T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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80.1 | Here's the recipe and sources of others. | UILA::WHORLOW | D R A B C = action plan | Thu Jun 28 1990 03:00 | 27 |
| G'day from Downunder,
Ahhh yes
Take apples, preferably cooking (green) apples, core and wash( keep
whole with a tunnel through the middle. You can buy a tool for doing
this at the hardware store).
Place in a flameproof dish and fill the centres with raisins and
sultanas mixed with brown sugar and cinnamon, if desired. Place in oven
and bake formaybe 3/4 hour.... With custard ***YUUMMMEEEE ***
Problem is an oven in camp... It's easy to make one from clay and a
biscuit tin, or you can use a dutch oven
There are a bunch of recipes in:
ABACUS::SURVIVAL
BTOQA::HIKING
CACHE::SCOUTING
Derek
|
80.2 | camping? | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Thu Jun 28 1990 10:28 | 3 |
| Derek, is there a camping notes file?
--bonnie
|
80.3 | Try this cookbook | NOVA::WASSERMAN | Deb Wasserman, DTN 264-1863 | Thu Jun 28 1990 12:01 | 5 |
| I spend a _lot_ of time camping a few years ago, and found a great book
called "The One Burner Cook Book" (or maybe The One Pot Cook Book, I
forget). It's full of recipes that are designed to be made in one pot.
We used a small Coleman backpacker stove, which only has room for one
pot, so this cookbook was perfect.
|
80.4 | NO not camping, as such... | UILA::WHORLOW | D R A B C = action plan | Thu Jun 28 1990 20:18 | 7 |
| G'day,
As far as I can tell, no not directly. The HIKING conference has most
info, followed by scouts. Survival talks alot about favourite guns for
survival hunting (of the hunter, not huntee ;-| )
derek
|
80.5 | there is a camping notesfile | OVRDRV::BADGER | One Happy camper ;-) | Fri Jun 29 1990 00:03 | 10 |
|
There is a camping notesfile, GENRAL::RV KEYPAD 7 TO ADD TO YUR
LIST:
note 655
ed
|
80.6 | it's just a mobile apartment | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Fri Jun 29 1990 08:54 | 3 |
| An RV is NOT camping!
--bonnie
|
80.7 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Fri Jun 29 1990 11:25 | 2 |
| I'll second that (.6). You may be able to go on vacation in a
Ridiculous Vehicle, but you can't go camping.
|
80.8 | hi and mighty idealizim? | OVRDRV::BADGER | One Happy camper ;-) | Fri Jun 29 1990 17:36 | 15 |
| Bruce, Bonnie, each to their own opinion. I've seen people get upset
before, but over a matter like this. ;-)
An RV does give a family a chance to get out. And the food we cook
over the campfire tastes the same as the food you may cook over the
campfire. Just becase it was stored in a refrigerator that guarentees
that it won't spoil adn give food posioning.....
This was a note on camping cooking, wasn't it. do we need a note on
tent camping, backwoods cabins, backpacking, pop-up camping..ad
nasheun,... nah, just go over to a friendly atmosphere in RV notefile.
I'll delete my previous reply if your really going to get upset about
it!
ed
|
80.9 | sorry, didn't mean to rathole | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Mon Jul 02 1990 09:20 | 19 |
| Sorry, Ed, I'm not upset . . . you'll have to pick another topic
for that. :)
It's a rathole, but it was based on a childhood in which I did
both backpacking camping with friends or with my daughter and RV
camping with my family in our pickup camper.
I found the two experiences to have practically nothing in common
except for the fact that I wasn't sleeping at home. I enjoyed the
RV stuff, don't get me wrong about that, but when I go camping,
I'm looking to leave behind some of the baggage of modern living.
It kind of spoils it when the people in the big motorhome next
door are sitting on their porch listening to Mozart and reading by
a generator-powered pole lamp (actual experience).
I haven't seen very many RV people cooking over a campfire. They
cook inside on their Little Chef gas range.
--bonnie
|
80.10 | back on track | OVRDRV::BADGER | One Happy camper ;-) | Mon Jul 02 1990 12:51 | 17 |
| bonnie, we use the microwave. There's no excape from thoughless
people, and someone who'd use their generator ranks high on the list
of thoughtless people.
