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Camp Cuisine
Book Review: Simple Foods for the Pack
After setting up our wilderness kitchen, I was inspired to take my love of healthy vegetarian cooking to the great outdoors.
There were a couple of meals we’d mastered. Spaghetti, vegan sausages, and garlic bread for dinner. For breakfast we liked fried potato wedges, eggs, and more vegan sausage. Tasty but not the best we could do.
I browsed the camping cookbooks in an outdoors enthusiast store and then the local bookstore. No luck. Sure there were plenty of books on the subject, but all were chock full of recipes starring meat. I could have made adaptations, but I decided to hunt out just the right book.
I found a recommendation on Jennifer McCann’s (author of Vegan Lunchbox) blog (www.veganlunchbox.blogspot.com) and ordered it.
A Sierra Club Book, Simple Foods for the Pack: More Than 200 All-Natural, Trail-Tested Recipes features a variety of yummy recipes that are mostly vegetarian. Many are vegan or easily made vegan. For example, the recipe might call for grated hard cheese to be added at the end for flavor. Vegans can use a vegan alternative or even make a homemade, dairy-free version (I love Almesan, an awesome recipe I found in Isa Chandra’s Veganomicon. You can find her books at http://www.theppk.com.). The recipes would also be excellent camp fare sans cheese. While there is a section on fish towards the end of the book (as well as a few recipes which include seafood), the majority of the book sticks to nutritious, tasty vegetarian cuisine.
The book is written for both the backpacking camper with limited space and the car camper who can lug around all the gear and goods he or she so desires.
The Book Includes:
- Exciting recipes from around the world! Didn’t think you’d be dining on Taste of India Couscous during a camptrip, did ya?
- The right recipe for every camp scenario—a romantic night by the fire, camping out with the kids, food for a crew, the list goes on.
- A listing of where you may purchase specialty foods online (although most recipes call for ingredients you’ll be able to purchase at your local grocer).
- Sections on Staple Foods, Tools, Herbal Remedies
- Info on planning, packing, and preparation
I even find myself making some of the recipes at home.
Sections Include:
Before You Go with info on planning your trip, basic foods, staples, notes on fresh foods, stoves, steaming directions, water options, sample menus, and more
Foods To Make At Home including pocket foods, journey cakes, spreads, dressings, and condiments
Foods To make In Camp which includes everything from cereals and breads, to soups, to patties and dumplings, to one-pot meals, to desserts and beverages
Simple Remedies including a natural first aid kit, medicinal teas, poultices and compresses, and more
PLUS Food Sources and Books and Websites and an easy-to-navigate Index.
I won’t ruin the excitement you’ll experience the day you get your hands on this gem, but here’s a few of the recipes you’ll enjoy: fruit leather, granola bars, nine kids of nutritious fudge, sesame chia crackers, Boston brown bread, journey cakes, couscous pilafs, miso sesame butter spread, lemon tahini dip, quinoa and fruit cereal, oatmeal hotcakes, drop scones, salsa soup with corn dumplings, tomato curry sauce, spicy peanut sauce, and so much more!
You’ll be pleased with the easy and fun-to-prepare dessert selections. Forfeit marshmallows (which, unless special vegan ones, contain gelatin—so not vegetarian) for skillet brownies, tapioca fruit pudding, and snow ice cream.
Also there is a long list of herbal tonic teas as well as great recipes for lemonades, horchata, and cashew milk.
For the hardcore, there are even instructions for a “Simple Garden for the Pack.”
The book is small, compact, and I tuck it in with our pots and pans when we go. I always pull it out when we come home though, keeping it in my kitchen along with my other cookbooks.
From the Preface:
“Whether you are an extreme hiker, a haiku hiker, or simply seeking to commune with nature, you have a love of the great outdoors…There’s no better way to celebrate this experience than enjoying good food and cooking in the backcountry.”
From Amazon:
Simple Foods for the Pack: More than 200 all-natural, trail-tested recipes
Bento Your Breakfast Toppers
The two most ideal (ideal= fast, simple, nourishing, frugal, and healthy) camping breakfasts for us are steaming bowls of hot cereal or wholegrain pancake stacks served with vegetarian sausage patties (we like Yves the best!). Both delicious options come to life with an assortment of toppings. It’s easy to plan and prepare ahead of time because you can use the same toppings and extras for both breakfast options.
Here’s what we love to stir into our morning bowls of hot cereal or add to our stacks of banana pancakes:
- walnuts or pecans (hemp seeds or slivered almonds would be good too)
- dried fruit (raisins, banana chips, mango, dates, and shredded coconut are our top picks)
- fresh, organic, and seasonal (if possible) strawberries, bananas, peaches, and/or blueberries
- organic almond butter or peanut butter (instead of nuts)
- 100% maple syrup
- cinnamon
Now here’s the fun part. Taking each of these individual toppers in ziplocs or tupperware would be inconvenient and not the most eco-savvy means of transporting.
I came up with a good idea while wading through my various food storage containers. As I rummaged through the cupboards and pantry, I decided I wanted to make use of the lunchboxes I’d surprised Kevin with over our four years together. One of them, a traditional stainless steel Indian tiffin (here’s one at Amazon) worked well for the berries. But the Laptop Lunchbox (I bought it at www.laptoplunchbox.com) would truly live up to it’s motto: Bento-ware for Everywhere!
The main box holds four containers, some with lids although not at all necessary for the dry items, leaving enough room for silverware (I tucked a rolled up reused ziploc with just enough dried coconut in that space). I filled the containers with walnuts, raisins, dried mango, and dried bananas. Then the Laptop Lunchbox closes. No matter how you lift it or carry it, stuff doesn’t spill.
In the mornings we set up shop, getting the ingredients we needed to cook up breakfast from our Kelty Binto Hauler Storage bag (yes, another bento-inspired idea): For Pancake Day—maple syrup, soy milk, canola oil, Arrowhead Mills multigrain pancake mix; For Hot Cereal Day—bulk-bought oats. Plus the Laptop Lunchbox with our beautifully arranged toppings. After pulling the bananas and berries and Earth Spread out of the cooler, we were ready to cook up some a.m. grub without hassle.
Add a cup of Kevin’s French pressed coffee (with water boiled in our new camping kettle) and breakfast never tasted better.
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