Annie's Mac and Cheese plus dehydrated hamburger and ghee butter (both shelf stable and high cal/oz) plus some jalepeno salt was my favorite meal over and over again on the Colorado trail. Not as fancy but lighter and great as UL food.
dehydrated meals only save weight when you have water sources. On hikes where there aren't water sources you can expand your menu quite a bit to include fresh fruits and veggies that last a few days, and boil in the packet meals like Tasty Bite, Loma Linda, or 60second rice packets since you already paid the weight penalty of hauling the water.
Spam musubi Kimbap (various types) Dried pork with steamed rice (make rice balls or dried pork musubi) Squid jerky Haw flakes Stretch Island zero sugar added dried fruit bars Kopiko coffee candy Trader Joe’s sweet and spicy buffalo jerky Indomie ramen 😋 Premade sandwiches with good bread that won’t get overly soggy like ciabatta (should be eaten by the next day at most though) And sticky rice with a sweet coconut filling for desert 😋 Precut nectarines Tangerines Fresh spring rolls filled with whatever you like Bao bun sandwiches (sweet and savory variations)
Bear Creek meals , all of them are good. Don't want to carry Tomato Paste then get some dehydrated Tomato powder from Harmony House Foods. There are a lot of different dehydrated foods (Vegetables & Meat ) from commercial outlets and even grocery stores. With some imagination you can do your own and basically have the same meals you have at home , all it takes is thought. You would be surprised what you can find ( & put together ) at your local grocery.
Ive been trying what im calling peanut butter pudding. Its a mix of 2 tablespoons creamy peanut butter, a teaspoon of chocolat instant breakfast mix, a teaspoon of powdered sugar and a dash of cinnamon powder. You put it in a screw closed container to repeat until its full. Lots of protien and vitamins and such.
You can buy sachets of flavoured cous cous here in UK that are amazing for camping. You only need to boil a few ml (I guess like 5oz) of water and you have a LOT of food. Add tinned tuna or fresh spring onion 👨🍳
Great selection, love it! (newly subscribed to your channel a couple of days back and going through your videos so maybe a little bit late to comment here but couldn't keep my mouth ...) So, just to say it - if you are not always on the spicy side, peanut butter sauce is also easily done with peanut butter, ketchup and soya sauce, and some water. If you add a spoon of wild blueberry fruit spread (that jam with half cooked berries in it) it even tastes like prepared by a 5star Michelin chef ... ;-) And else: if you are not so happy with the taste of whatever instant meal you prepare it is almost never bad to add simply some pieces of dried mushrooms ... even cheapest packs of macandcheese or other noodles can taste suddenly much better if you give some small pieces of dried mushrooms in the water whiles boiling it up. Use whatever cheap dried mushrooms you get for that hack, e.g. shitake or oyster mushrooms or so. The cheap mushrooms from farms are even better than wild ones since there is also without washing them guaranteed no sand in it - they are usually grown on saw dust or straw or something like that ;-) And finally: since many years, my number one backpacking meals are noodle soup packages from Wai Wai (often also spelled waiwai) in chicken flavour - originally these noodles are from Nepal and since years also widely available here in India, and afaik these noodles are meanwhile also available in the US, at least online. They are precooked and prefried and can be eaten raw as snack, what makes them already ideal for travels and backpacking, and prepared with boiling hot water (simply pour it over them and let them rehydrate for a couple of minutes) they are just great. Here in India they are available for 12 Rupees per pack (=0,16 USD) what makes them maybe the cheapest backpacking meals ever. Of course they give a nice stand alone meal but very often I combine them with tuna and ketchup or scrambled eggs or sausages or dried mushrooms, enjoy them with peanut butter sauce, or put them on top of toast or chapatis/tortillas etc. If you pinch a small hole in the pack and crush the noodles in your hands, the volume shrinks to approx. half of the original size, means you can save quite some volume in your rucksack.
I was wondering the same thing. I’ve seen so many videos that say to bring aidells sausages but they say “keep refridgerated” right on the package. I’m so confused.
