My Trangia Reunion

  • Come along to the amazing Summer Moot (21st July - 2nd August), a festival of bushcrafting and camping in a beautiful woodland PLEASE CLICK HERE for more information.

Chris

Life Member
Staff member
Sep 20, 2022
1,654
2,168
Somerset, Yorkshire, Lincolnshire
I love a real fire, but it’s just not safe or practical to have one everywhere.

Last time I used a Trangia was when I was in the Scouts, about 25 years ago, which makes me feel ancient. Though the Trangia 27 which I just got was first released in 1957, according to Google. This is interesting because that is exactly half way between World War 2 ending and Led Zeppelin releasing their debut album. Is there a name for someone who enjoys examples like this of where The Old meets The New? Not the name you’re thinking of, that’s rude.

Anyway, immediately on opening and removing the paper dividers from this Trangia, it seemed familiar. It evoked the memories of the smell of cheap rashers of back bacon being fried at too-low a temperature outside of a big canvas tent, until they were warm but still anaemic looking. The memory of a soot covered hand as I tried to clean dented steel with damp grass, a used teabag or in one case my friend’s sleeping bag because he was being annoying.

I’ve not cooked anything in it yet, though if memory serves me they had a tendency to be ‘clean’ to the point of impracticality, because the bare, unseasoned metal used to make even butter stick to it.

There was a point in military history where the gas parts of rifles went from being uncoated steel, to some kind of teflon coated parts. People would return their rifles to the armoury and be sharply rebuked because their gas parts ‘were not clean!’, because they were still ‘black and sooty’ to the eyes of an old sweat. Back they went with the wire wool, scrubbing until the gas parts were steel coloured and ineffective once more. This is the fear a shiny metal Trangia strikes in me.

So job one was ruining the frying pan and my younger Scout self’s dreams by making the pan all dirty looking. I took the same approach I’d take with a cast iron pan, though Google tells me that the melting point of Aluminium is 660C so was extra vigilant. A thin layer of vegetable oil on the pan, maintain it at smoke point (about 240C), wipe clean and then reapply a teenyweeny thin layer again, repeat. I did this in the oven a few times, then switched to the hob to finish it off with a few more rapidly applied layers. I heard somewhere that frying spring onions with salt in it at a high heat does something, too, so I also did that. I suspect it’s an old wive’s tale, but old wives aren’t often stupid so I did it anyway.

It’s got some way to go before it gets that lovely, solid season on it, but I think we’re good to get going for now.

IMG_4051.jpegIMG_4053.jpeg

I’m at least semi-confident that I could fry an egg on it without it sticking now. Perhaps a fried breakfast would be a good First Trangia Meal as an adult. I think I’ll give it a go soon and report back, once my meths has arrived. £10 for 500ml they wanted at Halfords! No thank you.
 
12 litres should keep you going.

Even cheaper straight from the manufacturer, free delivery too.

No purple dye to breathe in when it burns, or to possibly clog burner jets.

UK meths has been plant-derived alcohol plus a bitterant plus a purple dye since the methanol was removed after an EU ruling in 2013.

Bioethanol is identical minus the purple dye, ignore the nutjobs claiming it burns 'hotter' or 'differently'....

Trangia's laminated stainless and aluminium 'Duossal' pans are a great investment, easy to scrub with a stainless scourer, conduct heat well and are very durable. Also no leaching of aluminium into your tomato sauce. Best innovation in Trangia's history!
 
Even cheaper straight from the manufacturer, free delivery too.

No purple dye to breathe in when it burns, or to possibly clog burner jets.

UK meths has been plant-derived alcohol plus a bitterant plus a purple dye since the methanol was removed after an EU ruling in 2013.

Bioethanol is identical minus the purple dye, ignore the nutjobs claiming it burns 'hotter' or 'differently'....

Trangia's laminated stainless and aluminium 'Duossal' pans are a great investment, easy to scrub with a stainless scourer, conduct heat well and are very durable. Also no leaching of aluminium into your tomato sauce. Best innovation in Trangia's history!
How long can this last ? ie does it degrade with longer term storage?
 
Even cheaper straight from the manufacturer, free delivery too.

No purple dye to breathe in when it burns, or to possibly clog burner jets.

UK meths has been plant-derived alcohol plus a bitterant plus a purple dye since the methanol was removed after an EU ruling in 2013.

Bioethanol is identical minus the purple dye, ignore the nutjobs claiming it burns 'hotter' or 'differently'....

