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I ate very similar to this when I was homeless and living in a tent. No refrigeration. I read a negative comment about the instant mashed potatoes. I pour the hot water in a dish, then slowly add potatoes and mix until I get the consistency I want. My favorite soup was Ramen noodles, dehydrated veggies ( like the cabbage mix- it's sweet), jerky, spice to taste. Let soak in boiling water for around 20 min for everything to re hydrate and eat. Instant rice, refried beans, dried soup mixes and so on were my staples. I added canned meat to round out my meals. I have no problem with vienna sausages or salty canned foods- I just didn't add salt to a lot of things.
@@mannixflinn6227 Considering the past tense and the internet access with spending time watching youtube videos, I think it likely that things have improved for her.
@Nunya Business What's bullshit? Me being homeless?,if that's the case you don't know me.. I'm a river rat dude 😎 I live just off a river I got a view people pay a tone of money for.. If your about to do the old how do you watch UA-cam then.. it's called day labor $60-$80 a day and I also fly a sign too when I don't work
RE: The prego or other ready type meals. I have put a lg hand warmer on either side of it and stuffed it in my inside coat pocket in winter and it's ready to go until the hand warmers quit. Or wrap it with a towel/clothing or something and set it aside for 20-30 min or so while I'm doing something else. Not exactly "hot" but really really warm. Good enough for me though.
Before bedtime put hot water in a thermos, add chopped apple, steel cut oatmeal, raisins, and honey for a great breakfast, or a hardy snack in the middle of the night when you are freezing. Cook sloppy joes ahead of time, freeze in boil in bags, drop in boiling water and beer along with hotdogs, put on buns and you have German style sloppy joe hot dogs!
I dont know if anyone else likes this. but I absolutley love GV frosted wheats that I dip in Jiff Penut butter. I get a 24 oz box of frosted wheats and a 40 oz jar of Jiff for under $10.00, and its like 8800 calories. Always feels like Im eating something substantial with a satisfying crunch, lots of fiber, filling penut butter, and sweet frosting. I live this much better than any bars. I also bring nutella for a change up, or a combo...lol.
I know this is extremely late as the video was posted 2 years ago but some bullion cubes could work well. They’re very small and compact as well as simple.
If you enjoy the taste of chicken ramen like me but don't want all that sodium here's what I do . Walmart carries a small package of Mahatma yellow rice for $0.75. And the Dollar Tree carries a 16oz bottle of seasoning salt for a dollar. The seasoning salt smells and taste just like chicken ramen with like half the sodium. Pairing them together you get a hardier and healthier meal that tastes just like chicken ramen. There's enough rice in the bag for a lunch for two or a Hearty dinner for one at the end of the day. I also like to fry up some smoked sausage slices to pair with it for fat and protein. It's delicious and it's cheap. If you want to make it last longer you can substitute the smoked sausage with summer sausage. But in my opinion the fresh sausage is tastier.
I can't say enough good things about the all the newish 90-second microwave rices that are available now. It's not exactly "cooking" if you want to get all fancy about it, but it's really awesome to have this easy rice to mix with grilled meats or seafood in such a light-weight packet. I wish they weren't about $2 a pouch, because that's about 100 times more expensive than raw rice, but darn if they aren't really useful to make a good meal!
just went camping a few weeks ago and what i do now a days is take those grocery store ready to eat/microwaveable pouches like you mentioned, Prego ready meals, Starkrist Tuna or Chicken and mix them up with the Military MRE (surplus or the commercial variants like XMRE, Z-Ration, First Strike Ration, etc). Super coinvent and way better than bulky canned goods or freeze dried mountain house over priced crap
One thing i always keep at the ready is a few family sized bags of jack links beef jerky. Great snack for in between meals and salty so helps hold water but not to salty where it can dehydrate you
Some of those pouch meals are kinda like a cheap civilian MRE. I've been looking up those vacuum sealing devices, and it's possible to use a vacuum cleaner for fairly decent results if you do it right. Then you can pack whatever you want for at least short term. The best thing for camp meals is always aluminum foil. I put aside empty tic tac containers for spices. And aside from camping what I always do, is keep a box in my car for whatever I run into. Matches lighter pocket knife, blanket and a plastic table cover, a jacket and at least one pair of socks. Old shoes. Basically I try to keep a little kit in the box so that I'm prepared for anything. I think it's something all kids should be taught when they get their license. Keep a small prepairness kit for random emergency. Get caught in the rain, lucky for you, you've got sweat pants and dry socks, and some old shoes. Whatever you think might be useful. Never know. I even keep a alcohol stove and snacks in the box.
@@CJ9007 always a flashlight. Lighter or matches. Change of shoes and socks. I even made a penny alcohol stove so I can cook food, for fuel i use that "heet" stuff in the yellow bottle. Barely takes up any space and whatever happens I feel prepared.
As a nearly diagnosed diabetic I am majorly redoing my food options while camping. Also try McCormick's Nature's seasoning. it has salt/pepper/garlic/onion and celery seed. Great on Everything!
In the British Army we used to take a pot of curry powder in our belt kit along with a 24hr ration pack. Don't know if they still do it, but back then everyone had it.