The food "danger zone" is 40-140F where bacteria becomes active. It's a bell shaped curve so the middle of that range is the peak. So, in cool weather, you shouldn't have any problems straight out of the fridge. But the best way, esp in warmer trips, is to freeze that sausage and pack it in the center of your backpack surrounded by all the insulating items we normally bring, like your sleeping bag, puffy jacket, etc. Most of the time, it wouldn't be completely defrosted yet even by dinner time the first night. (Eat your heaviest foods the first night of course, including that sausage) As for veggies, although convenient to pre-chop, best storage is to simply keep them whole. An onion will sit happily in your pack for days, provided you don't squish it, etc.
Coming from a gram weenie Food is never extra weight. Food is life! Packing more than you need can be a problem but when it comes to weight vs taste or verity, ill take heavy ingredients over lightweight & boring anyday... You end up eating it anyway so it's fine. 😁
Do you have any issues of Aidells sausage not being refrigerated? Love this sausage, many good choices with different flavors. Thanks for your video and simple meal plans.
I keep some extra water it cooked in for the powder. If I want em to be creamy I'll bring some butter in the backcountry with me. Powdered milk too if I want them to be (Chef's kiss)
Ill like the video, but we need to get to know eachother more before i just subscribe and turn on notifications. I dont even get notifications when my wife calls me.
I make my own Lara Bar knock-offs - great for a healthy infusion of calories mid-morning or mid-afternoon. half cup of Medjool dates, 1 cup of dried strawberries, 1 cup raw almonds, quarter cup of dried blueberries. Toss it into a food processor for a couple minutes until it looks like a paste. If you pick up a small amount and it sticks together when you press it in your fingers, it's done. Dump it into an 8x8 pan, compact it tightly, chill for at least 30 minutes, and cut into 8 bars. Lasts a few weeks in the fridge or several days in your pack if properly wrapped. 215 calories per bar.
My Ma and I like to make homemade cocoa and package it in ziplock bags for the trail. 4 cups Powdered milk, 2/3 cup each of powdered coffee creamer, sugar, cocoa and 1/4 tps salt. Wisk it together and 3-4 tablespoons to a mug of warm water, not boiling. It really hits the spot on a cold night. Even better in the morning with a tsp of instant coffee mixed into the hot chocolate.
Pre-cooked bacon crumbles make everything taste better and are very calorie dense. They generally keep at least a week once opened. Find them next to the croutons and salad dressings, if the Hormel Black Label is available do it, way better than Oscar Meyer. For veggies add a spoonful of Knorr dried vegetable mix to anything that gets cooked with hot water. It’s mainly onion, garlic, and carrots.
My suggestion would be to buy some freeze dried vegetables. I know that they don't add calories, but they are very lightweight, and they add flavour, fibre and a strong sense of eating a real meal. Also, some are relatively coarse, so they add texture as well. You can add them to any meal by first soaking them in boiled water according to the recipe and then add things like instant mashed potatoes, that mac and cheese or noodles. Or, depending on the recipe, you boil them together with those other ingredients.
He doesn't. Backpacking isn' usually for the overly sensitive/rigid people. It prob says "refrigerate" b/c that preserves them longer, Doesn't mean they get bad after 12h if room temp. Maybe it cuts an allready long expiration date in halv let's say.. these things are not black/white. Commercial companies also have an incentive to err on the side of caution. Meats that are smoked and relatively heavily salted, should keep for a wile, these were go-to preservation techniques in the old days. One can just apply the smell test, and check for oneself, even at home. When spoiled the smell will change noticeably with meat.
The sausage is precooked. It would take a couple days before it spoiled. Just eat it early in the trip and maybe don't take it backpacking in Death Valley in the summer. I've done this many times!
Yeah they're precooked like hot dogs. As long as they dont SMELL spoiled, they're probably ok. We get these weekly from Costco- trust me you'll KNOW when they're off
On my overnighter last weekend, dinner was 1 cup of rice cooked with a half packet of vegetable soup mix. That was more than enough to shared with my friend. I had it with a steak, but add in some jerky, sausage, beans or lentils and you've got additional protein mixed in for a one pot meal.