Accually, we do do a lot of cooking outside. It simply tastes better.
a couple of my favorites:
o allow the kids to go shopping and get a can of their favorite
soup. Over the fire, you put everyone's soup in the pot.
flavor combinations. One ground rule for us- no fishy soups.
o bone soup- start with a base of maccaroni (sp?). let everyone
add their favoite ingredients, meats, vegitables.
ed
|
80.11 | I'll have to see if I can remember some tohers | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Mon Jul 02 1990 13:02 | 16 |
| re: .10
I like the soup idea -- no problem about keeping it fresh with
just a cooler, either. And no doubt it would work equally well
with envelopes of dry soup on a backpacking trip, too.
Our family camping standby was pan-grilled steak (or hamburgers)
and fried potatoes. We'd take turns stirring the sliced potatoes
in the cast-iron skillet over the fire. After the potatoes were
done, we'd add a bit of oil and fry the steak in the same pan.
We also make what my mother called Campfire Spam -- cook macaroni,
drain, then add a can of stewed tomatoes and a can of Spam,
chopped up into bite-sized pieces, and heat through.
--bonnie
|
80.12 | Boiled eggs and hot rocks... | CISM::SCHUBERT | | Mon Jul 02 1990 13:13 | 17 |
| I've camp quite a bit in the past (prior to motherhood) and for
breakfast we would have boiled eggs. Big deal you say....well,
this is how we cooked them, take a paper cup, one with plastic
coating on it, put egg in cup, put enough water in it and place
it next to the fire - within 5 minutes it starts boiling and cooks
up in about 10 minutes (depending on how you like your egg) - and
the cup never catchs fire nor melts.
Another favorite is cooking on flat rocks - take your burgers out
of your pack, throw a nice flat rock in your campfire, go for a
30-45 minute walk, come back, take rock out of fire, throw a litte
water on it and throw your burger on it. Cooks it right up, and
tastes great. On second thought keep burger in cooler, racoons
would probably get it when you go on your hike.
I usually pack very light on the dishs/pans when we camp. Just
one pot for boiling veggies.
|
80.13 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Mon Jul 02 1990 13:30 | 13 |
| In re: .9 bonnie - that's an unusual experience, the people outside
with Mozart and reading matter. Had the TV and AC in the RV broken
down?
When I was young, we especially liked canoe camping. There's nothing
like finding a site on a small island to keep you away from pesky RVs.
But happiness was getting past the first portage - then you didn't even
have any motorboats on the same lake with you. This was largely in the
Gunflint Trail area of northern Minnesota (sigh). We managed to eat
fine for 8 to 10 days at a stretch, with no cooler or ice, and even
though nobody in the family was much interested in fishing.
- Bruce
|
80.14 | gourmet college students... | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Mon Jul 02 1990 13:36 | 4 |
| We used to just pack a three-day supply of peanut butter
sandwiches and koolaid . . .
--bonnie
|
80.15 | another suggestion | OVRDRV::BADGER | One Happy camper ;-) | Mon Jul 02 1990 22:58 | 19 |
| I forgot about the cast iron fry pan, but thats an absolute neccessity!
One other thing to try if you haveing, is to put corn in its husks,
into aluminin foil and throw it into the fire and hot coals. best
tasting corn you could have. Also, something you can make in advance
is a hobo pack:
one potato sliced, one small onion, optional green peppers, small
amount of bacon greese [use margerine if no bacon greese], or use
a stip of bacon, double wrap in aluminin foil and throw into the
hot coals. it tastes great, requires little work. we put them
together the day before the trip, when we get there and set up, it
requires little work on the part of the cook. There are no dishes
to clean up as you can eat out of the foil.
Make one pack per person.
ed [even rVers eat]
|
80.16 | What about dessert ??? | JANUS::AMURRAY | Alison Murray - PTT Approvals DTN:830-3008 LOC:REO2/G-M2 | Tue Jul 03 1990 10:50 | 6 |
| One we used to use at Guide Camp was to take a banana in its skin and split
down one side with a sharp knife. Push some lumps of chocolate into the gap,
wrap well with foil and then put into the hot ashes for 10-15 mins. It is a bit
gooey and messy to eat (and very hot !) but who cares when you're camping !