I like the instant rice with mushroom soup also can tamales with rice and a can of pork all under a dollar at the dollar store you mix the Spanish rice with the juice from Smalley's and the can a pork chicken whatever you prefer excellent excellent meal
It's easy to avoid the high-salt, high-cost 'camping' envelopes with a trip to Wal*Mart! My two issues are that in Canada, you can't find the tetra-packs of Tuna, Ham and Chicken...just tins. Also, living with Type II, means that a careful eye on carbs, sugars and overly processed foods makes it doubly difficult!!!
you can also seal some spices into plastic drinking straws. just melt the end fill it up and then melt the other end. use some needlenose pliers to hold end closed while your melting it. works fantastic, write on straw whats inside
*Oatmeal; Honey; fresh fruits and vegetables already washed, cut, pre-measured and in it’s own baggy; bar-b-que sauce; I Love Spam; trail mix; dry milk... spices!* *Spices!*. You can always especially if you carry a variety of food make a soup out of a bunch of things you wouldn’t of thought to mix together. I always enjoyed soup out on the trail! It was hot yummy and I guess it was comforting!
Best by dates on dehydrated food is really only best for the mfgr. If the package is still intact it's gonna be good when you need it. Other than that you got some great ideas here. Some money saving ideas might be to buy cans of chicken, tuna or Spam (slice it down to singles) and vac bag em (seal-a-meal). Also buy normal sizes of PB and put some in baggies or small plastic containers. Tortillas are awesome for trips too.
Let me give you a couple of things to try. You talked about freezing meat and it lasting a day. On youtube people have made pouches out of a foil bubble wrap you can buy at lowes. They use them for warming up rice dishes or Mtn house meals, cooking out of them, just adding boiling water. I have found that if I freeze meat, put it in a ziplock bag, then the pouch and wrap it in clothes in my pack, even in the summer I can keep it cold for about 3 days. A mini fridge. Another thing I use is gravy packets. I use 1/2 a packet per meal and make biscuits and gravy, using English muffins/ a poached egg on top and some jerky, bacon bits or something sprinkled in the gravy or on top. Try it you will like it. I use the other half of the gravy packet with the Ramon noodles. Last idea is stove top dressing, very satisfying. I too love to eat when I go hiking. Good luck with your next adventure.
Thanks so much for the great tip about the reflectix. I've got a cozy that I use for rehydrating meals and I never would have thought to use it as a fridge. So simple. So smart. Thanks!
If you get hungry for vegetables when you are backpacking. Ramin Noodles with some of the Harmony House Dehydrated Vegetable Soup mix ( about two heaping tablespoons ) added is really good , especially with a dash ( or two ) of Hot Sauce. I also add a Tablespoon of the dehydrated Cabbage to mine because I like Cabbage. The vegetable soup mix is good by itself plus you can add ( Summer-Sausage , Jerky , Dukes Smoked Short Sausages , Chicken ) whatever you want to it. Let your imagination go crazy.
making your own energy / protein bars are easy. just use a blender and smush up whatever you dont want to be chunky. add some peanut butter and/or cocoa some honey or brown sugar. protein powder nuts dried fruits.... whatever you want. oatmeal. etc. mix it all together and smush into a pan and when set up or firm as you want... cut into bars and wrap in saran wrap or put in a baggie. way cheaper than cliff bars and you get what you want in them.
Thanks for sharing a great video. My wife and I started dehydrating back in 1994. We had a bad dehydrator(Ronco) and even so we managed ok. Several years later I picked up a much better one for $3.00 at a garage sale and we haven't stopped since. My wife made and dehydrated the food for 12 people for a 10 day canoe trip in Canada all under 100 pounds! My favorite meal of the trip... Corned Beef and Cabbage with potatoes. Jello no-bake cheesecake for dessert after spaghetti, peas and garlic bread was the halfway dinner.
Sorry to be a party pooper, but might want to avoid adding boiling water directly in the oatmeal bag.... it seems the bag has an inner coating that may be polyethylene (like the knorr bags which are in fact coated with polyethylene). polyethylene plastic, which is also used to make ziploc bags, starts softening around 195F (mainly depending on elevation) and boiling water is around 212F. interestingly there seems to be a few people out there who think freezer bags are safe to add boiling water to... a freezer bag generally has a better seal and thicker plastic BUT softening point is for the most part the same...remember, it's a freezer bag, not an "oven bag". even if the plastic was a FOOT thick, the side exposed to the hot water can still melt/soften. if you are ok with potential chemical leakage in your food, i will sh up :) stay healthy!
Try using the Ziploc Zip and Steam bags - they are made for cooking and should not have the same issues as the freezer bags that you mention. You can buy them on Amazon.
I took some of the small mylar bags. I put oatmeal (some with cinnamon) in a sealed. All you have to do is cut open, add water, stir and wait few min. Eat out of pouch. They pack nice and flat and take no space in my BOB.
@4:40, I would expect those Ready Meals to be able to handle being dunked in boiling water, since they handle the heat generated by a stint in the Nuke-uwave.
@@SeekTheLordJesusChrist7 holy hell you just helped me out big time! Had no idea what asmr was so I looked it up. Mind blown. For real ty ty😎 I'm hooked!
