Cooking Hints
from BSA Troop 886 14 Feb
1992
Soap the bottom and side of your pots and pans
before putting on the fire. This will
reduce the amount of scouring you will need to do when cleaning up. Liquid soap is easier to use than bar soap.
If cooking on a wood fire, wait for the flames to
burn down. The coals are where the heat
comes from. Also the flames will
blacken the bottom and sides of the pot making clean up more difficult.
When using a propane or gas stove you have a
variety of heat settings, wide open is not the best way to cook.
Just because what you are cooking is black on the
outside it does not mean that it is cooked all the way through. Check the insides before serving.
If you continually have burnt on the out side and
raw on the inside food. Lower the
cooking temperature so the food will cook more evenly.
Get copies of your favorite recipes at home and
suggest them for camping trips.
Follow the recipe and box directions to prepare
food.
Many camping books have recipes. Check them out from the library and copy the
ones that sound good.
Do as much preparation as possible at home. Dice your onions, green peppers, etc. at home and store them in plastic bags. Place in the cooler before leaving.
To cut down on grease in camp food, fry meats in a
fine dusting of salt in the skillet instead of fat or shortening.
Vegetables such as celery carrots, radishes,
cabbage, and lettuce will keep fresh longer if wrapped in foil and several
layers of brown paper bag.
A little vinegar will remove onion and fish odor
from a skillet.
Scrambled eggs go further if bread crumbs and a
little milk are added.
A little dab of butter in oatmeal while its
cooking will make pot easier to clean.
Pancakes are less likely to stick if you add a
tablespoon of melted fat to each 1.5 cups of batter.
To remove fishy odor from your hands, rub a little
vinegar on them and rinse with cold water.
Bullion cubes can be substituted for meat stocks
when making camp soup, stews, and gravies.
Drop a small pat of butter or one tablespoon of
oil in your spaghetti water to prevent it from boiling over.
Stir pancake batter instead of beating it, don't
worry about the lumps. they will
disappear.
On a cold day.
butter may be too hard to spread easily. Invert a heated bowl or pan over the butter dish for a few
minutes. This will soften the butter
but not melt it.
Save TV dinner tray to use in camp.
Sprinkle a few drops of water on sliced bacon to
keep it from shriveling in the pan.
To keep cheese from molding, wrap it in cheese
cloth dipped in vinegar.
A piece of apple or orange inside a covered
container of brown sugar will keep it soft.
To keep salt shaker from spilling while traveling,
Screw a piece of plastic wrap under the lid.
Place bread in a shoe box to keep it from being
smashed.
Rice in the salt shaker will absorb moisture and
keep salt from lumping.
By using lids whenever possible, you will greatly
reduce the cooking time required for many foods,
Lightly grease a cast-iron fiddle before making
first pancakes. Then rub a raw peeled
potato between batches. This will
produce golden brown flapjacks that will not stick.
To tenderize tough cuts of meat, as for stew, add
a little vinegar to the water in which the meat is being boiled.
Cheese cut in small strips or narrow slices will
keep well in a covered glass jar.
A little lemon juice added to the boiling water
will make rice whiter and keep the grains from sticking.
At or near sea level foods cook quickly, care must
be taken to prevent burning.
A can or bottle can be used as a rolling pin.
Eggs can be removed from the shell, whole, and
stored in an oil jar with lid. They
won't break and can still be poured out on at a time.
Form hamburgers, biscuits or cookies with a clean
tin can, glass or cup.
Use fingernail polish to mark foil dinners. It won't burn off in the coals.
Do not spray non-stick coatings for pans on a hot
skillet / pan or near coals or flames.
The spray can ignite causing the can to explode.
Vegetables can be warmed directly in their own
can, but you must first open the lid part way to vent off steam. Otherwise, the can might explode.
A small soft drink bottle can be used as a potato
masher.
Adding a pinch or two of salt to water when
boiling a cracked egg will prevent the whites from running out, or wrap the
eggs tightly in aluminum foil.
Mix instant drinks in a screw top plastic bottle.
A pinch of flour sprinkled on fat while frying
will stop the spattering.
Removing a single strip of bacon from a package is
difficult. Roll the packaged
tightly. The slices will come off
easily.
Don't salt meats while (or before) they are
broiled. Salt starts the juices running
and you'll loose flavor.
Slab bacon will keep without molding for long
periods if first washed in water and a small amount of soda, then dried over a
smoky fire.
Biscuits, breads and corn cakes which are dried
out can be freshened by placing in a brown paper bag after sprinkling lightly
with water. Place the bag near the heat
or in a reflector oven for a few minutes.
If vegetables or cereal scorch, plunge the pan and
all into cold water for a few minutes.
Much of the burned taste will be dissipated.
Test spaghetti for doneness by throwing one noodle
up against a tree. If it sticks it is
done. (Remove from tree after test!)
If your stew or gravy is too salty, cut pieces of
raw potato and add to the mix. Remove
after a few minutes. The potato will
absorb the salt.
Eggs dipped in boiling water for 10 seconds will
last for weeks in a camp ice chest.