So just getting into backpacking. Why don't backpackers carry fresh produce like carrots, potatoes, celery? Won't last weeks, but can definitely work for a 2-3 night hike.
Carrots and spinach often. It can get a bit heavy with root vegetables. Although the first few miles out I often carry heavy fresh fruit such as an apple, orange, or others. I even carried Avocado before, but that was a bit sketch without bruising it up too bad. I love apples, so that is a big one for me that is a luxury if available first thing after a re-supply.
One of my classic meals is the uncle ben ”mexican rice” Just throw in a couple teaspoons of water and some black beans and its delicious! Potato salad is also always tasty both cold and warm.
Potato salad also seems like it could be heavy for its volume right? I guess you could just eat it on your first night, but what if its a week long hike? I'm going on a 5 day hike next month! Wish me luck lol
This must be a short trip? How long before those sausages start to stink and your knees hurt from carrying a jar of peanut butter, fully cooked chili, a brick of cheese along with all your stuff. 🙃
I don't know if you can get them in the US, but I've genuinely enjoyed freeze dried meals from Adventure Food. Not cheap, but they certainly have a nice taste and some texture as well. Converted from euros, they should be around 7 US$ and typically are 600 kCal. One of my favourites is pasta al salmone. They also have vegetarian (vegan?) options.
Poached Eggs in Idahoan Garlic Parmesan Red Mashed Potatoes mix. . . SO SO GOOD. Obviously you have to keep an egg or eggs. You can pre-crack a couple in a ziploc if using soon. If camping near town, can boil a few, and crack some raw in a ziplock to eat the first meals. You can get pre-boiled eggs too, often at stores, and just carry those and chop them up.
Also under-rated is backpacking breakfast burrito with chopped up hard-boiled egg, string cheese or baby-bel, and green pepper/chile in a tortilla. I carry tortillas often and use them for multiple things, but the breakfast burrito is an awesome option. (people don't often think of some of these fresh options that stay a while on trail)
Another tip: use nuts as a long shelf life alternative for meat: high in protein and ultra high in calories. For example: noodles with red curry and cashews.
BackpackingTV New sleep system, NeoAir Xlite regular wide and my new Feathered Friends Swallow 30 which I love sooo much, slept like a baby... Before I had a Klymit Static V (not enough R-value for Québec temperatures and too thin for me... so I had to combine it with a Z Lite pad... and it was a way too heavy and bulky pad system, and my bag was a KSB 20 which is a decent bag but a bit heavy, also, a 20 bag is a bit overkill for me, I rather have a hotter pad and a colder bag... A tad below 2 pound for my new setup Vs 4 pounds and 4 oz for previous setup
I just did my first overnight, (going big and going long by end of summer), and I literally used that mac n' cheese and that chili, mixed them together for chili mac, it was so good, anyone who doesn't try it is wasting good food for nothing.
I freeze a steak with peppers and onions. It's usually cool out when I pan fry a steak. I'm thinking frozen hamburger with peppers, onions, and Anne's. I cook away from camp, and I'm mindful of smells. It did smell good, and I thought I heard a purring cat in the middle of the night. It was worth every bite.
Chilli, burritos, curry, pad Thai and Mac and cheese. Close to my favorites: chilli, curry, couscous salad, pesto pasta, guac and chips, spring rolls and lastly Minestrone (yes, soup. Just cut everything nice and finely and boil for a few minutes. Ad a bouillon cubes of you want to. Filling, tasty, healthy. Best with fresh bread)
You just cant beat a dutch oven if your not hiking sun up till sun down after the big mile days!! For me I like the casual 10 mile day on easy terrain because I enjoy being there not just walking threw there! So dutch oven gets my number one vote!!!
That is good only for a weekend trip when there are no bugs. Otherwise, it is not very practical. You can dehydrate your own meals and not be bored with them.