Some good ideas here. I'd add oatmeal to the list. With some honey or peanut butter. Healthy, filling and a nice break from all the usual salty pre packaged foods. Also you forgot whiskey for the cold nights... lol
The Prego Ready Meals are fantastic. Sometimes you can find them on sale for $1. I ate a Chicken & Dumplings one last week on my camping trip. Just boiled the bag in hot water over a Sterno Stove fueled with Dollar Tree canned chafing dish heaters and ate straight out of the bag. No fuss and easy clean up.
great video. First time i went camping a few years ago i brought bulky canned goods. Luckily I was car camping so i didnt have to carry in a pack all day, but none the less, I now know better that theres better options out there.
Bought a freeze drier to hedge against loosing the food in our freezers . Looking forward to trying some stuff I don’t normally bring . Good video. Have a good one
Great video. Some of the east to grab stuff in the store is inexpensive, and easy to heat up. You did a great overview of stuff in this video. I have been dehydrating meals for 10 years, that is really the way to go if you do a lot of backpacking. A lot of the meals like mountain house are very unhealthy, they get you the calories you need, but are loaded with salt. Not bad if you are doing a quick weekend trip, not a big deal.. But doing a week or so out camping or backpacking,.. not the food you want to be eating. I picked up a few items in your video,. thanks.
Knorr has the rice in those same types of packets for $1 at walmart mix a little chilli $2-$3 or top it off with a thick canned soup $1.50 or some meat maybe sausage, spam or grilled chicken $1-$2 and your all set quick tasty high energy meal
Hey Bud, I'm packing for a 8 day snowshoe, ice fishing, bushcraft camping trip in upstate Maine next week. This video was a big help to me. I bought a lot of what you talked about. Some stuff I never considered before. Made my food planning a lot easier. Thanks, keep em coming.
Great vid! I'm so grateful to see more 'instant meal' options available now...and more affordable than typical backpacking meals. These meals are not the most healthy & usually overloaded with sodium; but this isn't for everyday/just for camping...I think that's fine. I went car camping; but didn't want to mess with ice. I used Nido powdered milk to add to coffee & can also be used to make a cream base for a main dish. I was pleasantly surprised with the taste.For meats, if you can stand a lil more weight, small medical ice packs (ie. used for shipping insulin) seem to stay frozen so much longer than anything I could buy at the store. It seems that you are more geared to backpack type meal prep; but if car camping was an option...I think canning your own meat to bring with would give you days worth of 'fresh' protein.
i don’t condone or suggest this, but; many years ago i had a coworker who would empty (drink) and dry his drink cup at fastfood places just before we left each time. he would then take it and the lid to the area where drink refills and condiments were. then pretending to get a drink refill, he would fill the cup with packets of salt, pepper, sugar, condiments and any specialties they had. he built an entire small suitcase for them that was divided and highly organized and would take it home to off load and start over every few months...
TrueLime and TrueLemon packets would be a great alternative to leaky lemon juice packets. They are crystallize lemon or lime juice so they are small, light and won’t leak.
Great video! Thank you for making it, I’ll definitely be using this info for my pack. I love to eat too and these nifty items are perfect for packing and being on the go!
5:18 .... drop it in a pot of boiling water. Ready fast, and keeping package sealed, you have hot potable water left over. (tea, hot chocolate, dishes....)
I really do like your suggestions and what type of food to be on a camping and hiking trip. Though that little Soy Sauce packet is not real soy sauce if you read the ingredients that are in it. Next time you go to your local Panda Express make sure to ask for some extra Kikkoman brand Soy Sauce packets. Kikkoman is pretty much the gold standard of real soy sauce. And not that Imitation stuff you have that is nothing more than a sugar based brown liquid. I think you might have mentioned this in one of your other UA-cam videos. About the Walmart "Great Value" brand Pulled Pork in BBQ sauce. If not, then for those who are watching this great UA-cam video. Next to you go to your local Walmart store. Check out the section where they have all the canned Tuna Fish and other pre-packaged foods. That come in a aluminum pouch and look for the Great Value Pulled Pork. It is great with just about anything, for putting it on a Tortilla, to mixing it in with some Top ramen noodles.
OK, Maruchan ramen and Spam! Now your talking my language. Yum, yum! Or any of the fresh meat cooked and chopped then added to the ramen. But you forgot an important thing, you can't serve ramen without some cheese in it.
@@pappy451 I prefer either garlic powder or minced onions. You can add hot sauce, but I like to keep my taste buds intact! I don't want them screaming at me! "What is this? Are you trying to kill us?" LOL
Awesome video man!! I've done some of the same stuff in regards to packing light like the tuna pouches and spam pouches. Very awesome! They're great source of nutrients and not alot to pack in your journey!
Boil some water, add some dried minced onion to reconstitute them, then add the instant mashed potato mix and stir. Then add some real bacon bits. A normal bag of instant potato mix is about $1 and a great value real bacon bits is around $1-$1.50. So even with the minced onions you get two good meals for around $2.50.
My two cents on ramen, if you can go for Maruchan's Creamy chicken, I find that it's a hardier meal in that the stock seems to form a cream base and may have a little extra protein because of that...
I only take small packaged summer sausages, peanut butter and crackers, block cheese, jerky, dried fruit, boiled eggs, granola bars, apples. Basically anything ready to eat and doesn't require cooking. I'm paranoid about attracting bears and coyotes. Also you don't have to worry about bringing back too much trash.
