Camping Cooking Supplies

Food always tastes better when cooked in the great outdoors. Camp cooking doesn’t have to be difficult; nor does leaving the confines of home mean that you have to go about primitive means to enjoy a great meal. Here’s how to put together a camp kitchen and enjoy some great food while camping.

Many people associate camping with cooking over an open fire. If you can flip burgers on the grill, you can cook over a fire. Basic tools for campfire cooking are a grate or grill, long handled tongs, spatula, and a long fork. I like to use a pair of heavy leather welding gloves if I need to move the grate or adjust the fire. Camping supply stores sell portable grates; otherwise most established campsites do have grates on their fire rings. A roll of heavy duty aluminum foil also comes in handy to make baked potatoes or dinner pouches. Just wrap your meal in the foil and place it on the hot coals.

A Dutch oven is a great addition to anyone’s camp cooking kit. Dutch ovens are large cast iron pots with legs and a lip around the lid. These ovens come in a variety of sizes, but the common and useful size is 12 inches in diameter. Hot coals or charcoal is placed underneath and on the lid of the pot so the meal inside is cooked much like it would be in a conventional oven. You can cook a wide variety or stews, roasts, breads, cakes and even pies in a Dutch oven. Many recipes that are designed for a crock pot work quite well in the Dutch oven.

A camping stove is a good addition to your cooking arsenal. Stoves give you more convenience, control and versatility that an open fire does. There are two types of camping stoves on the market: propane and liquid fuel. Propane stoves use bottled propane gas in either one pound or 20 pound cylinders. Propane is very convenient but does not burn very well in colder weather. Liquid fuel stoves use refined white gas in a tank that you pressurize with a hand pump. These stoves work great in cold weather but you have the mess of liquid fuel to deal with. Both stoves give you an easy to control flame so you can heat up water, fry, sauté, and simmer foods. There are even ultra compact backpacking stoves for lightweight cooking in the backcountry.

Other supplies for your camping kitchen include mess kits, utensils, pots and pans. Utensils and dishes don’t need to be fancy; you can search out thrift stores for inexpensive dishes and utensils. Use heavy duty freezer zipper bags and place them into large plastic tubs to organize your gear. You’ll find the most useful pans in your camping kitchen are the 12 inch cast iron fry pan, one quart saucepan, and a six quart pot for heating water. Add to that a 5 cup coffee percolator and you’ve got a functional camp kitchen. Now you can enjoy delicious cooking in the great outdoors.

Camping Chairs

Camping chairs aren’t just for camping. Chances are, you’ve seen people toting and using camping chairs at many other places besides a camp ground or forest. Camping chairs are generally small, folding chairs with a light, aluminum frame and strip of tough material in the middle where you sit upon. Usually they do not have a back.

Depending on the store which you shop, camping chairs may be listed under different names, such as stadium chairs or director’s chairs. Usually, director’s chairs have a back and arms to them, but some sporting goods stores, department stores and their online equivalents may still refer to any lightweight folding backless chair as a director’s chair.

There are lightweight folding camp chairs that do come with backs and armrests. Sometimes they are listed by stores as beach chairs. However, these are much heavier than the usual backless camping chair. These more chair-like folding chairs may be a viable option for those who do their camping in RVs or who will not be traveling very far into the wilderness.

If you are going to be hiking, traveling to a parade or need to wait in long lines for a great sale or concert tickets, then the backless camping chair would be a much better option. It weighs a lot less and can be easily attached to a backpack or carried with one arm. Think about how long you need to carry the chair.

If you are going to be carrying the camp chair for a long time, then you really should go to a bricks and mortar store and try the chair out before purchase. This way you can feel how light it is, how easy it is to set up or take down and if it is comfortable at all to sit upon.

But it you won’t be carrying the camping chair for long, then consider online shopping outlets for camping chair selection. Many websites will offer free shipping and limited warranties if you spend a certain amount of money. If you have had great service in the past with a particular online store, then the chances are high that you will be able to get a quality product and quality service with a camping chair.

Whether you choose to buy in a store or online, be sure you know the store’s return policy before you buy the camping chair. Find out if shipping is included in the refund and if the chair would have to be sent to a different address than where it came from. Also find out if you need to get a mailing label (which is often has pre-paid postage on it) or if you need to make your own mailing label.

Yard sales, flea markets, thrift shops and online auctions are dicey places to get camping chairs. Although bargains can be had, you need to check the camping chair carefully for rust, mildew and tears or frays in the fabric. Sit in the camping hair and note if it feels steady or wobbly.

Categories