how do you get your food hot? Campfire, gas stove, esbit? Do you carry different pots and pans or do you ram a stick through a animal and hold it over fire?
Anonymous
usually a campfire or a msr whisperlite just running on unleaded gasoline. but i just bought a jetboil to bring on trips when i only need it for hot water. it's getting its first run this weekend. those are both assuming backpacking. car camping i have one of those big, green, 2 burner coleman stoves running white gas. re: cookware, i just found the lightest steel pot i could at a thrift store. holds 2 qts, weighs 17 oz. the only pita about it is the handle doesn't fold in or detach like a backpacking pot.
Anonymous
Pocket rocket 2, canister, and my trusty Stanley pot.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1265613 Out-D alcohol stove in the summer
in the cold seasons I have a Seek outside titanium wood burner for the tent and I just cook over that
Anonymous
>>1265632 >Pocket rocket 2 I'm need a new stove, so far I was considering the BRS stove, that weighs like 25 grams, but yours looks nice too.
I've heard some stories about gas bottles getting hot when using the BRS stove, does it happen with the pocket rocket too? And what is the inner diameter of the stove? like can I put a cup on it or?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1265613 Milsurp basically, Britbong mess tins, britbong folding stove and hexamine fuel blocks.
Going to get either an MSR stove or a jetboil stove as an upgrade at some point but I need to start going /out/ properly first (I'm a newfag from /k/)
Anonymous
Why just this very day I got an MSR dragonfly for $7.99 at the the thrift store. Needs a fuel pump and a bottle, which will set me back about $50, but a $160 multi-fuel stove for less than $60 is fine by me.
Anonymous
>>1265613 I got a little Snowpeak burner and an old scout cook kit.
Anonymous
>>1265961 How's usable is a pot of that size for actual food? I'd like to get a kit like that at some point because they pack well and have a pan.
Everything else I've looked at on the market seems to be aimed at people who do nothing but make tea/coffee or rehydrate pre-packaged food, neither of which I do.
Anonymous
A friend was telling me recently that burning was a big taboo on the appalachian trail, can anyone confirm?
Anonymous
>>1266265 I heard they don't like open fires, so as long as you have a stove you're good.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1266265 Your friend is a retard
Anonymous
>>1266161 >actual food Look into the MSR alpine pots, they range from 500ml to 1.6L and are stainless so you can cook on an open campfire too
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1266266 Who's "they"? Rangers or other campers? I can't afford to buy a bunch of fuel because I have rice and beans as provisions and not dehydrated bag food.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1266265 Probably just don't want everyone burning all the trees along the path since so many people hike it.
Anonymous
>not too expensive >tough as shit >a bit heavy winrar
Anonymous
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1267582 What lens you use for your pictures anon?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1265694 Bottles shouldn't get hot in fact the biggest problem with these stoves is that in extreme cold you need to take some time to warm the bottle up and use something between it and the snow, or the flame will be tiny. Pressurized liquid fuel ones are best if you plan to go in alpine areas but those propane/butane canisters will do the trick just fine otherwise. I just carry a cheapo frying pan with the handle cut down, and a cup canteen, that's enough for a brew and a meal for two.
Anonymous
I never see these on here, whats wrong withcamping gaz?
Anonymous
Hey I just got one of these and a 24oz Stainless steel cup/pot to go with it. Are those mountain house/backpackers pantry meal worth it and if not what would YOU bring to cook with a simple kit like this?
Anonymous
>>1267619 >what would YOU bring to cook with a simple kit like this? instant noodles, not even memeing
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1267615 They're all the same shit at the end of the day
Anonymous
Anonymous
Anonymous
>>1267652 do you find the pressure is sufficient in the cold like that?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1267640 What? Tell me.
Am I not spending enough on memegear?
Anonymous
>>1267623 Not even a weeb here but why does anime food look so delicious? Goddamn.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1267615 It's what I use and it works. May not but as efficient as some msr or jetboil but it's good enough for the girls I go with.
Anonymous
>>1267795 Because the food is actually delicious irl as well
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=4o7XmhISLms Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1267663 no idea. i never cooked a meal with this stove. i use the msr.
Madsen Maskingevær !!o9Rj2xAYif5
>>1265613 Trangia or MSR pocket rock+debit pot
Sometimes fire too, that the trangia can't go on a fire is it's second biggest drawback after it's bulk/weight
Anonymous
>>1267663 Get an inverted canister like the kovea spider
Then you can run cheap butane refills even in the winter
Anonymous
do you guys use pans, pots or do you cook in cups?