In Sweden we have can harring sill and its great. I like it and bring it on hike here. Caled "Matjessill" and it make u full of salt, electrolytes and fat, oil and sll u need in one can. 🇸🇪✊️👍🏻🐟
The sell by date doesn't mean that a product is bad after that date. It's for the highest quality of taste. I've eaten soup that is outdated by a year and no issues. But then I don't mess around with anything that has dairy or fats in it. I like couscous because I can just soak it with a can of chicken and I'm set. I REALLY wish they would put out small single pouched chicken. Starkist is putting out flavored chicken ones but we need plain old chicken.
This is an excellent video you put out to UA-camrs. I was looking at reviews of the most popular brand names of Freeze-dried food packs mostly taken on Hiking or camping trips. They really vey expensive for what you paid, the taste is very bland, and usually don't hydrate well. So what you do is exactly what I was thinking about and now you put me on the right track … Inexpensive, taste good, and fun setting yourself up for to make the trip worth it with some real goodies. Have you tried making your own jerky? Oh, you forgot the beer.
Experation dates on canned and dried foods are suggestive and part of the food industry's agenda to get people to buy more food by tricking people into throwing food away by dates. No need to throw that dried soup mix because of a date. Those dates are also there to keep stores rotating their stock. On the topic of food suggestions, GOYA brand bullion packets can be bought at Dollar Tree. There's 10 or 12 packets in each box and each packet makes a good amount of broth or makes for a good seasoning addition. They carry both chicken and ham at my local DT and I keep them on hand for easy broth/soup or for seasoning dishes like adding to rice when cooking or adding to instant mashed potatoes.
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I ate very similar to this when I was homeless and living in a tent. No refrigeration. I read a negative comment about the instant mashed potatoes. I pour the hot water in a dish, then slowly add potatoes and mix until I get the consistency I want. My favorite soup was Ramen noodles, dehydrated veggies ( like the cabbage mix- it's sweet), jerky, spice to taste. Let soak in boiling water for around 20 min for everything to re hydrate and eat. Instant rice, refried beans, dried soup mixes and so on were my staples. I added canned meat to round out my meals. I have no problem with vienna sausages or salty canned foods- I just didn't add salt to a lot of things.
Tina Gallagher I sincerely hope things have improved for you.
@@mannixflinn6227 Considering the past tense and the internet access with spending time watching youtube videos, I think it likely that things have improved for her.
How are you doing now? Im sure we are all curious and thanks for the tips.
You’re a stronger person for going through all that. Hope things have gotten better for uou
So I take it that you are no longer homeless?
As a homeless person I approve..
I shop souly on longer lasting food
And I swap packs of condiments from the gas station and fast food places..
As a former homeless man I wish you safety an warm nights.
sorry
wishing you the best stay safe 💙
@Nunya Business
What's bullshit?
Me being homeless?,if that's the case you don't know me..
I'm a river rat dude 😎 I live just off a river I got a view people pay a tone of money for..
If your about to do the old how do you watch UA-cam then.. it's called day labor $60-$80 a day and I also fly a sign too when I don't work
@_ NEGAN _ I can't work normal jobs I do odd jobs mostly ..
RE: The prego or other ready type meals. I have put a lg hand warmer on either side of it and stuffed it in my inside coat pocket in winter and it's ready to go until the hand warmers quit. Or wrap it with a towel/clothing or something and set it aside for 20-30 min or so while I'm doing something else. Not exactly "hot" but really really warm. Good enough for me though.
Before bedtime put hot water in a thermos, add chopped apple, steel cut oatmeal, raisins, and honey for a great breakfast, or a hardy snack in the middle of the night when you are freezing. Cook sloppy joes ahead of time, freeze in boil in bags, drop in boiling water and beer along with hotdogs, put on buns and you have German style sloppy joe hot dogs!
Real potatoes pack fairly easy and don't spoil too fast. Teas are essential, coffee is a must. Chocolate is great for winter camping.
I dont know if anyone else likes this. but I absolutley love GV frosted wheats that I dip in Jiff Penut butter. I get a 24 oz box of frosted wheats and a 40 oz jar of Jiff for under $10.00, and its like 8800 calories. Always feels like Im eating something substantial with a satisfying crunch, lots of fiber, filling penut butter, and sweet frosting. I live this much better than any bars. I also bring nutella for a change up, or a combo...lol.
I know this is extremely late as the video was posted 2 years ago but some bullion cubes could work well. They’re very small and compact as well as simple.
Always have a few of those with me, even i go for a short half-day hike with the kids
Herb-ox sells packets of bouillon powder and they have sodium free versions.
I like to bring pita bread on the trail, they toast great, and stay fresh for a long time as well.
100mm tube of justice agreed. Pittas have a great shelf life, and they're so versatile as a bread, toast, dipping food, hot food pocket, everything.
Nice idea
Thanks so much..
