Meal of the week: Cream of Mushroom Soup
A great trick for adding some flavor and/or variety into your backpacking meals is to use pre-packaged sauces and seasoning packets. Lipton has a huge selection of soups and sauces, Annie’s foods have a lot as well. It is a very quick way to make some really great meals. The problem is you are stuck with what the company comes up with, and what they put in it. MSG or a truckload of salt are pretty common in these sauces. I’m not a big fan of either. I ran across a great site called trailfood.com. It has a lot of great food ideas for the backpacker. What got me most excited about the site is that it has a section devoted to dry mixes and sauces! This is exactly what I wanted. She has come up with recipes for your own broth powder, cream of mushroom soup, Salsa, cheese sauce, pesto and a few others. So this weekend, I tried out the parmesan cheese sauce over rice with potatoes and broccoli. It tasted great! Here is the recipe I used: Cheese sauce: 1 cup dry milk (whole milk powder like “Nido” is the best” 1 1/2 tsp dried garlic powder 1/2 tsp onion powder 1/4 cup shelf stable parmesan Mix all these ingredients together well. For one person combine: 1/2 cup instant rice 1/4 cup dried potatoes 1/4 cup dried broccoli 3 Tbls cheese sauce powder 1 cup of water plus a little more depending on how saucy you want it. If you like making your own food and having complete control over what you put into your body. Check this out!
Gear Corner
About a month ago I purchased yet another stove. I know that I have a problem but I just can’t help myself. This stove is by Jon at Flat Cat Gear and is the best alcohol stove I have ever used. First off, the Flat Cat stove is not a pressurized stove, so there is no prime time. You pour the alcohol in, you light the stove and put the pot over it. Done. It is much more similar to a canister stove in that way. Second, the stove can be used with any windscreen, but Jon has a windscreen/pot support system that is heavy duty and lightweight at the same time. It folds down small and will fit in small diameter pots. My lightest system so far uses a simmer cat stove and a piece of hardware cloth as a pot support(10.2 oz). The Flat Cat stove system is 11.8 with simmer ring and 11.2 without, but with all the advantages, I like it way better. It is worth the extra oz. In addition, you save that amount of weight in fuel alone if you are going on a two night trip. The simmer cat works great, but you can not put out the stove once lit. You have to wait for it to burn out of fuel. With the Flat Cat, you can place your pot right on top of the stove and it goes out quickly. You can also pour that fuel right back into your fuel bottle easily as there are not any side ports. The stove was also much more efficient then I expected. I can almost boil 1 cup of water with 1/4 oz of fuel. I can’t explain it, but what worked better was to put in 1/2 oz fuel for 1 cup water, bring it to a boil and then snuff out the stove so I could reclaim the remaining fuel. It used just over 1/4 oz in that way. If I only put in 1/4 oz, the water only got to about 170. Still plenty hot for a cup of coffee or tea, but not boiling for meals. Lastly, he also sells a simmer ring for the stove that has allowed me to bake for 45 minutes using only 1 oz of fuel! It is really amazing. I bought the Bobcat system as I always go out with my family of three, and I need the larger volume pot (1.6 L Toaks titanium pot). Jon also sells some smaller systems for solo hikers.
Tips and Tricks
What about using an alcohol stove in the snow? Alcohol stoves don’t work well in cold temperatures right? In general that is true. You don’t have a pressurized container pushing the fuel through the system. You need the heat of the stove to do the work. In addition, alcohol stoves do not burn as hot in general, and are influenced by the outside temperature a lot. I was surprised to find out the Flat Cat stove, had very little issue with the cold. All that was required was to put some kind of insulation between the snow and the stove. I put a piece of carbon felt on the snow, then put my heat shield on top of that, then my stove. Carbon felt(you can buy this on amazon, or at any local hardware store that sells plumbing supplies) is a high temperature material that plumbers use when working with copper in a house. The flame can touch the felt, but it will not burn. Great stuff for stoves. The carbon felt did the trick and the stove stayed hot during the burn and the water boiled without any issues. It was just as hot as during the summer. This was my first test out in the snow, but the temperature had dropped to 11 degrees Ferinheight overnight, so it was plenty cold to test the low temperature abilities of this stove. No excuses now, you can use your alcohol stove in the snow, so get out there and enjoy some great meals during those winter treks. I am particularly looking forward to some hot cream of mushroom soup when I go out on my cross country skiing trips! Enjoy! Dustin
gravy recipe says
Thanks for the article, very useful.