Annie's Mac and Cheese plus dehydrated hamburger and ghee butter (both shelf stable and high cal/oz) plus some jalepeno salt was my favorite meal over and over again on the Colorado trail. Not as fancy but lighter and great as UL food.
dehydrated meals only save weight when you have water sources. On hikes where there aren't water sources you can expand your menu quite a bit to include fresh fruits and veggies that last a few days, and boil in the packet meals like Tasty Bite, Loma Linda, or 60second rice packets since you already paid the weight penalty of hauling the water.
yeah if there isn't going to be water near you, then you don't really save much going freeze dried.
@BackpackingTV ...if there isn't water near you then how are you staying hydrated? Rehydrating meals doesn't require much water anyway.
Spam musubi
Kimbap (various types)
Dried pork with steamed rice (make rice balls or dried pork musubi)
Squid jerky
Haw flakes
Stretch Island zero sugar added dried fruit bars
Kopiko coffee candy
Trader Joe’s sweet and spicy buffalo jerky
Indomie ramen 😋
Premade sandwiches with good bread that won’t get overly soggy like ciabatta (should be eaten by the next day at most though)
And sticky rice with a sweet coconut filling for desert 😋
Precut nectarines
Tangerines
Fresh spring rolls filled with whatever you like
Bao bun sandwiches (sweet and savory variations)
Perfect timing, I just rewatched every food episode you’ve ever done
Awesome! (hush hush secret: there's more coming....)
Bear Creek meals , all of them are good. Don't want to carry Tomato Paste then get some dehydrated Tomato powder from Harmony House Foods. There are a lot of different dehydrated foods (Vegetables & Meat ) from commercial outlets and even grocery stores. With some imagination you can do your own and basically have the same meals you have at home , all it takes is thought. You would be surprised what you can find ( & put together ) at your local grocery.
Totally! A little creativity and you can do just about anything with your food. Good call on the tomato paste!
Ive been trying what im calling peanut butter pudding.
Its a mix of 2 tablespoons creamy peanut butter, a teaspoon of chocolat instant breakfast mix, a teaspoon of powdered sugar and a dash of cinnamon powder. You put it in a screw closed container to repeat until its full. Lots of protien and vitamins and such.
Beef ramen, curry powder, cayenne, garlic powder, coconut powder - spicy beef coconut curry!
That's a delicious recipe!
Sounds delicious, my little brothers will love it.
Bringing that many spices sounds exhausting...
I could eat ramen for breakfast lunch and dinner! 🍜
@@ChimRichalds34 I would assume it was premeasured into a bag with the ramen, so nothing to think about, other than adding water.
I do tuna packs, homemade jerky, mini chocolate bars, cliff bars (and others) and kraft dinner, and fruit leather.
I’m doing a overnight on the approach trail with my grand uncle and second cousin tomorrow thanks for the vid
You can buy sachets of flavoured cous cous here in UK that are amazing for camping. You only need to boil a few ml (I guess like 5oz) of water and you have a LOT of food. Add tinned tuna or fresh spring onion 👨🍳
Great idea!
I always carry some scallions even if I'm eating dehydrated
We have different packets of couscous here as well in USA
Great selection, love it! (newly subscribed to your channel a couple of days back and going through your videos so maybe a little bit late to comment here but couldn't keep my mouth ...)
So, just to say it - if you are not always on the spicy side, peanut butter sauce is also easily done with peanut butter, ketchup and soya sauce, and some water. If you add a spoon of wild blueberry fruit spread (that jam with half cooked berries in it) it even tastes like prepared by a 5star Michelin chef ... ;-)
And else: if you are not so happy with the taste of whatever instant meal you prepare it is almost never bad to add simply some pieces of dried mushrooms ... even cheapest packs of macandcheese or other noodles can taste suddenly much better if you give some small pieces of dried mushrooms in the water whiles boiling it up. Use whatever cheap dried mushrooms you get for that hack, e.g. shitake or oyster mushrooms or so. The cheap mushrooms from farms are even better than wild ones since there is also without washing them guaranteed no sand in it - they are usually grown on saw dust or straw or something like that ;-)
And finally: since many years, my number one backpacking meals are noodle soup packages from Wai Wai (often also spelled waiwai) in chicken flavour - originally these noodles are from Nepal and since years also widely available here in India, and afaik these noodles are meanwhile also available in the US, at least online. They are precooked and prefried and can be eaten raw as snack, what makes them already ideal for travels and backpacking, and prepared with boiling hot water (simply pour it over them and let them rehydrate for a couple of minutes) they are just great. Here in India they are available for 12 Rupees per pack (=0,16 USD) what makes them maybe the cheapest backpacking meals ever. Of course they give a nice stand alone meal but very often I combine them with tuna and ketchup or scrambled eggs or sausages or dried mushrooms, enjoy them with peanut butter sauce, or put them on top of toast or chapatis/tortillas etc. If you pinch a small hole in the pack and crush the noodles in your hands, the volume shrinks to approx. half of the original size, means you can save quite some volume in your rucksack.