Madsen Maskingevær !!o9Rj2xAYif5
>>1268591 depends on what im doing, if im doing more of a camping type situation (not moving every day) or if i am traveling with a buddy or two, then its Trangia, it has 2 bowls a pan and a kettle.
if i am alone and want to cover some distance its Esbit cup and stove only
also got a MSR frying frying pan that i very rarely use but its good for eggs and bacon
Anonymous
>>1268614 Why kinda bowls are you using for the eggs and osup?
Madsen Maskingevær !!o9Rj2xAYif5
Quoted By:
>>1268619 i am not actually sure what your asking frinedo? what the cup and bowl in the pic are? thats Kupilka, some very hipster recycle wood/plastic compound stuff, i got a good deal on the set and the cup is fantastic, all the aesthetic advantages of a wood kuksa with non of the drawbacks
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1267568 Excellent little stove for 23 Canuck bucks. I cooked every meal on it for 14 days whilst camping in Hawaii.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
diy pot cozies yay or nay?
Anonymous
>>1268436 >kovea spider looks neat
Anonymous
Madsen Maskingevær !!o9Rj2xAYif5
>>1268689 heh, look at that Esbit clone, cute
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1267619 I have that exact stove. Don't get mountain house. Get Knorr sides and throw tuna, spam, or sausage in them. $1 instead of $9.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
For long treks i use an SVEA 123R gasoline stove, for 2-3 days i use a cheap isopro ($5 amazon) stove. for cooking i use a halulite minimalist, stove fuel fork and pot holder fit inside the minimalist.
Anonymous
>>1267619 I have this same setup.
If I'm using the stove, I'm making soups. I bring Chicken and beef bouillon cubes, dry cured meats, and dry rice with me. Makes one hell of a soup for one guy.
Anonymous
>>1268757 That's a good idea. I'm gonna have to steal that. What do you usually put in for cured meats?
Anonymous
>>1268354 that looks comfy
Anonymous
>>1268787 Honestly, it depends on what I can get a good deal on at the farmer's market. Beef sticks, coppa, etc. I've even used chopped salami for this. I have also used jerky, but I don't like that as much as cured meats.
I'm going out with some buddies next week (we all have the week off somehow), and am going to blow them away with french onion soup on a mountain top with some garlic, two onions, two beef cubes, and babybel cheese. Who would have thought you could do such a """""""fancy"""""" dish lightweight?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1267619 I have this thing and love it. I've used it to boil water for tea and to heat up beans and whatnot. Its not great if your pot is wide and you aren't making something mostly liquid or semi-liquid, as its flame is relatively well focused. I love how compact it is.
Anonymous
I hesitate to ask but does anyone actually use a biolite stove? I've seen them used as sort of a novelty backyard thing. I like that it uses sticks as fuel
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1268834 That sounds like a good time, anon. I hope you and your buddies have fun. Thanks for the recipe ideas.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1265961 Snopeak titanium is a nice burner but easy to break. I have broken 2. The center screw is the weak point.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1268689 I actually have this set up, at least the stove pot combo version.
I got the Stanley cooking set too
Anonymous
Quoted By:
I have a suitcase sized 500Wh lithium battery with a handle. A 102 watt folding solar array charges that. I run a thermoelectric cooler off it to store my food, and run a 12 volt portable oven to cook it. At night I run a heated blanket. By the time I wake up the next morning it's half charged again.
Madsen Maskingevær !!o9Rj2xAYif5
Quoted By:
>>1268810 It definitely was, just a few days after newyears so a bit cold (actually had snow in the morning) but, had the woods completely to myself which was lovely
Anonymous
So i'm in the market for a stove, and I was thinking of getting an alcohol stove because they're light and you can use rubbing alcohol to fuel them. The main things i'm going to be using it for are boiling water, making rice and noodles, cups of tea stuff like that. (I'd usually make some corn and sweet potatoes and bake bread in a dutch oven if I was using a fire but i'm assuming you can't do stuff like that with a gas stove) Ideally I'd like it to be able to cook large amounts of food, be able boil water in about 5-10 minutes and maybe be used to keep water ever i'm eating or drinking warm. I'm planning on travelling with it so I'll need to be able to refuel it going up the coast.
Madsen Maskingevær !!o9Rj2xAYif5
Anonymous
>>1269244 That's the one I was thinking of, it's just that it's so small it's hard for me to believe it could compete in power compared to a gas stove.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1269236 Those homemade alcohol stoves will be perfect for you
Madsen Maskingevær !!o9Rj2xAYif5
Quoted By:
>>1269290 but, you said you wanted an alcohol stove?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1267652 Where was this filmed?
Anonymous
>>1268694 Hey man if it works it works
Anonymous
>>1269344 yea, i´m just kidding around man
Anonymous
>>1269352 How’s Australia this time of year
Madsen Maskingevær !!o9Rj2xAYif5
Quoted By:
>>1269353 fuck, not again, just just stop posting old phone photos, they are all Australia´d for some reason
Anonymous
>>1268663 It's pretty great f.a.m.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1265902 Nice find. Getting kind of tired of all the set-up it takes to run my Primus. I'm a sucker for versatility but 80% of the time it's not even worth it.
