Tent Camping - Food and Meals
94All About Camp Cooking
Camp cooking may pale before your usual home-cooked gourmet feasts or favorite frozen food entrees but don’t worry – fresh air really whets an appetite. Everything tastes great!
While the lack of refrigeration may put a damper on your style; space and storage are the main concern regarding camp supplies. But if you plan ahead and get a little creative, camp meals can be fun, nutritious and delicious.
Make sure you pack essential equipment, foods, storage containers and food preparation necessities. The last thing you want to do when you're camping is have to run out to the store. Of course many of the best camp sites are way too far from any store to make a grocery run even thinkable. If you do forget something, learn to make-do. That's all part of the camping experience.
Kitchen set-up is important too. A well-laid out kitchen makes cooking convenient, safe and fun.
The first thing is to build your kitchen with a large tarp, rope, branches or poles in case of rain. This sheltered area should be out of the wind and well away from the tents. If you have a campfire, the actual kitchen area should be set away from this for safety.
Remember never take food into your tent. Food attracts pests to your tent – insects, rodents and bears.
Kitchen essentials
- Water – 2.5 to 5-gallon containers. You need 2 – 4 quarts of water per day per person. And that’s only to drink. Don’t forget water will be needed for cooking and clean up.
- Stove and fuel (and waterproof matches)
- Tarp, ropes, clothesline, etc.
- Table or something to use as a table if you want to rough it.
- Seating – camp stools, camp chairs, logs, large rocks, etc.
- Frying pan and Dutch oven – cast iron is best but heavy. You can transport stuff in the Dutch oven.
- Coffee pot – can be used to heat water for tea, soup, pasta, coffee, hot chocolate or for doing dishes
- Plastic bowl or tub – for washing up
- Rags, old towels, scrubbies and biodegradable soap
- Eating utensils – knives, forks and spoons
- Cooking utensils – sharp knife, can-opener, large spoon, spatula
- Cutting board – wood or plastic
- Cooler – good for up to 2 days if most of the food is frozen
- Plastic tubs with tight fitting lids (or bear proof container)
- Zip lock bags for food storage.
- Aluminum foil (wrap foods up and cook)
Food To Take on a Camping Trip
- Premade meals – dried, dehydrated, freeze dried (this stuff can be expensive, be creative and make your own meal ahead of time yourself)
- Tea, coffee, hot chocolate, dry juice mixes
- Hard cheese does not need refrigeration (I don't care what they say)
- Cereals – granola, cream of wheat, oatmeal, muesli
- Fruit – fresh and dried
- Nuts – great in meals or for snacking
- Sunflower Seeds – great in meals or trail mixes
- Breads – flat breads and hard crackers (regular bread gets squashed)
- Soups – instant Knorr, Ramen or bullion to make your own
- Lentils – quick cook, dried or canned beans
- Pasta – thinner cooks faster
- Dried veggies
- Honey, sugar
- Peanut butter
- Flavoring agents – soy sauce, hot sauce, salt, pepper, garlic, dried onion, cilantro, cinnamon etc.
- Canned meats – or dried
- Alfalfa or dry beans for sprouting (in a zip lock bag with damp paper towel).
- Chocolate, marshmallows, graham crackers! (For S'mores)
- Potatoes - you cam almost make a meal out of a baked potato (with cheese), or chop and fry up potatoes with eggs, onions, almost anything. A versatile, not squashable food.
Cooking over a camp fire
Cooking with a Dutch Oven
Great Camp Meals
The first and possibly second night out, you can enjoy ‘fresh’ food from your cooler.
- Chicken breasts or cubed chicken cooks up real quick and can be added to rice or pasta. Or you can cook them at home to be eaten cold, or rewarmed.
- Foil pack dinner – ¼ pound of ground beef per person, chopped onions, carrots, celery, garlic and cubed potatoes with a splash of soy sauce. Close tightly and set on coals or on stovetop and cook for 30 minutes or so.
- Hot dogs and beans are great All-American camp foods.
After the ice has run out, dinners can still be delicious :
- Macaroni and cheese (packaged or camp-made)
- Canned chili
- Canned stews
- Pasta and dried veggies
- Grilled cheese and soup
- A Delicious Beans and rice dish: Cook rice. In pan sauté garlic and chopped onions. Add canned black beans and canned chopped tomatoes. Heat up and add cilantro, pinch of salt and lime juice. Serve bean mix on rice with shredded sharp cheese.
