Super cat stove and windscreen at left; meal at right |
The super cat stove is a cat food can
with specific-size holes punched at measured intervals. Denatured alcohol from
the hardware store is the fuel (I carry mine in two small Gator-Ade bottles).
My windscreen is strips from a aluminum turkey pan from the dollar store. It
takes about 30 ml alcohol to boil 2 cups of water. Instructions are at http://zenstoves.net/LowPressure.htm (have a look around Zen Stoves site –
lots of good info). It is important to not use the super cat on top of duff or
other flammable material, AND general burn bans apply to the super cat.
Breakfast staples include freeze-dried scrambled eggs (the only such pre-packaged trail food I carry) with pita bread and cheese. I put the eggs into freezer bags at home and divide 2 packages into 3 freezer bags (with some of my dehy jalapenos or salsa). I also carry oatmeal in freezer bags tarted up with milk, sugar, cinnamon, dried fruit, etc. Some days I just have an energy bar + hot chocolate. I’ve begun having some protein drink (see below) with breakfast.
In the Wind Rivers - can you feel it. Stove with pan left front |
Dinner includes (everything dehydrated) marinara with hamburger and angel hair pasta (all pasta
is angel hair b/c easiest to dehydrate), chili with burger and pasta, mashed
potatoes (Idahoan brand – so good!) with cheese, various dried sauces such as
Alfredo and chipotle cream (when pre-measuring, add dry milk if milk needed)
with pasta, tom kha with chicken (get soup mix + dry coconut milk and serve
with instant rice or pasta) (dehy chicken [use canned to dehy] takes >10
minutes to rehy in a cozy). I bring cheese for half my dinners and have found
that pepper jack lasts at least 2 weeks in the mountains. I add EV olive oil to
almost everything for taste and >calories (carried in a small plastic bottle
from REI). A wide variety of freeze-dried vegetables are now available in bulk
from various stores – I don’t eat much of these as I like to take in lots of
calories, protein, and carbs when backpacking.
Bread: I used to bring soft tortillas,
but now I use bags of pita bread chips or something similar (such as flat
bread) as they are lighter and more varied – I expel the air in the bag via a
pin hole, bash them up some to make a smaller package, and put scotch tape over
the pin hole. I also take smaller (not the smallest though) bags of Doritos,
Fritos, etc. and treat them the same as the pita chips.
Pasta with onions, peppers, olives, chicken, etc. All dehydrated at home |
Protein drink: I use Walmart brand
whey-based protein drink as part of my work-out regimen at home and have begun
taking some, mixed with dry milk, when I’m backpacking. I mix up ~500ml (with
cold lake/river water) every day, have a little with breakfast, and the rest
mid to late morning. This seems very helpful to maintaining my strength and
energy along the way.
Coffee: Starbucks instant coffee
packets are the best, though there are now some pretty good packets from other
makers. Hot chocolate is always good.
Other: A package of cooked bacon pieces
goes well with several things. Spam comes in single-serve packs and ain’t bad
(nor very good). Olives and similar foods can be well-rinsed and dehydrated, as
can fresh basil, jalapenos, salsa, etc. I chew several sticks of Doublemint gum
along the trail every day. Gum is essential in the desert.
Sources of information:
And
Google, of course.