Pita mashed potatoes oatmeal. Great
@@jennyellis7666 mmmm... carb sandwich... nom nom nom
If you enjoy the taste of chicken ramen like me but don't want all that sodium here's what I do . Walmart carries a small package of Mahatma yellow rice for $0.75. And the Dollar Tree carries a 16oz bottle of seasoning salt for a dollar. The seasoning salt smells and taste just like chicken ramen with like half the sodium. Pairing them together you get a hardier and healthier meal that tastes just like chicken ramen. There's enough rice in the bag for a lunch for two or a Hearty dinner for one at the end of the day. I also like to fry up some smoked sausage slices to pair with it for fat and protein. It's delicious and it's cheap. If you want to make it last longer you can substitute the smoked sausage with summer sausage. But in my opinion the fresh sausage is tastier.
I can't say enough good things about the all the newish 90-second microwave rices that are available now. It's not exactly "cooking" if you want to get all fancy about it, but it's really awesome to have this easy rice to mix with grilled meats or seafood in such a light-weight packet. I wish they weren't about $2 a pouch, because that's about 100 times more expensive than raw rice, but darn if they aren't really useful to make a good meal!
This!
Truth
Those are a guilty pleasure when I’m lazy or can’t pre-cook my own.
just went camping a few weeks ago and what i do now a days is take those grocery store ready to eat/microwaveable pouches like you mentioned, Prego ready meals, Starkrist Tuna or Chicken and mix them up with the Military MRE (surplus or the commercial variants like XMRE, Z-Ration, First Strike Ration, etc). Super coinvent and way better than bulky canned goods or freeze dried mountain house over priced crap
One thing i always keep at the ready is a few family sized bags of jack links beef jerky. Great snack for in between meals and salty so helps hold water but not to salty where it can dehydrate you
Those Folders crystals packs also come in decaf too. I can't have caffeine so I bring both in case I have somebody with me.
Some of those pouch meals are kinda like a cheap civilian MRE. I've been looking up those vacuum sealing devices, and it's possible to use a vacuum cleaner for fairly decent results if you do it right. Then you can pack whatever you want for at least short term. The best thing for camp meals is always aluminum foil. I put aside empty tic tac containers for spices. And aside from camping what I always do, is keep a box in my car for whatever I run into. Matches lighter pocket knife, blanket and a plastic table cover, a jacket and at least one pair of socks. Old shoes. Basically I try to keep a little kit in the box so that I'm prepared for anything. I think it's something all kids should be taught when they get their license. Keep a small prepairness kit for random emergency. Get caught in the rain, lucky for you, you've got sweat pants and dry socks, and some old shoes. Whatever you think might be useful. Never know. I even keep a alcohol stove and snacks in the box.
Derealized fantastic tips I do the same. A good flashlight is good to have in the car too.
@@CJ9007 always a flashlight. Lighter or matches. Change of shoes and socks. I even made a penny alcohol stove so I can cook food, for fuel i use that "heet" stuff in the yellow bottle. Barely takes up any space and whatever happens I feel prepared.
As a nearly diagnosed diabetic I am majorly redoing my food options while camping. Also try McCormick's Nature's seasoning. it has salt/pepper/garlic/onion and celery seed. Great on Everything!
Lawrys season salt was something that went with us everywhere in the military. It made anything taste better!!!!!!LOL
When is the next routine diagnosis with the Primary Care Dr?
Just happen to have this in my kitchen lol
i use " Natures Seasonings " by Morton . great seasoning for ANY food .
In the British Army we used to take a pot of curry powder in our belt kit along with a 24hr ration pack. Don't know if they still do it, but back then everyone had it.
That's cuz Lowrys is the best
and also lipton soup is good for up to a decade past its sell by date
I’m just starting to camp regularly and I appreciate you’re videos! Thanks for sharing
I like the instant rice with mushroom soup also can tamales with rice and a can of pork all under a dollar at the dollar store you mix the Spanish rice with the juice from Smalley's and the can a pork chicken whatever you prefer excellent excellent meal
Is English your first language?
It's easy to avoid the high-salt, high-cost 'camping' envelopes with a trip to Wal*Mart! My two issues are that in Canada, you can't find the tetra-packs of Tuna, Ham and Chicken...just tins. Also, living with Type II, means that a careful eye on carbs, sugars and overly processed foods makes it doubly difficult!!!
Geography in Action what do u bring with u? I’m type 2 diabetic just found out at 36 and NO CLUE what to do 😣
Have u though about walmart delivery or shop online
Best if buy dates are not expiration dates. That soup last at least 10 years or more.
tic tac containers are good for when you are camping and wanna take some spices
you can also seal some spices into plastic drinking straws. just melt the end fill it up and then melt the other end. use some needlenose pliers to hold end closed while your melting it. works fantastic, write on straw whats inside
Good call
@Lady bird Totally agree!!!
Great suggestion, Michael.
michael ashbrook great idea
*Oatmeal; Honey; fresh fruits and vegetables already washed, cut, pre-measured and in it’s own baggy; bar-b-que sauce; I Love Spam; trail mix; dry milk... spices!* *Spices!*. You can always especially if you carry a variety of food make a soup out of a bunch of things you wouldn’t of thought to mix together. I always enjoyed soup out on the trail! It was hot yummy and I guess it was comforting!
Best by dates on dehydrated food is really only best for the mfgr. If the package is still intact it's gonna be good when you need it. Other than that you got some great ideas here.
