>>2371208well, as the only pot for cooking, I think that 800ml is a bit small amount. I'd like to think that 1L is the bare minimum for a cooking vessel.
>>2372119Do you want a set that can be contained inside the pot or what? I myself am using a MSR Pocket Rocket 2, a Primus Litech 1L Trekking pot and an Optimus clip on windshield. These all make a pretty nice contained set, I can store the stove, a gas bottle and a ferro rod inside the pot. The windshield fits around the pot pretty well.
In the pots storage bag I keep a 0,6L Wildo foldacup, a couple of wood fibre "throw away" spoons and a fork (they can be washed and used again and they are as sturdy as a LMF spork, just without the retarded design) and a small bottle of dish washing liquid and a sponge. It all fits in to a nice little set.
The teflon coating on the pot is a nice thing to have, makes it a lot easier to cook foods that contain a lot of milk/cheese/cream (that shit seems to burn very easily). Although it means that I can't use my trusty old army Spoon-Fork with the pot. For winter use I should get myself the Trangia model 28, as it should fit inside the pot and it would use alcohol as fuel, thus work in temperatures in which the 4 season camping gas fails. Nowadays during winter I've used a normal trangia (Model 25), but it is bulky for one persons cookings.
>>2372233It is only 800ml, so I'd say that realistically you can safely boil 600-700ml of liquids in it at once. If that's enough for you, then by all means, go ahead. Ramens usually require up to 500ml of water. Or at least, my ramen do. I usually have the 90g Mama ramens.
>>2372764Well, anything is better than "you aren't big, you are perfect size". We all know what that means.