Get some dehydrated tomato powder. It stores for a really long time and forever in the freezer.
For your backcountry pad thai, try adding a seasoning pack from the shrimp flavor ramen 🤌
@@MichaelTheophilus906 To each their own
Dehydrated mash taters, dehydrated mixed veggies. Pack of Sunkist chicken and chicken gravy packet. Mmm
Aren’t some of these perishable / refrigerate after opening? How do you manage?
I was wondering the same thing. I’ve seen so many videos that say to bring aidells sausages but they say “keep refridgerated” right on the package. I’m so confused.
The food "danger zone" is 40-140F where bacteria becomes active. It's a bell shaped curve so the middle of that range is the peak. So, in cool weather, you shouldn't have any problems straight out of the fridge.
But the best way, esp in warmer trips, is to freeze that sausage and pack it in the center of your backpack surrounded by all the insulating items we normally bring, like your sleeping bag, puffy jacket, etc. Most of the time, it wouldn't be completely defrosted yet even by dinner time the first night. (Eat your heaviest foods the first night of course, including that sausage)
As for veggies, although convenient to pre-chop, best storage is to simply keep them whole. An onion will sit happily in your pack for days, provided you don't squish it, etc.
@@louisng7539 awesome thank you!
I recommend a folding titanium cheese grater
How do you prepare the chili out on trail? I feel like I remember the package calling for like a 25 minute simmering time.
Awesome channel! I just discovered it this week and I am hooked. Thanks for the video.
Hey glad to hear it!
How would you keep the veggies cheeses and sausage cold without a cooler???
Coming from a gram weenie
Food is never extra weight.
Food is life!
Packing more than you need can be a problem but when it comes to weight vs taste or verity, ill take heavy ingredients over lightweight & boring anyday...
You end up eating it anyway so it's fine. 😁
Do you have any issues of Aidells sausage not being refrigerated? Love this sausage, many good choices with different flavors. Thanks for your video and simple meal plans.
This is also my concern...food poisoning lol
As long as I eat the Aidells within 2-3 days, I've never had a problem. They're precooked so they will last some time.
I have packed frozen raw cubed beef thoroughly packed and insulated, still cold (but thawed) after 7-8 hours of hiking and ready to make kebabs.....
@@BackpackingTV Same. I also get the precooked meatballs. They go well with any pasta / noodle deal.
Who do you keep the sausage cold while hiking?
how do these sausages not go bad?
Ok I have to ask the dumb newb question? Is it safe to carry sausage or cheese around in a bear canister in the summer?
Wow I was the 1000th thumb up!!! Sweet
How do you make Mac and Cheese without milk?
I keep some extra water it cooked in for the powder. If I want em to be creamy I'll bring some butter in the backcountry with me. Powdered milk too if I want them to be (Chef's kiss)
That Sriracha doesn't look fresh my guy...
Haha, wut?! Yeah that bottle is slightly past it's optimum time of usage. Thanks for noticing!
Ill like the video, but we need to get to know eachother more before i just subscribe and turn on notifications. I dont even get notifications when my wife calls me.