Trangia's laminated stainless and aluminium 'Duossal' pans are a great investment, easy to scrub with a stainless scourer, conduct heat well and are very durable. Also no leaching of aluminium into your tomato sauce. Best innovation in Trangia's history!

Those Duossal ones sound interesting. Would the two layers with different thermal properties not lead to warping? Perhaps one to experiment with. I would indeed prefer stainless steel as the cooking surface.
 
Carrying a Trangia is a great idea for all of us who normally cook with fire. More than once I’ve found somewhere to sleep but I’m surrounded by dry bracken and can’t use the Kelly.

These days I don’t carry stuff but I don’t set out without my stainless steel M40 back up.

I’ve liked the look of the 27 since I first saw one but …… well, I’ve been using the M40 for so long now…….

pee ess -
I’m not receptive of the purple potion scare stories. I’ve found nothing wrong with it for half a century.
 
Those Duossal ones sound interesting. Would the two layers with different thermal properties not lead to warping?

They are very durable, even once dented and battered.

Two- or even three- ply cooking vessels are nothing new. Most quality stainless steel domestic cookware is tri-ply, stainless outside, aluminium core for good conductivity all around the pot, and stainless inner. Sometimes with an encapsulated copper base too for good measure. Millions of pans of this sort have been used in homes and kitchens for decades now without any ill effects.

I’m not receptive of the purple potion scare stories. I’ve found nothing wrong with it for half a century.
The dye in some brands of meths can and does block burner holes, I have seen it happen to others first hand. The dye is also just more rubbish to breathe in. Meths cannot be bought anywhere cheaper than bioethanol in bulk, so to me it's a no brainer.

Like a lot of things, meths has changed in half a century. It now contains a bitterant rather than methanol, and the formulation of the dye veries between brands and over time.
 
They are very durable, even once dented and battered.

Two- or even three- ply cooking vessels are nothing new. Most quality stainless steel domestic cookware is tri-ply, stainless outside, aluminium core for good conductivity all around the pot, and stainless inner. Sometimes with an encapsulated copper base too for good measure. Millions of pans of this sort have been used in homes and kitchens for decades now without any ill effects.

My concern is more about this being an issue with such a thin pan. My multi-ply pans at home are a lot thicker and heavier. Either way, I’m going to give it a go so will find out.
 
Completely agree with your sentiment in the original post, there's something about the Trangia which invokes a great deal of happiness. I think it's the age old simplicity of design and re-assuring reliability. That's a great idea with the ally pan seasoning, curious to see how that 'pans' out for you (pun intended!).

I have the hard anodised version of the Trangia 27 and have recently had to replace one of the pans because the hard anodised coating started to flake off. No idea if it's a common issue, I think it was most likely my fault because I probably put too much heat through a dry pan when I used it to create a trangia pizza oven. I replaced the hard anodised pan with a standard ally pan and I recall it only cost a few pounds (less than a tenner) to source a replacement.

With regards to the fuel, my go to source is the 2 litre bottles of bio-ethanol which you can get from B&Q for about £9.

The other thing that I like to do when I know that I'll be camping without a fire is to pack a candle lantern. It's not the same as the fire, but it does create a nice ambience.
 
I recently found my old Trangia when clearing out the shed for moving. It was like meeting an old friend. It's a relatively new one though (only ~30 years old), not the one I used to borrow from my father when I was a young Venture Scout. He bought his in the late 1970's/early 1980's when he was a mountain leader in an outdoor centre.

My other favourite stove is my Origo spirit marine stove, a stainless steel twin-burner thing which is bombproof. The manufacturer was bought up by their rival (who made gas stoves) who then ceased to make the stoves. I had mine off eBay several years ago not long after they were discontinued, they go for silly money if you can even find one these days. I also have a couple of crates of bioethanol too, at the time it was a MUCH better price on Amazon if you bought a crate of 24 x 1L bottles and as it doesn't degrade...... The stove was used in my camper van, I saved the stove when I disposed of the van, the stove is so frugal that I still have a load of bioethanol left. The Origo stove was a masterpiece of design- really simple, very effective- a controllable alcohol flame over which one could cook properly. It's not a camping stove- it was a marine stove- but it's good in a van or as an emergency house stove.

I have a soft spot for alcohol stoves, just glad that modern bioethanol doesn't stink the way the old purple "Meths" did.

GC
 
  • Like
Reactions: Chris

BCUK Shop

We have a a number of knives, T-Shirts and other items for sale.

SHOP HERE