joined May 2010 · Points: 100

Peanut Butter with rice crispy cereal and hot cocoa powder on a wrap...its like a reeses cup with a lot of protein and carbs.
Any cheese can last 5 days as long as you only touch the wrapper and not the cheese itself...the oils and bacteria on your fingers will cause that one spot to get moldy without a fridge.
If you get the just add water bisquik mix, mix it up and then pour a table spoon or 2 at a time into boiling water you can make dumplings to add to a stew or something. Id do a search on backpacker.com and go to the menu planner or just search 1 pot meals.

eisenbrj · · Grand Rapids, MI · Joined Jun 2012 · Points: 20

We tried Enertia Trail Foods on our recent trip. We ate their stuff for over 20 days as we completed the JMT. Neither of s got tired of the food and agree that it is much better than MH or BP, plus it's significantly cheaper.

Guideline #1: Don't be a jerk.

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