To check if an egg is fresh place it in water, if
it sinks it is fresh if it floats it is bad.
Store eggs with large end up, they will stay fresh
longer.
Lining your cooking equipment with foil will save
cleanup.
Wipe dishes and pans with a paper towel, to get
the grease off before cleaning.
A pop top liquid soap container can be used to
store vegetable oil. (Be sure to mark
the contents of the container on the outside.)
A whisk broom or a 4 inch paint brush can be used
to sweep out your tent before striking.
When traveling you can heat frozen T. V.
dinners on the manifold of your car.
A substitute for maple syrup can be made by
heating brown sugar in a little water.
Deepen a shallow pan with heavy duty aluminum
foil.
Use plastic bags for mixing foods.
Use a clean stick as a stirring spoon.
A maple syrup substitute can be made by heating
brown sugar and a little water while stirring constantly.
Enjoy scrambled eggs but don't get stuck with a
hard-to-clean pan. Rinse it out with
cold water first and leave a very thin layer of water at the bottom before
adding egg.
To separate egg yolk s from the whites, crack egg
into a saucer. Turn an egg cup
upside-down over the yolk. Tip off
white into a basin.
Take the backache out of washing messy pans by
always filling used pans with cold water straight away.
When popping corn, you'll get better results if
you place corn in the freezer for a day, or as long as you care, beforehand.
Save your used eggshells in a jug of water. In a few days it will be ready to use on
your indoor plans, the resultant liquid makes a good plant food.
Keep water boiled over a wood fire free of that
smoky taste by throwing a clean sliver of wood into the water while your
boiling it.
You say that some of the eggs you carried along
acquired a cracks en route? You can still boil them successfully if you first
wrap them in tissue, Use string to tie the tissue closed like a purse around
the egg.
If you carry along eggs, avoid cracks (and worse)
by packing them in your flour or sugar.
To test the griddle temperature before cooking, let
a drop of water fall onto the surface.
If the water simply lies there and bubbles, the griddle is too
cool. If the drop pops and jumps, it's
time to cook. If it splatters and
disappears, the griddle is too hot and should be raised a bit from the heat
source.
The Hand Thermometer enables you to try on your
campfire, recipes which specify a cooking temperature. Of course, the secret of any campfire
cooking is to try and maintain steadily glowing coals, but once you have your
fire in this state, you can gauge its approximate temperature by using your
hand.
Hold your bare hand over the coals and count off
second ("1 and 2 and 3...").
Your temperature guide id the number of second you can hold your hand
over the fire.
-If you have to remove your hand between four and
five seconds, you have a low heat (about 300 degrees F)
-If you have to remove your hand between three and
four seconds, you have a low heat (about 350 degrees F)
-If you have to remove your hand before you can
count to three seconds, you have a low heat (about 400 degrees F)
To find the temperature you want, raise or lower
your hand and you will know where to set your cooking utensils. No matter what you are cooking, the results
will be more consistent if you maintain an even or near-even heat. And, by using your hand thermometer, you
will assure that your meal cooks at the rate which will produce the tastiest
results every time.
You need even heat for griddle cooking, so use the
griddle only over coals or on a stove.
It won't work successfully over a campfire.
The day is hot and breezy and you want to keep
your drinking water cold. Wrap the
water container in a wet cloth and hang it in the open from a branch of a
tree. It's good as putting it in a
regular refrigerator
On that same day you can keep your dinner meat
cold by wrapping it in foil and burying it in the ground.
When you've finished cooking, set your cook pot
off to one side. Perhaps if you give
them their own plate, the bees, wasps, flies and other pests will stay away
from yours.
Avoid "burnt offerings from a Dutch oven by
placing the baking pan 4 to 5 cm above the bottom of the oven.
If you're having a problem cleaning a pan, rub the
area with salt.
To refreshen a pack of marshmallows place them in
a brown paper bag and place in a warm oven for a few minutes.
If you burn the inside of a cook pot, shake cream
of tarter into the pot, fill with water and bring to a boil. Boil for a few minutes, pour out water, and
wipe clean.
Cover the ice in a picnic cooler with foil to help
it last longer. Keep the water in your
canteen cooler by wrapping the canteen in foil.
Use foil ring dividers for frying eggs. Put rings in the greased pan and drop eggs
into each ring.
Toast sandwiches by wrapping them in a foil
envelope and placing them on the embers or a hot plate for a few seconds.
Because foil-wrapped foods tend to scorch where
they are in direct contact with the coals, use a double wrapping of heavy duty
foil and turn food frequently during cooking.
To make a sprinkler top for vinegar or oil bottle,
shape a piece of foil over the bottle opening, secure with a rubber band, and
punch small holes in the foil.
Save clean-up time by lining casserole, baking and
frying pan with heavy duty foil before cooking in them.
When it is time for washing up, a crumpled ball of
foil makes an excellent scouring pad for pots and pans.
To keep marshmallows from burning dip them in
water before holding them over the flame.
Thanks to Harry Simmons
<hsimmons@vnet.IBM.COM> for providing this file.