Anonymous
>>1269353 In south australia its raining and cold, so not many people out which is nice.
Anonymous
isopro: halulite minimalist icetek stove wood: swiss army volcano stove.
Anonymous
I like the Firebox stove. It's fun making little fires without needing much firewood. I use it with a stainless steel Nalgene bottle to boil water.
Anonymous
>>1269794 has there been made any laws specifically regarding them? like there are different laws for campfires vs stoves/gas burners
Anonymous
>>1269811 It's an open fire moron. No exceptions for this faggotty
Anonymous
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1269794 I see the Firebox stove guy on Instagram all the time. Dude is always out doing something cool.
Anonymous
>>1269794 I get the appeal of wood boxes is that you can basically use the wood around you as fuel, but considering how they become unusable if it rains and they don't really make a large flame compare to a campfire or last long compared to an alcohol stove, why not just make a campfire?
Are there any pros besides that you can just use whatevers lying around to fuel it?
Anonymous
>>1269680 Have you ever had a problem with the aluminum melting? Just ordered one of eBay
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1269955 as long as you dont run it dry it should be fine, the water eats a shitload of thermal energy. for the same reason you can boil water in a plastic bottle without melting it.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1269569 >In south australia its raining and cold Heave away, haul away.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1269936 Where I live you get fined for making campfire. But this fucker never bothered anyone. Also its harder to detect and windproof.
Anonymous
Any love for Trangias? I have one that i got years ago as part of duke of Edinburgh. No one else wanted it so i kept it and have been using it on and off. replacing the spirit burner with a gap attachment because fuck meths.
Madsen Maskingevær !!o9Rj2xAYif5
>>1270849 I love trangias, been in Many adventures with them, they are kinda bulky though so not the best for solo trips
And by "gap" I assume you mean gas, and FUCK yes, this cuts down on cleaning time so much
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1270849 >>1270862 Did an all-summer camp last year in Canada with my significant other and we took a Trangia set. Great to fly with, perfect size for two people, very affordable/easy to find fuel. I honestly can't say enough good things about it. It's just so fucking stable compared to a lot of other stoves.
Anonymous
>>1265613 has anyone her have any experience with making soup?
I'd figure it's quite handy since you only need 1 stove, and you can use breadfor the carbs.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1270877 >making soup what exactly do you mean?
>added food to water sure, ive done that
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1270877 Ive made noodles
Anonymous
Anyone want to give me a quick rundown on food recommendations for through hiking? I'm doing the AT southbound from Harper's Ferry later this summer after I take care of some things and would like some ideas, thanks!
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1265961 Yo, it's been good to me for everything, a soup in the pot and fish in the pan. Last time I cooked /out/ I plucked a bunch of fiddle heads double boiled em then and took them to the pan with rice, browned beef and tomato sauce.
Anonymous
>>1271039 Ramen, malt liquor and AIDS pussy are your new best friends
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1271067 Already have a Jerry can full of malt liquor and enough AIDS pussy to put Rwanda to shame, any other recs?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1270849 how are these things to clean? is the non stick useful? how about the harden aluminum?
Anonymous
>>1270862 how are these things to clean? is the non stick useful? how about the harden aluminum?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1266274 >putting stove on top of pine needles Madsen Maskingevær !!o9Rj2xAYif5
>>1271173 pretty normal to clean i guess, nothing different from any other aluminium cookware, the thing that can suck with them is soot from the alcohol burner, yes, the non stick is nice but no essential, i am not sure what you mean about the hardened aluminium
Anonymous
>>1271201 im talking about the anodized aluminum. it is apparently harden and has some nonstick properties. But i wonder if this is necessary as it nearly double the price. How is the normal aluminum trangia as far as durability?
Madsen Maskingevær !!o9Rj2xAYif5
Quoted By:
>>1271205 Durability? Fucking legendary, I have never even heard of one breaking, googled it, couldn't find a picture of a broken one either
I have no experience with the hard anodized ones, only the normal aluminium ones, I do have the non stick pan for my personal set but wouldn't say it's necessary, just don't burn your food, same as all cooking really
One thing to remember is making sure the strap buckle is on the side when you pack it up otherwise it can dent the pan over time
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1271205 >>1271173 The anodized is super easy, I usually just scrub it with moss if there's any bits stuck to it. Just don't let stuff dry on it and you'll be fine. I have no idea about the regular aluminum stuff. Pic related, last summer.
Anonymous
I'm looking for a first cooking set. Does anyone have any experience with Snow Peak's stainless cookware?