I make my own Lara Bar knock-offs - great for a healthy infusion of calories mid-morning or mid-afternoon. half cup of Medjool dates, 1 cup of dried strawberries, 1 cup raw almonds, quarter cup of dried blueberries. Toss it into a food processor for a couple minutes until it looks like a paste. If you pick up a small amount and it sticks together when you press it in your fingers, it's done. Dump it into an 8x8 pan, compact it tightly, chill for at least 30 minutes, and cut into 8 bars. Lasts a few weeks in the fridge or several days in your pack if properly wrapped. 215 calories per bar.
Heck yeah! That's great. I love the homemade options. Sounds delicious!
My Ma and I like to make homemade cocoa and package it in ziplock bags for the trail. 4 cups Powdered milk, 2/3 cup each of powdered coffee creamer, sugar, cocoa and 1/4 tps salt. Wisk it together and 3-4 tablespoons to a mug of warm water, not boiling. It really hits the spot on a cold night. Even better in the morning with a tsp of instant coffee mixed into the hot chocolate.
Oooh, I like this a lot! Great idea!
Pre-cooked bacon crumbles make everything taste better and are very calorie dense. They generally keep at least a week once opened. Find them next to the croutons and salad dressings, if the Hormel Black Label is available do it, way better than Oscar Meyer. For veggies add a spoonful of Knorr dried vegetable mix to anything that gets cooked with hot water. It’s mainly onion, garlic, and carrots.
My suggestion would be to buy some freeze dried vegetables. I know that they don't add calories, but they are very lightweight, and they add flavour, fibre and a strong sense of eating a real meal. Also, some are relatively coarse, so they add texture as well. You can add them to any meal by first soaking them in boiled water according to the recipe and then add things like instant mashed potatoes, that mac and cheese or noodles. Or, depending on the recipe, you boil them together with those other ingredients.
Good tip! Any idea where to buy these in the UK?
@@syrus3k Just do a google search and you'll find some companies that sell them.
personally my favorite is mangos I love them so much
@@syrus3kgo to the store
Thanks for the inspo!! What do you do to keep the sausage cool when backpacking as they’re meant to be kept refrigerated?
He doesn't. Backpacking isn' usually for the overly sensitive/rigid people. It prob says "refrigerate" b/c that preserves them longer, Doesn't mean they get bad after 12h if room temp. Maybe it cuts an allready long expiration date in halv let's say.. these things are not black/white. Commercial companies also have an incentive to err on the side of caution. Meats that are smoked and relatively heavily salted, should keep for a wile, these were go-to preservation techniques in the old days. One can just apply the smell test, and check for oneself, even at home. When spoiled the smell will change noticeably with meat.
Cream of mushroom soup powder + mashed potato flakes + lentils (pre prepared in tetrapak) is one of my faves
Sounds good!
Typically, Annie’s mac and cheese is prepared with milk and butter. Do you pack those ingredients or do you use substitutes? Thanks!
You can use powdered milk and powdered butter. Or just use olive oil in place of the butter.
Great ideas! My fave easy meal is stove top stuffing, mashed potatoes, gravey packet. Sometimes iadd a pack of chicken.
Sounds delicious!
when your favorite backpacking meal is essentially a poor trailer dinner.......
hits home hard
When eating with hot sauce in the backcountry be careful that your stomach isn’t writing checks your ass can’t cash
How do you get past the refrigeration for the adels sausage
Wondering the same...
Thinking the same thing
The sausage is precooked. It would take a couple days before it spoiled. Just eat it early in the trip and maybe don't take it backpacking in Death Valley in the summer. I've done this many times!
Yeah they're precooked like hot dogs. As long as they dont SMELL spoiled, they're probably ok. We get these weekly from Costco- trust me you'll KNOW when they're off
@@tdillard947 i did food inspection in the Army. This is still taking a big risk
How long does the sausages stay good? And once open do you just throw them in a zip lock bag?
Depends on conditions of course, but in mild temps 2-3 days is fine. And yes, ziplock em up!
On my overnighter last weekend, dinner was 1 cup of rice cooked with a half packet of vegetable soup mix. That was more than enough to shared with my friend. I had it with a steak, but add in some jerky, sausage, beans or lentils and you've got additional protein mixed in for a one pot meal.
