I am looking at getting a cookbook or something for insperation for when we go away. It will be our first camping trip, but i dont want to be stuck to bog standerd food.
We have a twin gas burner & one of the party (me lol) is a veggie so im looking for ones that would be easy to change from meat to veg.
Any Ideas??
------------- 2010 dates so far
Feb - kington
April - Kington (easter weekend)
May - Newcastle - to see Rod Stewart
May - Cleethorps Haven Camp
Aug - woolacombe Bay - Easewell farm.
Oct - Lakes
To be honest i think iv had my best recipes off here, printed them off and kept them in a folder.Have you looked here recipesAlso keep you eye on the posts,Some will ask 'how do you do yours' or slow cooker recipes.
Or yo can try the search facility and put in something like 'Salmon'and see what it comes up with.
I've got a camping cookbook with photo's from the 60's in it, think it came from a garden centre, brought for me as a bit of a joke. Not actually used it as most of the recipies sound revolting but it's in the glovebox in the car in case I need some strange inspiration!
Most of the cooking I do on campsites is pretty much the same as what i cook at home. Roast dinner, spag bol, curry, fry up etc, sometimes just using slightly different ingredients to speed things up like tinned potatoes that just need warming through. Don't need a cook book.
Twin burner LPG gas type stoves are commendable bits of kit but they are a bit limiting unless you are prepared to use a lot of gas “slow” cooking a casserole or something similar. They also need to be manned constantly. We have a double steamer which is quite good for doing potatoes and veg etc. on one burner leaving the other free for the meat/fish/tofu . I have seen people using woks for stir fries, I am not sure how effective they are though, but to be honest we mostly tend to stick to pasta and rice dishes with pasta or rice on one burner and “sauce” on the other. To ring the changes we buy disposable BBQs (about £3 each) and these really do widen the scope for creative cooking enormously.
Regards
Bert
------------- If you think you can, or you think you can't.......you're probably right!
Quote: Originally posted by dadsbeaniemad on 08/1/2010
Just do what I do everywhere I go but especially on camping trips - take your own personal chef with you
We do!!.......The sad thing is, it always seems to be me who's the chef!!!
My mouth is watering at the thought of cooking outside on the stove got a weeks worth of food in my head in seconds, just love curry and that can easy be veggie. Fresh pasta (had one yesterday Aldi's) lovely. Bean casserole, dont need to use slow cooker or wait for hours if you use pre-cooked mixed beans (tinned). I am a meat eater so a trip to a independant butcher or farmers shop/market to get local stuff. Then the camping cook book (xmas) to try
------------- July 1-9 Nantcol Waterfalls meet Sept naturist week Sept SVR w/e Oct Secret meet Nov hopleys meet
We tend to eat the same things we would if we were at home - pasta, curry, chilli, "roast" dinner, Spag Bol, full English.....
Half the fun is trying to work out how to cook everything using 2 burners and a grill!! I always take my steamer with me - potatoes/pasta/rice go in the bottom with the boiling water and then the veg in the top 2 tiers all on 1 burner. That leaves the other 1 free for meat/fish/Quorn plus a sauce. With EHU I like to use the slow cooker too.
Trying to convince hubby that I need a Remoska but fighting a losing battle at the moment!!
------------- Love a lot. Trust a few. But ALWAYS paddle your own canoe!!
Minds are like parachutes:- They only function when they are open!!!
Those who talk don't know.
Those who know don't talk.
when we go to france i buy huge tinnes of ravolie spag bol and just heat them up with a salad and french bread, no cooking involved who wants to cook on hols????
We've tried making batches of pre-prepared casseroles and lasagne and the like, kept fresh in our electric coolbox. But to be honest, I think it's hard to beat finding some really good local produce and cooking it as simply as possible, preferably on an outdoor grill/bbq/steamer. If you're camping on the coast, the chances are there will be some really fresh fish/seafood available locally. Check out local farmers markets too - a bit of googling before you go can make it far easier to track down the best of the local produce before you go.