- Fresh fish! You can enjoy fresh food anytime if you’re lucky enough to land a legal sized one. Clean the fish well away from campsite and bury the guts (to deter bears). Never wear your fish cleaning clothes in the tent. Cook and serve the fish as soon as possible for maybe the best meal you have ever eaten!
Some tips on food safety at camp
Deter those pesky bears
Personally, I would never camp in a state that contains grizzly bears. No offense to the folks (or bears) who inhabit those beautiful places. Maybe I’ve watched too many movies. Maybe I’m just a big baby. But if you are new at camping, you need to be careful and remember that it’s the bear’s home, not yours. You are the intruder and sometimes certain bears are not too happy with that.
Now, black bears, though appearing to be large, cuddly creatures can be dangerous as well as messy. Nothing a black bear likes more than to raid a campsite, eat up all the brownies and cookies and throw everything else all over the place.
- Try to avoid areas frequented by bears.
- Use a bear vault - a strong bear proof container that can be purchased. Some camp sites provide bear vaults.
- Try to spot the bear before he spots you; avoid him by backing quietly away.
- Hoist your food container into a tree 4’ away from the trunk and 10 ‘ above the ground.
- Bang pots and make some noise if you think a bear is poking around. Supposedly, they don’t like a lot of racket. Some folks think the banging of pots is like the bear’s dinner bell.
- Never take food or clothing that smells like food into your tent. Did I already say that? Well if I did, I am saying it again. Never take food or clothing that smells like food into your tent.
Tent Camping Checklist
- Tent Camping Checklist
Tent camping cause you to rethink your needs. Here is a list of what to take tent camping to make your tent camping holiday comfortable with a minimum of excess junk.
Pest Proof Your Campsite
- Tent Camping - Pest Proof Your Campsite Prevent Insects and Bears From Invading
Tent camping puts you in nature but some natural elements you may wish to avoid. Insects, mosquitos, flies, and bears can make your camping trip unpleasant. Deter pests like bugs and bears by following simple camping rules.
Should You Build a Campfire?
- Campfires - To Burn or Not to Burn
Campfires are a lot of fun and a great camping tradition, but campfires can be dangerous. Campfires can negatively impact the environment and many camp areas now ban campfires.
How to build a camp fire
- Campfire - How to Build a Campfire
Campfire - How to build a campfire, campfire safety, and campfire clean-up. With sing-a-long videos and pictures, the campfire is the heart of the camp
Fellow Hubber's Recipe for Hobo Stew
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One dish I enjoyed while growing up is called Hobo Stew or sometimes Foil Stew. It is tasty and very filling on those cold winter nights. It is often associated with camping or outdoor cooking, but it makes a...
Cool site, pretty pictures, much info.
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Great list of food! Also good advice on the bears. I live in an area that is heavy with black bears and I have very strict rules on food with my kids.
I go camping for 3 or 4 days every summer with my family, and my inlaws.....thats 10 adults and 5 chldren at least. We look forward to it every year, and every year I get better at my packing. I have found a deck of cards, and some games like Yahtzee are good ideas on longer trips. You never know when its going to rain.(I know this is about the kitchen, but often the kitchen is where we are stuck during downpours) Skunks and racoons are pests too, even when there arent any bears KEEP FOOD PUT AWAY. If some crazy picky person doesnt love campfire cooked food... it helps to have ketchup and hot sauce on hand. Now I cant wait to go camping again!!!!!!
I like camping. and your tips is very useful for me.
Fabulous advice and tips!! Thanks so much for this - will definitely be using the food list! :)
Fantastic hub, you packed quite a lot of information into this one. Appreciate the lists you included, think I am going to type them up and print them out.
I enjoyed your very useful and practical article. You comment, if you forgot something--make do reminds me of an experience in the La Sal Range of Utah. We forgot, of all things, a pot for cooking stew. We made do with a large piece of aluminum foil which we shaped carefully into a pot and succeeded in cooking our stew.
Good info! We used to camp in a tent, now I prefer a condo or resort, or at least a camper! lol
Enjoyed reading your article I found it very informative and useful - Thanks for sharing
I love camping. We haven't been for over 2 years now, but your article makes me want to go again! I really enjoy your articles; they are very informative and are on a host of great subjects. Thank you very much.
Barb
You brought back memories of my camping days with my children.. Sweet...
Dolores, we camp all the time. I can't wait to go this year. This is where canning comes in handy
Thanks for the well-written hub. Tons of great info for tent campers of all levels!
Great blog! I'm off camping this week actually :) Camping rocks! Perhaps I was a nomad in my last life - I can live in my tent lol.