Yeah but how do you keep the sausages from going bad?
Erics got more shoes than my wife
So just getting into backpacking. Why don't backpackers carry fresh produce like carrots, potatoes, celery? Won't last weeks, but can definitely work for a 2-3 night hike.
Check out Basecamp Chris, he cooks up some nice meals on his overnights, and tells good stories!
Carrots and spinach often. It can get a bit heavy with root vegetables. Although the first few miles out I often carry heavy fresh fruit such as an apple, orange, or others. I even carried Avocado before, but that was a bit sketch without bruising it up too bad. I love apples, so that is a big one for me that is a luxury if available first thing after a re-supply.
Just wish the prepackaged dehydrated meals were not a mega ripoff
Yup! Super pricey.
One of my classic meals is the uncle ben ”mexican rice” Just throw in a couple teaspoons of water and some black beans and its delicious! Potato salad is also always tasty both cold and warm.
That's a solid option!
Potato salad also seems like it could be heavy for its volume right? I guess you could just eat it on your first night, but what if its a week long hike? I'm going on a 5 day hike next month! Wish me luck lol
@@nicksshitbro Yeah potato salad is unfortunately quite heavy but its just so good! Goodluck on the hike!
This must be a short trip? How long before those sausages start to stink and your knees hurt from carrying a jar of peanut butter, fully cooked chili, a brick of cheese along with all your stuff. 🙃
I don't know if you can get them in the US, but I've genuinely enjoyed freeze dried meals from Adventure Food. Not cheap, but they certainly have a nice taste and some texture as well. Converted from euros, they should be around 7 US$ and typically are 600 kCal. One of my favourites is pasta al salmone. They also have vegetarian (vegan?) options.
How do you take the sausage backpacking without refrigeration?
I'm curious how long the sausage will keep unrefrigerated.
Might be a dumb question, but how do you carry sausages in backpacking? Don’t you need ice packs or smt..?
You keep cheese and sausage refrigerated in your backpack how? Glib phrasing, yeah, but serious question.
Why would you go backpacking and take a whole case of dia?
That seems like it'd be heavy.
Love the thumbnail. Great work.
Ketchup packet packed out with town food suitable substitute for tomato paste in Chili mix
Ketchup packets! totally!
How do you store the sausages in your pack?
Replacing dehydrated meals with mostly dehydrated, processed meals, adding processed sausage, is not an improvement.
How long will those sausages hold up in a pack?
So 1:03 of advertising and and begging for subscribers before your content started. Real shame as it distracts from your content.
Poached Eggs in Idahoan Garlic Parmesan Red Mashed Potatoes mix. . . SO SO GOOD. Obviously you have to keep an egg or eggs. You can pre-crack a couple in a ziploc if using soon. If camping near town, can boil a few, and crack some raw in a ziplock to eat the first meals. You can get pre-boiled eggs too, often at stores, and just carry those and chop them up.
Also under-rated is backpacking breakfast burrito with chopped up hard-boiled egg, string cheese or baby-bel, and green pepper/chile in a tortilla. I carry tortillas often and use them for multiple things, but the breakfast burrito is an awesome option. (people don't often think of some of these fresh options that stay a while on trail)
colby jack cheese sticks and salami rolled up in a tomato basil or spinach tortilla
I'm new to this so I don't understand how the meat and cheese stays good. What am I missing?
Another tip: use nuts as a long shelf life alternative for meat: high in protein and ultra high in calories. For example: noodles with red curry and cashews.
Does the sausage need to be cold?
How long can the sausages last in your pack
For my 3 days hike i use dehydrated meal plus my own made dehydrated meal. Plus dry fruits mix. Some energy's snacks and bananas
How do you keep your cheese and sausage cool? And fresh to eat
Love the Good to Go Thai Curry.....it is better than some curry meals I have had at restaurants.... always a goto
It's a classic!
Yall making me hungry with thes comments😂
Starts at 01:55.
Dehydrated chili equals a lot of farts.
