I'm going to have to try that bannock sometime.
Me too. Even just the car camping I do it sounds like a great campfire treat.
I'm going to have to try that bannock sometime.
Anybody have experience dehydrating their own trail foods? Seems like an awesome option, after the upfront investment in the dehydrator.
http://www.backpackingchef.com/food-dehydrator.html
edit to add - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q1-QKLVjq_Q
edit to add again - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4JUHxrKJ81c
One of the perils of working graveyard shift over the holidays is the risk of having online conversations with yourself on web forums. This is a sign that I am bored and already tired of winter, and should not be taken as an indication of my mental stability or lack thereof.
Freeze dried backpacking food is pure utility for me. It's eating to live, not living to eat. Sure, in the mountains, when I'm hungry, it goes down easy enough. Almost seems to taste "good" even, sometimes, when I'm hungry. From there, you just have to hope it makes a reasonable turd and keeps the mail moving, I find the MH stuff in particular not very reliable in that aspect...
But to eat that stuff any other time? Except when I'm counting every ounce and calorie and using it for the pure utlity of it? No way... It always surprises me when I see people eating it car camping. I mean, you can carrry RIB EYE STEAKS car camping. You can make fried chicken. Rolls. Potatoes. Pie iron calzones. Fresh pastry. Cheesecake. Why on earth you'd subject yourself to backpacking stuff when you don't really have to, I don't understand.
I'm sure as heck not gonna sample any at home!
- DAA
I also really like that you can burn the Mary Jane's packaging. When/where allowed, of course.
You know mountain house is never low sodium.
I've been wanting to try natural high. Anyone have any experience with their stuff?