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Variation is of essence when it comes to food,
alternate between at least 7 dinners and sample
them before expedition. If you don’t like it at
home, you won’t like it on the ice.
Bring treats for important milestones and
anniversaries; include salami, beef jerky and
equivalent for protein. Beef jerky makes a great
barbecue – grill over the burner for a few
seconds until curly. Extra Parmesan cheese to top
of your pasta dishes is a great fat- and calcium
supplement. Spices really add to taste and are
powerful antioxidants. Supplement plenty of salt
to all food including your trail mix as you will
sweat immensely.
Breakfast should be a hot cereal and much of it;
it will keep you to lunch. Some cereals like the
one from B-well require only warm water to be
added.
If you bring enough Thermoses you can boil all
water in the evening before and have your morning
coffee and breakfast without even lighting up the
burner. This saves energy and
fuel. Boil up
tomorrow’s drinking water at the same time, tap
on Nalgene bottles and store hot in your sleeping
bag overnight. Hot soup for lunch break is easily
made of angel hair pasta, a cube of stock and
dried veggies. Only a handful of ingredients will
swell into a thick, hearty soup. Heat oil, stir
in all ingredients for a few seconds, pour hot
water over and let stand in a Thermos over night.
Fruit soups, hot chocolate and hot juice are
other lunch favorites.
A good Thermos is of essence for soup and hot
drinks, as not all thermoses preserve heat
equally well. Nissan stainless steel thermoses
are durable and tight. If a Thermos is dented, it
will lose isolation power. Check your Thermos by
filling it up with hot liquid and toss it into
the refrigerator. Check the temperature of the
liquid next day. In extreme cold conditions, you
should store the thermoses inside the inner tent,
wrapped in something isolating (down booties or
jacket).
Your trail mix should consist of dried fruit,
chocolate and a variety of nuts. Make your own
mix and add salt. Again, variation does the
trick. Nuts such as almonds, macadamias, walnuts,
soy nuts and other all contain good fat and each
different nutrients, not only the vitamin E.
Dried fruit is an excellent multivitamin,
digestion aid and quick energy fix. Chocolate
again contains important antioxidants plus it is
another calorie packer. Dark chocolate have the
best calorie ratio but bring it only if you like
it. Break up chocolate in bite size pieces before
departure as chocolate freeze solid in severe
cold. Pre-pack daily servings of your trail mix
in lightweight plastic bags. Count on around
180-250 grams per person per day.
Check calorie/fat ratio of the food you bring,
you need high energy versus low weight. Some
explorers add uncooked oil to dinners to bring up
the energy ratio, but the back draw is diarrhea.
Use generous amounts of oil in your cooking, but
don’t overdo it.
Everybody have their own favorite camp food. We
liked the freeze dried from BeWell. Our favorites
were the Bolognese, Milanesa and Lamb Curry. Paul
Landry sell some great stuff too, try his Turkey
Alfredo! Outdoor store freeze dry favorites were
Sweet and Sour Pork, Pasta with Meatsauce and
Beef Stroganoff. Sjur Mordre sells an excellent
Cod in Cream Sauce.
Notice the variation between seasonings
(curry/sweet&sour/cream sauce/tomato sauce/brown
sauce) the variation between proteins
(beef/mushroom/pork/lamb/fish) and the variety of
starches (pasta/rice/potatoes).
The important advice when it comes to food is to
bring enough of it. The second most important
advice is variation and nutrition value. If you
keep a well balanced diet of good fat, protein,
fiber and vitamins, you won’t even experience
food cravings.
Store oil in tight canisters but remember that
some oils (olive) freeze solid in cold whilst
other (avocado) doesn’t. Try it out in your
freezer. Nalgene bottles do the trick for solid
oil storage if cut in half when oil is hard to
get to. Butter is a nice addition but spoils more
easily than oil.
Divide all food and snacks in portions prior to
the expedition. Each day should contain breakfast
and dinner, plus a daily ration of lunch
ingredients and the trail mix. Pack the daily
ration in a sturdy plastic shopping bag and mark
with the dinner menu. Pack seven of the daily
rations in a weekly pack. Store the entire weekly
content in lightweight sturdy packs
(Ortlieb) and
assign each bag to a particular week, signing the
bag with a number for each week and the weekly
menus. This will really help to keep a fast track
of your supply. For a 70 day expedition, you’ll
end up with 10 bags.
Extras such as drinks, treats, spices and such
should be stored in a single, separate bag. Oils,
butter and meat in yet another bag, for easy
storage outside the tent to avoid spoilage and
bedroom bear visitors. |
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