Isnt chili like a risk? What if you just shit yourself
I am currently on a 2 days gear testing trip and eating at camp right now while watching this video... 😋
Nice! What are you gear testing?
BackpackingTV
New sleep system, NeoAir Xlite regular wide and my new Feathered Friends Swallow 30 which I love sooo much, slept like a baby...
Before I had a Klymit Static V (not enough R-value for Québec temperatures and too thin for me... so I had to combine it with a Z Lite pad... and it was a way too heavy and bulky pad system, and my bag was a KSB 20 which is a decent bag but a bit heavy, also, a 20 bag is a bit overkill for me, I rather have a hotter pad and a colder bag...
A tad below 2 pound for my new setup
Vs
4 pounds and 4 oz for previous setup
Doesn't sausage need to be refrigerated?
You don’t have to keep the sausages refrigerated?
mango chicken sausage!!! wtf...
Do you have to simmer the bear creek chili or can you just rehydrate it the same way as a mountain house? How do you prepare it on the trail?
how can the sausage be left open and un refrigged?
will not be dying in the front country now !!
How many shoes do you have dude?
Never enough!!! Also, I have way too many pairs.
Most every meal I put in a burrito it’s my food tube.
Burrito is the ultimate friend, never lets ya down.
dont have those things in europe
Hold on how long dose cheese last not cold?
Pronouncing sriracha is not hard. SRI is the way, not SIR. As there is no siracha only Sriracha.
It's still Hipster Ketchup. Or Hipster Catsup! Also, it's gross.
Always good video!thanx to share!! I like to bring pre mixed pancake in zipploc bag and eat it the first morning!!with a little maple syrup
mmmmm.... Nice! I've been digging the Kodiak Cakes pancakes lately.
Mystery ranch has backpacks featured in Tarkov, they're the best backpacks as far as i'm concerned xD
Fist bump.
Exactly what I needed... unluckily with Europe available foods, but still a great video
I just did my first overnight, (going big and going long by end of summer), and I literally used that mac n' cheese and that chili, mixed them together for chili mac, it was so good, anyone who doesn't try it is wasting good food for nothing.
I freeze a steak with peppers and onions. It's usually cool out when I pan fry a steak. I'm thinking frozen hamburger with peppers, onions, and Anne's. I cook away from camp, and I'm mindful of smells. It did smell good, and I thought I heard a purring cat in the middle of the night. It was worth every bite.
Wow 🤩
Chilli, burritos, curry, pad Thai and Mac and cheese.
Close to my favorites: chilli, curry, couscous salad, pesto pasta, guac and chips, spring rolls and lastly Minestrone (yes, soup. Just cut everything nice and finely and boil for a few minutes. Ad a bouillon cubes of you want to. Filling, tasty, healthy. Best with fresh bread)
this is great, thanks. dehydrated meals suck
they get hard to stomach after a while!
You just cant beat a dutch oven if your not hiking sun up till sun down after the big mile days!! For me I like the casual 10 mile day on easy terrain because I enjoy being there not just walking threw there! So dutch oven gets my number one vote!!!
Question, if I’m backpacking and being minimal how do I keep the sausages cold?
How do you keep addeles. Meat from going bad in the back country with refrigerator?
Pad thai is super easy, ramen noodles, chicken or plain, soy sauce and penut butter packets. Done.
That "chili" is nasty. Doesn't taste anything LIKE chili. Starting to question your judgment hermano, lol
That is good only for a weekend trip when there are no bugs. Otherwise, it is not very practical. You can dehydrate your own meals and not be bored with them.
Thank you for all the great ideas!
What's the longest you've kept the aidells sausage not refrigerated and did not regret it? Haha
Thank you!
Hey Greg, longest I've kept Aidells has been four days, using one per day from the package. I've done that quite a few times actually.
@@BackpackingTV thank you :)
Stowaway Gourmet is kind of new (to me at least) to the dehydrated backpacking meals, but they are some of the best that I have tasted.
Nice! Gotta try those!
Dude your walking around with a bag full of cut onions? You’re wild