Alison
|
80.17 | | MEMORY::FRECHETTE | Use your imagination... | Tue Jul 03 1990 10:59 | 3 |
| Frozen waffles (you can just keep them in your cooler), thawed
strawberries, and whipped cream. Toast waffles on camp stove toaster
($1.49 at Spag's), and put berries and cream on top... yummy.
|
80.18 | what is this ingredient? | CIVIC::U2CANB::JANEB | NHAS-IS Project Management | Thu Jul 05 1990 10:08 | 14 |
| To Derek (.1):
> Place in a flameproof dish and fill the centres with raisins and
> sultanas mixed with brown sugar and cinnamon, if desired. Place in oven
> and bake formaybe 3/4 hour.... With custard ***YUUMMMEEEE ***
This recipe sounds great, from the parts I know about, but what is a sultana?
My (American English) dictionary says "the wife, mother, sister, or daughter of
a sultan", so that didn't help!
Thanks for the info,
Jane
|
80.19 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Jul 05 1990 11:43 | 3 |
| A sultana is a type of raisin, larger than the usual kind.
Steve
|
80.20 | A few more ideas | UILA::WHORLOW | D R A B C = action plan | Fri Jul 06 1990 01:03 | 42 |
| G'day,
And you can use currants or mincemeat (as in Christmas time pies) too.
Enjoy
Or here's a variation...
take slices of buttered bread, place butter up in a pile with currants
or raisins (or sultanas ;-) )and apple slices or apricots or...(dried
fruit) and sugar (if desired) between each slice. Top off with one
slice butter down - sort of like a humungeous sandwich. Now place in a
bowl or basin = build it there is less messy! - and pour on fruit juice
or milk then place a weight on top and allow the juice/milk to soak in
for overnight... then place in oven and bake until golden brown again
munch with custard....
or... take a small flat plate of metal say 12-18" square. Place on fire
and when warm, clean with water and then melt lard or cooking oil on
it. Take flour water and an egg or two mixed up in a creamy mixture and
ladle carefully onto plate. When cooked turn it over and cook for a
while Hurrah flapjacks/pancakes/ eat with sugar or jam or a squeeze of
lemon....
or take same mixture as above, but somewhat thicker = a dough, hollow
out a recess and place aple and cinnamon in the hollow, then cover with
dough so apple etc is in the middle. Wrap in lightly greased tinfoil
and place in the embers of the fire until a knife pressed into it comes
out clean.... Woopee apple cinnamon damper!!! hyper triple yumm!
or mix c,r & s (again!) into the dough = spotted dog damper!! or grate
cheese and peel and slice onion finely and mix that in = cheese and
onion damper and ham bits or bacon bits too! Savoury dampers Oh what
delights camping has to offer...
my word, I can hardly wait to go again....
derek
|
80.21 | Cholesterol breakfast | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Member of the Alcatraz swim team | Fri Jul 06 1990 13:34 | 14 |
| Fry up some bacon. Save the grease. Mix french toast batter
in a zip-lock bag. Cut holes approx 3-inch in diameter in the
center of your french toast bread. (An empty soup or tuna can
works freat for this.) Cook the french toast (with the holes)
in bacon grease. It doesn't taste like camping unless you cook
in bacon grease! :^) When you flip the toast to cook the second
side, crack one egg into each hole. Flip one last time to get
the second side of the fried egg. Fried eggs fry faster than
french toast, so be sure to do one side of the toast before putting
in the extra egg.
You don't need many of these to make a filling breakfast.
Joe Oppelt
|
80.22 | oh, yum . . . | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Tue Jul 17 1990 09:57 | 7 |
| re: .21
Eggs in a bonnet! My FAVORITE!!!!
Drenched with syrup, of course.
--bonnie
|
80.23 | PAGODA::COOKS | SAHQ::HERNDON | Kristen, DTN 385-2154 | Tue Jul 17 1990 11:32 | 6 |
| Try PAGODA::COOKS.
Type DIR/TITLE=CAMP* and you will will get lots of notes on cooking
and camping.
Kristen
|
80.24 | S'mores!! | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Fri Aug 10 1990 12:42 | 10 |
| I'm surprised! Has everyone forgotten about S'mores! Don't forget it
HAS to be Hershey's chocolate bars and Campfire Marshmallows (toasted
on a greeen stick of course)! Must be properly eaten sitting around the
campfire on your "situpon" and telling scarey ghost stories!
Forget the "newfangled" microwave ones, they're absolutely AWFUL!!
Lyn
(still a Girl Scout at Heart)
|
80.25 | RE: S'mores | SHALDU::MCBLANE | | Tue Aug 14 1990 18:44 | 1 |
| Don't forget the graham crackers underneath the chocolate and marshmello.
|