What food would you take with you on a 2 day hike? No food pakets

F

FreshMint

Guest
Heya
I wonder what food would you guys take with you on a two day (one night sleeping outside) with you.
Not the artifical packet food you get in the outdoor shops.

Here is what i have thought of so far:

1x Salami
4x Apples
1/2 bread
2x Banana
2x Cans of Red Kidney beans (high in complex carbs and relativly delicious)
4x Protein Bars (you get them in any BB shop)
3x Can of Tuna
 
4x Protein Bars (you get them in any BB shop)

Not the artifical packet food you get in the outdoor shops.

IMHO Breaking your own rules :D

I would replace protein bars with homemade mixed nut muesli bars or mixed nuts.

I would also include a small amount of brown rice (maybe half a cup) to make a kidney bean and tuna hotpot - adding some complex carbs.
Add a clove of garlic and some crushed chillies and a veggie stock cube.
LOVELY :)

Also swap the bread for brown pitta bread

Neil
 
F

FreshMint

Guest
raskusdrotti said:
IMHO Breaking your own rules :D

I would replace protein bars with homemade mixed nut muesli bars or mixed nuts.

I would also include a small amount of brown rice (maybe half a cup) to make a kidney bean and tuna hotpot - adding some complex carbs.
Add a clove of garlic and some crushed chillies and a veggie stock cube.
LOVELY :)

Also swap the bread for brown pitta bread

Neil

sounds good.
 

Brynglas

Full Member
I often take cous cous which is extremely quick and easy to prepare, just add boiling water and some seasoning, leave for 10 - 15 minutes whilst you prepare the rest of your meal and it's done, also it's extremely lightweight when dried and bulks up considerably when cooked.

Oats and pearl barley are another favourite of mine, excellent when added to soups and stews.

If you're happy to carry the weight of tins, why not take some fresh vegetables, a clove of garlic, an onion or a leek, a couple of carrots or potatoes, easy to cook and no packets to carry out when you're done.
 

tomtom

Full Member
Dec 9, 2003
4,283
5
38
Sunny South Devon
i would take a block of cheese!

but thats just me :rolleyes:

i would also personaly replace the bread with rice or pasta.. only because a hot meal is always nice!
 
Nov 29, 2004
7,808
26
Scotland
I carry one of those small sigg bottles filled with olive oil and amongst other things I pour it onto bread as a butter substitute.
 

Doc

Need to contact Admin...
Nov 29, 2003
2,109
10
Perthshire
Lots of options here. I like to keep pack weight down so tend to go for dehydrated.

Pepperami salami - cheap, light,about 50% fat so calorie dense, pasteurised so no need to refrigerate, strongly flavoured so a useful ingredient to 'forager's stew'.

Pasta - tasty, cheap, dehydrated so low pack weight. Get the 3 minute cook version.

CousCous - see pasta.

Wayfarer pouch meals - effectively the same as tinned but in a pouch instead of a tin. Very hassle free and quite tasty but portions small, expensive, and as not dehydrated you're carrying unnecessary water.

Instant mash- Calvin Rustrum raves about it - I guess it was new technology in 1950 :) Still useful and rich in (artificially added) vitamin C.

If you're cooking over fires and fuel is no problem, rice is good too.

I'd avoid tinned food on weight grounds. You have to carry the tins out as well as in of course.

Again, if you're cooking with a fire consider a plastic bag of bannock mix and you just add water. Cooking utensils not required - you roll it into a long sausage and wind it round a peeled green non-toxic stick (birch is good) and prop it over the fire. No-one showed me this - I just read about it and tried it. Very easy and very tasty - nothing like hot freshly baked bannock when outdoors. Try it over the barbie at home.
 

anthonyyy

Settler
Mar 5, 2005
655
6
ireland
Stuart said:
I second cous cous, fantastic stuff for backwoods cooking

I second that seconding.
Great thing is it is easy to clean pots afterwards, it is quick, dosent waste water like pasta.
I like to warm some olive oil in a pan and toss the cous cous in this before adding hot water.

Tastes great with feta cheese.
 

