What is some good food to take on a hiking trip?

What food is easy to take out on a camping trip?

  • Just doing a little preparation for a camping trip me and a few friends are going on over new years... We have a small gas cooker, could you please give any suggestions on what food ...show more

  • Answer:

    MRE's!! Meals Ready to Eat. You can find them in any sporting goods store like Dick's, or Gander Mountain....they are easy to cook, all you need is hot water, which you can easily boil in a small pot on the gas cooker. They range from meatloaf, pastas, corn dogs, burritos, all the way to cakes, pies.... And they taste pretty good too, mostly low cost. :)

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Other answers

canned , beef stew, soups, prebake potatoes, or instant, any thing that is in a can or is instant [mix with water ] or buy the meals ready to eat, [at a camping outlet,]

William B

Well, if you have a gas stove, bring a cooler with ice, and put in it: eggs, milk, sausages/ sliced ham, hot dogs, burgers, PB +J, fruits, ect.

Rifleman 129

assume cooker is small one burner, assuming 4 people, best to plan on mostly boiling water - still some good meals morning - instant oatmeal and coffee - add some raisins or other dried fruit (toaster pastries, cereal, dry milk) mid-day - sandwiches - PB&J is always good, cheese and crackers evening - rice/pasta/Ramen noodles (flavored rice and noodle packs-usually with a cream sauce- are good as well as mac&cheese) add foil pouch of tuna or chicken and favored seasonings above based on backpacking - use a lot of stuff I dehydrate at home too if not backpacking, you can carry just about anything you want but it sounded like your stove would limit you - therefore recommendation to boil water when you add boiling water to pot, wrap in insulation (sweater or something) - it will "cook" while you boil another pot for coffee and cleanup you can buy fancy freeze dried stuff at camping store but you can probably do about as well at regular grocery - just have to do more planning

bamavol

if you have a cooler, just go for the standard stuff like hot dogs, cold cuts and mac-n-cheese. then just fill in with canned foods and anything vacuum sealed. peanut butter is always good.

freeD

Pasta is my camp fav. Mac-n-cheese with Rotel is not only another fav, but a staple of my diet...good or bad. Get the generic stuff. It's cheap and packs well. Beef stew with Rotel is pretty nice. MRE's and dehydrated stuff at the fancy outdoor stores are good quality (I question the quality of MRE's) but crazy expensive. Grocery store is cheap and easy and just fine.

jools4fools

Well, if it's just for new year's, like a week or less, you could possibly pull off some quick-to-expire stuff, at least for the first day or two. Bread would last the week. Any snack that's not refrigerated. You could always bring a cooler full of ice to store some meat, if it's cold in your area. If it's hot, it'll just melt right away and the meat will go bad. Potatoes and anything in the produce aisle. Canned food always works. Just walk up and down the non-refrigerated aisles of your grocery store and grab what looks satisfying. But, for the sake of a good meaty meal, that's why I suggested the possibility of bringing raw meat at least for the first day.

William

Pal of mine always takes some of those foil pouches of tuna fish :) They're single-serving, vacuum packed, and easy to store, easy to open. You could make a tuna melt on your stove, or....?

freeze dried food packages. you can get them at any outdoors store. You just add hot water and you've got yourself a nice meal. Or you could get MREs. they have their own heat source, so you dont have to boil the water. you could also just take canned food, like chili. beef jerkey and peanut butter crackers are easy. If you are going campground camping anything would do, but if you are going backpacking you need freeze dried food or MREs.

Socrates

I would try that MRE's thing, except if you can find the Canadian Forces ones, buy them instead. They are amazing for instant army meals, and one pouch will feed you pretty well through the entire day, you would probably also have leftovers. Other than that, I would plan out a meal plan and figure out for yourself what you want. Try to stay away from meats and other things that spoil quickly, and pack a lot of juice crystals. The meal plan idea has worked for food supplies for an 8 day, 12-14 man trip through Temagami, Ontario numerous times for a camping group I used to be in.

Larry

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