Some money saving ideas might be to buy cans of chicken, tuna or Spam (slice it down to singles) and vac bag em (seal-a-meal).
Also buy normal sizes of PB and put some in baggies or small plastic containers.
Tortillas are awesome for trips too.
Was thinking the same thing about small plastic containers. Good thinking.
Love it! You're my kind of dude.
When I saw the Spam I was like 😍
I don't like spam
Love the idea of dehydrating leftovers! I'm not sure why it never occured to me. Thanks for the tip!
Let me give you a couple of things to try. You talked about freezing meat and it lasting a day. On youtube people have made pouches out of a foil bubble wrap you can buy at lowes. They use them for warming up rice dishes or Mtn house meals, cooking out of them, just adding boiling water. I have found that if I freeze meat, put it in a ziplock bag, then the pouch and wrap it in clothes in my pack, even in the summer I can keep it cold for about 3 days. A mini fridge. Another thing I use is gravy packets. I use 1/2 a packet per meal and make biscuits and gravy, using English muffins/ a poached egg on top and some jerky, bacon bits or something sprinkled in the gravy or on top. Try it you will like it. I use the other half of the gravy packet with the Ramon noodles. Last idea is stove top dressing, very satisfying. I too love to eat when I go hiking. Good luck with your next adventure.
Thanks so much for the great tip about the reflectix. I've got a cozy that I use for rehydrating meals and I never would have thought to use it as a fridge. So simple. So smart. Thanks!
If you get hungry for vegetables when you are backpacking. Ramin Noodles with some of the Harmony House Dehydrated Vegetable Soup mix ( about two heaping tablespoons ) added is really good , especially with a dash ( or two ) of Hot Sauce. I also add a Tablespoon of the dehydrated Cabbage to mine because I like Cabbage. The vegetable soup mix is good by itself plus you can add ( Summer-Sausage , Jerky , Dukes Smoked Short Sausages , Chicken ) whatever you want to it. Let your imagination go crazy.
Good recommendation. Thanks!
making your own energy / protein bars are easy. just use a blender and smush up whatever you dont want to be chunky. add some peanut butter and/or cocoa some honey or brown sugar. protein powder nuts dried fruits.... whatever you want. oatmeal. etc. mix it all together and smush into a pan and when set up or firm as you want... cut into bars and wrap in saran wrap or put in a baggie. way cheaper than cliff bars and you get what you want in them.
Lady-T Survival great idea.
Thanks for sharing a great video. My wife and I started dehydrating back in 1994. We had a bad dehydrator(Ronco) and even so we managed ok. Several years later I picked up a much better one for $3.00 at a garage sale and we haven't stopped since. My wife made and dehydrated the food for 12 people for a 10 day canoe trip in Canada all under 100 pounds! My favorite meal of the trip... Corned Beef and Cabbage with potatoes. Jello no-bake cheesecake for dessert after spaghetti, peas and garlic bread was the halfway dinner.
I'm impressed!
Sorry to be a party pooper, but might want to avoid adding boiling water directly in the oatmeal bag.... it seems the bag has an inner coating that may be polyethylene (like the knorr bags which are in fact coated with polyethylene). polyethylene plastic, which is also used to make ziploc bags, starts softening around 195F (mainly depending on elevation) and boiling water is around 212F.
interestingly there seems to be a few people out there who think freezer bags are safe to add boiling water to... a freezer bag generally has a better seal and thicker plastic BUT softening point is for the most part the same...remember, it's a freezer bag, not an "oven bag". even if the plastic was a FOOT thick, the side exposed to the hot water can still melt/soften. if you are ok with potential chemical leakage in your food, i will sh up :) stay healthy!
what does polyethylene mean
@@alymorgan4494 it's a type of plastic
I make crushed Raman by adding boiling water in the bag it came with and let it sit then break open down the line n eat
Try using the Ziploc Zip and Steam bags - they are made for cooking and should not have the same issues as the freezer bags that you mention. You can buy them on Amazon.
I took some of the small mylar bags. I put oatmeal (some with cinnamon) in a sealed. All you have to do is cut open, add water, stir and wait few min. Eat out of pouch. They pack nice and flat and take no space in my BOB.
Maryjane Green that sounds delicious
@4:40, I would expect those Ready Meals to be able to handle being dunked in boiling water, since they handle the heat generated by a stint in the Nuke-uwave.
Great thoughts. Peanut butter to go is just a few spoonfuls of pb scooped into the corner of a ziplock bag.
Soup isle, I always get those little soup cubes. Its good with raman or any stew. Bojon cubes or something. Try those out :)
Bouillon
Dip the chocolate cliff bar in the peanut butter! Just saying it's amazing. Great video I love all those things.
so you use the peanut butter to cover the horrible taste of the chocolate cliff bar huh ?
i'll have to try that.
The jif to go cups are great. I've been buying them. Perfect proportion.
love those go cups of peanut butter
Thank you for sharing this video, I’m just getting into tending trips but also great hunting days too.
Thanks for all the great ideas. I carry crystallized lemon and lime juices. They are great and the lemon one is regularly available at dollar tree.