Bumblebee

Nomad
May 27, 2005
362
10
54
Here and there
anthonyyy said:
I second that seconding.
Great thing is it is easy to clean pots afterwards, it is quick, dosent waste water like pasta.
I like to warm some olive oil in a pan and toss the cous cous in this before adding hot water.

Tastes great with feta cheese.

Mmmmm, nice. If you can find it try bulgur instead of cous-cous. More taste, less refined (helthier) and same weight/cooking time. Olive oil in a small Sigg botttle was an excellent idea!
 

neo_wales2000

Tenderfoot
Dec 6, 2004
57
0
wales uk
I just take an Army 24 hour ration pack, its got everything you need.
If my lad comes with me we take more fresh food and knock up stuff like corned beef stew.

Dried veg, onions, peppers, mushrooms are good, about 85p a packet for the Batchelor stuff; pre soak if you can to save on cooking time, add hot dogs/corned beef, (and things like garlic, curry powder etc) for a hot meal with smash. 5 minute rice/pasta with sauce, pepperami, couscous, don't forget stock cubes or packet soup (chicken, mushroom and ox tail are good for stock also). Small zip lock bags of herbs, galic powder make a big difference, as does a small bottle (panda pop type) of good oil, and some sachets of brown/red sauce. I recently got some emtpy 'Tooth paste' type tubes you can fill at home, ideal for jam, butter etc.

A current favouite at present in 5 minute rice and a curry made with dried onions and tinned pilchards yum yum
 

Graham_S

Squirrely!
Feb 27, 2005
4,041
66
51
Saudi Arabia
i was out at the weekend. lunch was cous-cous with 1/2 a stock cube, 2"of garlic paste and a generous shake of chilli flakes. washed down with a cup of green tea with honey.
ready in 15 mins (this includes time spent looking for fuel and then lighting my volcano kettle)
 

simonsays

Forager
Sep 9, 2004
126
0
57
sunderland
Breakfast in the outdoors for me is nearly always a cup full of oats pre-mixed with milk powder, sugar and some dried fruit

For a really quick hot lunch I tend to go for a block of noodles (Currently retailing for 9 pence in Quicksave) with a packet of cup-a-soup mix thrown in once they are cooked. You can easily make this more interesting by adding things like garlic, chilli flakes, salami, dried veg/peppers/mushrooms/onions.

Given time and sufficient access to fuel I would tend to go for a stew as an evening meal. Spuds, carrots, turnips (All chopped really small), some ready made dumpling mix. herbs/spices and either some tinned meat or home made jerky.


Or a couple of ration packs :rolleyes:

simon
 

Rod

On a new journey
As much homemade beef jerky as I can carry! (very moreish). Will munch/chew/suck on this throughout the day
Uncle Ben's boil in the bag rice x2 - carbs
super noodles x2-6 carbo/stodge
oxo cubes - flavour
sundried tomatoes/mushies/peppers - flavour
dried chorizo sausages - yum
oatcakes - carbs
primula cheese in a tube fat + protein
tinned mackeral x2 omega3's ++
broth mix - filling protein from pulses with carbs too
fruit leather - dried 'flat' fruit - from a healthfood shop


These are some of my current 'flavourites'

Remember, if you're not dining like a king - you ain't doin' it right!
 
J

Jamie

Guest
Grasshopper said:
As much homemade beef jerky as I can carry! (very moreish). Will munch/chew/suck on this throughout the day
Uncle Ben's boil in the bag rice x2 - carbs
super noodles x2-6 carbo/stodge
oxo cubes - flavour
sundried tomatoes/mushies/peppers - flavour
dried chorizo sausages - yum
oatcakes - carbs
primula cheese in a tube fat + protein
tinned mackeral x2 omega3's ++
broth mix - filling protein from pulses with carbs too
fruit leather - dried 'flat' fruit - from a healthfood shop


These are some of my current 'flavourites'

Remember, if you're not dining like a king - you ain't doin' it right!

And having been an official Grasshopper taster at the the Reading moot I can attest to dining like a king! It was awesome - i bags to pitch my hammock next to him at MM!!!!!!
 

BCUK Shop

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

SHOP HERE