I like the info on taking care of your food so you don't get bears. I went camping one time with a group of friends and we didn't take the proper precautions with our food. We ended up getting an unwanted visitor that kept coming back the whole night. We also made the mistake of camping out under the stars which was great if we hadn't had a bear joining us!
I have camped many times in the Appalachian Mountains and it was always the little critters like raccoons that raided the campsite not the bears. Great hub.
Some good tips there. Just got back from Glastonbury and wish I'd used some of them. http://www.gelertrucksack.co.uk
This is a really col hub. I like what you did with all the guidance, really neat. I wish I could find my pictures from my camping trips.
This is a great hub! Knowing the right foods to take is important on a good camping trip! Im still getting used to writing hubs. It's fun to share experiences with everyone else! I voted up!
Great article.
We just got back from four days of tent camping. Our best meal was a four course Asian style soup. My boyfriend prepacked cut foods like tofu, veggies, miso, and chicken and threw them in the ice chest. Then, he boiled water on the camping stove. Starting with a powdered asian soup base, the cook then added various things like rice noodles, Shitake mushroom slices, fresh fish chunks, and so on. Each time the pot got full, soup was ladled out, leaving enough soup stock for the next batch of ingredients. He added spices like soy sauce and fish sauce and seaweed flakes. It was easy, fresh, and social. By the time the fourth bowl was ladeled out we were all full.
I have not gone camping before and my new year resolution is to do my camping this year. You have provided great advice and tips! Thanks!!
Great article! My husband loves camping but in the five years we have been married we have only been two times. Camping intimidates me, mostly due to the fact that I have a hard time coming up with meal ideas, but I will definitely take some of your meals with me on are next excursion.
Hi Dolores ! This is a fantastic article , thanks for taking the time to post it. I feel that you should have mentioned that army surplus stores can help you to save cash when camping, and are a great option to consider.
I'm adding you to my faves :)
Delores, great hub. We go camping several times a year and love it.
Very nice write up, I am looking forward to warmer weather to get back out into the woods this year.
This was very informative. We have a full summer planned out this year for camping and I've been going overboard buying things we probably really don't need. I guess I'm taking the boy scout motto 'Always be prepared', a little too far.
liked this, got some new ideas. Something we always make when we camp is pizza. We each pick one ingredient and put it on a premade crust with the sauce.
Great information about camp cooking. I camp alot, and prefer campfire cooking as much as possible. I have found that proper planning means doing as much prep and pre-cooking at home makes the camp cook job a lot easier. And you are right - chicken is one of the most versatile meats you can find for camp food cooking.
Gus
Great information - when I did primitive camping I would freeze my meat ahead of time with whatever marinade or sauce I was using and keep it in my cooler. The meat kept longer and also the container would work with the ice to keep the food in the cooler longer. I would buy fresh chicken wings, put sauce on them and freeze them - our neighbors always found it amazing we would have chicken wings cooked on the grill when we went camping.
Ah how I miss camping, your suggestions make me miss it more. I've had a couple bear encounters too, one with a monster that growled louder than any exaggeration Hollywood could come up with, that was the last time my wife went "real" camping with me (no plumbing type)...but we still do the state park thing once in awhile.
Great suggestions, I'm going to check out the campfire article next, I've heard the complaints, now I wonder how you approached it?
Cheers
Ben
Hay lots of great ideas and a list that someone could actually use to go camping most campers want to over do the do not need stuff.
I made chicken and dumplings on our last camping trip, It was a huge hit! AWESOME!!!
Very nice article, thanks, informative....
This hub is perfect for me and my boyfriend! We went to the Adirondacks last year and had a blast! YOu have great ideas on this hub and on the other hubs you included in this piece. I voted up and shared!
Thanks for the information! I'm actually going camping with my boyfriend for 2 weeks this summer in Minnesota, North and South Dakota, Montana and Wyoming. This will help immensely for putting together our food and supply list together!
Great advice! I grew up camping and now that I have a family of my own, camping is their favorite vacation. My kids would rather go camping than go to Disneyland! One thing I have learned is anything you put in the cooler goes into a gallon sized ziplock bag first. Ice always melts and if everything is in baggies, nothing gets contaminated by something else. Always take extra baggie too, so your lunch meat doesn't taste like your catch of the day!













































brad4l 3 years ago
I love camping and spending time outdoors. I have found that even the most basic camp meals usually taste like a four star meal after a long day of hiking. Camping was actually how I discovered granola...