I used to add one of the various cup a soups to the mashed potatoes for a different flavour
Chicken stew ready meals are my favorite camping trip food. Can be microwaved at local general store or taken out the package and cooked on camp stove
Strangely satisfying-- that noise when he picks up a package or touches them!! ❤
Volume on high XD
Welcome to your asmr
@@SeekTheLordJesusChrist7 holy hell you just helped me out big time! Had no idea what asmr was so I looked it up. Mind blown. For real ty ty😎
I'm hooked!
Some good ideas here. I'd add oatmeal to the list. With some honey or peanut butter. Healthy, filling and a nice break from all the usual salty pre packaged foods. Also you forgot whiskey for the cold nights... lol
You don't even need water! One instant oatmeal pack + one little pack of PB and/or jam = YUM! Adding some trail mix, maybe some bacon jerky and enjoy!
Oatmeal was in the video when he talked about breakfast foods.
The Prego Ready Meals are fantastic. Sometimes you can find them on sale for $1. I ate a Chicken & Dumplings one last week on my camping trip. Just boiled the bag in hot water over a Sterno Stove fueled with Dollar Tree canned chafing dish heaters and ate straight out of the bag. No fuss and easy clean up.
great video. First time i went camping a few years ago i brought bulky canned goods. Luckily I was car camping so i didnt have to carry in a pack all day, but none the less, I now know better that theres better options out there.
Sushi shops are good for soy sauce and also mayo packets. Even have teriyaki sauce packets too.
Bought a freeze drier to hedge against loosing the food in our freezers . Looking forward to trying some stuff I don’t normally bring . Good video. Have a good one
Great video. Some of the east to grab stuff in the store is inexpensive, and easy to heat up. You did a great overview of stuff in this video. I have been dehydrating meals for 10 years, that is really the way to go if you do a lot of backpacking. A lot of the meals like mountain house are very unhealthy, they get you the calories you need, but are loaded with salt. Not bad if you are doing a quick weekend trip, not a big deal.. But doing a week or so out camping or backpacking,.. not the food you want to be eating. I picked up a few items in your video,. thanks.
Knorr has the rice in those same types of packets for $1 at walmart mix a little chilli $2-$3 or top it off with a thick canned soup $1.50 or some meat maybe sausage, spam or grilled chicken $1-$2 and your all set quick tasty high energy meal
True Lemon and True Lime are great for backpacking.
Hey Bud, I'm packing for a 8 day snowshoe, ice fishing, bushcraft camping trip in upstate Maine next week. This video was a big help to me. I bought a lot of what you talked about. Some stuff I never considered before. Made my food planning a lot easier. Thanks, keep em coming.
Awesome Dave glad it helped.
Spam......the science meat of the gods
Great vid! I'm so grateful to see more 'instant meal' options available now...and more affordable than typical backpacking meals. These meals are not the most healthy & usually overloaded with sodium; but this isn't for everyday/just for camping...I think that's fine.
I went car camping; but didn't want to mess with ice. I used Nido powdered milk to add to coffee & can also be used to make a cream base for a main dish. I was pleasantly surprised with the taste.For meats, if you can stand a lil more weight, small medical ice packs (ie. used for shipping insulin) seem to stay frozen so much longer than anything I could buy at the store.
It seems that you are more geared to backpack type meal prep; but if car camping was an option...I think canning your own meat to bring with would give you days worth of 'fresh' protein.
i don’t condone or suggest this, but; many years ago i had a coworker who would empty (drink) and dry his drink cup at fastfood places just before we left each time. he would then take it and the lid to the area where drink refills and condiments were. then pretending to get a drink refill, he would fill the cup with packets of salt, pepper, sugar, condiments and any specialties they had. he built an entire small suitcase for them that was divided and highly organized and would take it home to off load and start over every few months...
TrueLime and TrueLemon packets would be a great alternative to leaky lemon juice packets. They are crystallize lemon or lime juice so they are small, light and won’t leak.
Definitely need to check out those Microwave Meals! Thanks!
Leslie Kovacs carrying a microwave isn't as bad as carrying the looong extension cord...😂😂😂😄😄
Looks likes good stuff to have on hand in case of an emergency
Great video! Thank you for making it, I’ll definitely be using this info for my pack. I love to eat too and these nifty items are perfect for packing and being on the go!
5:18 .... drop it in a pot of boiling water. Ready fast, and keeping package sealed, you have hot potable water left over. (tea, hot chocolate, dishes....)
Or overnight oats :)
A money saving tip for mountain house meals (other companies probably do similar things) is to get on their email list and watch for sales.
Great presentation. A lot of those I eat already. I never thought of using them of that. Thx
I really do like your suggestions and what type of food to be on a camping and hiking trip.
Though that little Soy Sauce packet is not real soy sauce if you read the ingredients that are in it. Next time you go to your local Panda Express make sure to ask for some extra Kikkoman brand Soy Sauce packets.
Kikkoman is pretty much the gold standard of real soy sauce. And not that Imitation stuff you have that is nothing more than a sugar based brown liquid.
I think you might have mentioned this in one of your other UA-cam videos. About the Walmart "Great Value" brand Pulled Pork in BBQ sauce.
If not, then for those who are watching this great UA-cam video.
Next to you go to your local Walmart store. Check out the section where they have all the canned Tuna Fish and other pre-packaged foods.
That come in a aluminum pouch and look for the Great Value Pulled Pork.
It is great with just about anything, for putting it on a Tortilla, to mixing it in with some Top ramen noodles.
Thanks!
OK, Maruchan ramen and Spam! Now your talking my language. Yum, yum! Or any of the fresh meat cooked and chopped then added to the ramen. But you forgot an important thing, you can't serve ramen without some cheese in it.
@tenhirankei
. . . don't forget the hot sauce !
I like vegetables in mine
@@CJ9007 OK I will toss in some whole kernel golden corn or the small sweet peas.
@@pappy451 I prefer either garlic powder or minced onions. You can add hot sauce, but I like to keep my taste buds intact! I don't want them screaming at me! "What is this? Are you trying to kill us?" LOL
@@tenhirankei . . . just a few drops adds a wonderful spiciness but it doesn't kill your taste buds .
Great video thanks for all the help
Awesome video man!! I've done some of the same stuff in regards to packing light like the tuna pouches and spam pouches. Very awesome! They're great source of nutrients and not alot to pack in your journey!
Thanks! Will do!
Great video. In the fall and winter, I carry butter or lard.
+Diebulfrog79 I just got a German butter dish that I am going to try
Boil some water, add some dried minced onion to reconstitute them, then add the instant mashed potato mix and stir. Then add some real bacon bits. A normal bag of instant potato mix is about $1 and a great value real bacon bits is around $1-$1.50. So even with the minced onions you get two good meals for around $2.50.
no onion .
My two cents on ramen, if you can go for Maruchan's Creamy chicken, I find that it's a hardier meal in that the stock seems to form a cream base and may have a little extra protein because of that...
Pop tarts! Should be on the list.
Wintersburg Outback unhealthy and processed too much but they do taste good
This video along with the comments are incredibly useful.
Stove Top Stuffing
Scott Hite I cant do the store kind. Has to be home made
Great info thank you for sharing!
I only take small packaged summer sausages, peanut butter and crackers, block cheese, jerky, dried fruit, boiled eggs, granola bars, apples. Basically anything ready to eat and doesn't require cooking. I'm paranoid about attracting bears and coyotes. Also you don't have to worry about bringing back too much trash.
Great video! Thanks for sharing.
'Twinings' is an English tea pronounced "Twy-Nings"
Thank you. 😉☕
Yee
i always bring sel pepper and tabasco and im all good with that great video to put in my food
In Sweden we have can harring sill and its great. I like it and bring it on hike here. Caled "Matjessill" and it make u full of salt, electrolytes and fat, oil and sll u need in one can. 🇸🇪✊️👍🏻🐟
Lots of tasty goodies to be had for cheap. Great video.
That crunching of the packets though........... it's the reason I watched the whole video
Asmr! 👍👍👍
Instant coffee in hot chocolate.... yum.
M. Quinn classic
The sell by date doesn't mean that a product is bad after that date. It's for the highest quality of taste. I've eaten soup that is outdated by a year and no issues. But then I don't mess around with anything that has dairy or fats in it. I like couscous because I can just soak it with a can of chicken and I'm set. I REALLY wish they would put out small single pouched chicken. Starkist is putting out flavored chicken ones but we need plain old chicken.
Mate we have similar to your Ramen noodles in Australia,I often use the Oriental noodles and chuck them into a stirfry….totally delish!
Down here we have to turn to no-cook stuff because it is just too hot for a fire or to eat anything hot....
Excellent choices for camping.
Don't forget those microwavable Mac and cheese and ravioli I just use boiling hot water on camps stove ready to eat on cold nights
real good video, you have shown lots of options for light weight meals for hiking
Old Bay heeeeellllll yes!!!!
Awesome video! This just gave me some great ideas.. 👍⛺️
This is an excellent video you put out to UA-camrs. I was looking at reviews of the most popular brand names of Freeze-dried food packs mostly taken on Hiking or camping trips. They really vey expensive for what you paid, the taste is very bland, and usually don't hydrate well. So what you do is exactly what I was thinking about and now you put me on the right track … Inexpensive, taste good, and fun setting yourself up for to make the trip worth it with some real goodies. Have you tried making your own jerky? Oh, you forgot the beer.
Great ides! Thanks so much. :)
N8ce. Gonna need the hot stuff when I go on my first snow camp...lol. another good vid.
dinty moore beef stew has ready to eat packages of different stuff... not just the canned stuff.
Thanks again for another great informative video!! Thanks for the ideas
These are great . I am seeing a lot of salt though.
Very helpful, appreciate it!
Experation dates on canned and dried foods are suggestive and part of the food industry's agenda to get people to buy more food by tricking people into throwing food away by dates. No need to throw that dried soup mix because of a date. Those dates are also there to keep stores rotating their stock. On the topic of food suggestions, GOYA brand bullion packets can be bought at Dollar Tree. There's 10 or 12 packets in each box and each packet makes a good amount of broth or makes for a good seasoning addition. They carry both chicken and ham at my local DT and I keep them on hand for easy broth/soup or for seasoning dishes like adding to rice when cooking or adding to instant mashed potatoes.
Another packet hoarder. I'm definitely one
Those Mountain House dehydrated meals are like $11 now. $6 was cheap.
Great video and great information