>https://www.backcountry.com/snow-peak-personal-cooker-3-pot-set I was planning on pairing it with an Etekcity Ultralight Camping Stove ($15) for my first overnight excursion.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1271523 no, but if its your first set id go for something smaller, depends on what you plan to cook though
Anonymous
Quoted By:
Camping, I just use a fire ring or if I'm farther in I make a small fire pit and collect deadwood. Hiking, I take a tiny alcohol stove and one small pot for heating food. If conditions are good (not horribly wet/stormy/whatever) I'll find a spot and make a small fire hole or rock ring, get some coals going and get the water boiling. Easy peasy.
Madsen Maskingevær !!o9Rj2xAYif5
My light my fire spork bit the dust today, replaced it with something less bent in the handle so that it isn t retarded to hold. But I noticed that it said on the packaging that it isn t "dishwasher safe" is this because it can damage the anodized coating? It is, isn t it?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
is it worth upgrading from the pocket rocket to pocket rocket 2?
Anonymous
>>1269680 whats the orange thing next to your spork? not the cap for the gas
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1272835 Gsi micro pot gripper.
gayboi69
Quoted By:
>>1269352 that's the weirdest cave I've ever seen
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1268027 >hands aren't cute >terrible knife technique >not browning the bacon first to render out the fat to saute the other ingredients it hurts
Anonymous
Quoted By:
Go /out/ to a lake
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1268027 that looks like dogshit
Anonymous
>>1271039 dried lentils are a good choice, high protein high fiber. you can put them in water to soak a couple hours before you boil them and they will boil up very quick, bring spices.
though if you are heading south bound, you may want cold meals. to that end bread, hearty dark rye, or pita bread is good, hummus, cucumber (electrolytes and water), summer sausage. all these things will keep for a couple days. Hell, they got me through the chisos mountains this spring.
Anonymous
>>1268436 >>1269553 >kovea spider Looking to buy my first smaller stove. I have a big fat piece of shit for car camping. Is the spider good for a lightweight hikes, but not necessarily an ultralight backpacker? How long do those smaller butane canisters last?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1268027 what final fantasy is this music from?
Anonymous
>>1273152 It's amazingly compact and for the weight it may as well be ultralight. Plus it costs less than actual memegear like the pocket rocket, which doesn't work in winter
If you're only boiling water the small 4oz isobut canisters last 6-8 meals (5 mins each). But unlike the jetboil you can actually cook real meals with it, so you might run out after. However, since the kovea runs inverted, you can use refill them with regular butane which goes as cheap as $1/8oz
Anonymous
>>1273177 Thanks anon.
If I'm not worried about cold conditions would I be better off like something like pic related?
Anonymous
>>1273187 yeah for $15 might as well
I just discourage people from spending $50 on a pocket rocket or jetboil when you can get a chinkshit version for $10 off amazon
Anonymous
>>1273207 >$10 jetboil Sure thing retard
Anonymous
Quoted By:
Someone give me the rundown on propane VS alcohol pls. I'm a car camping pleb that's only ever used coleman canisters and a shitty ozark trail burner.
Anonymous
>>1267568 >>1265613 >>1265961 I've always just made a campfire and cooked over that. How do these things work? If you use one, can you just throw it in your backpack again, or do you need to use it all in one go? Do they leak?
Anonymous
>>1273467 >How do these things work? No one knows. There's two conflicting theories so far. One saying it's black magic and the other one saying it's technology not from this world.
>If you use one, can you just throw it in your backpack again, Do not throw it in!!!! The lightest shock will make it explode, killing you and all your loved ones.
> or do you need to use it all in one go? Do they leak? Yeah, this is the safest practice. Some people say you can also put them into some pressure-proof and EX-safe steel drum, if you wanna transport them.
Personally, I just have a dog with me, which I kinda hate (and he hates me too), and he has one of those ridicoulous dog backpacks to carry it. And since fucking doggo hates me and tries to stay away from my kicking boots, it's always in a safe distance. And if it blows up, who cares? I'm finally rid of shitty Biter McTickface.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1273475 lmao. Fuck you, dude.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1268867 not this meme again
Anonymous
>>1272902 I thought hummus had to be refrigerated? It's always by the open coolers where all the dairy is. It won t go bad in a warm/hot environment after a day or two of backpacking?
Anonymous
>>1273236 Not a legit jetboil you retard, he's obviously talking about a similar type of portable gas stove. I got one at Wal-Mart years ago for $20 that still works perfectly fine and has not let me down in winter/snow conditions and strong winds (although I was inside my tent, 45 mph winds)
Anonymous
Anonymous
>>1273505 >$10 jetboil >Costs $20 >Not a jetboil >Not jetboil style >45 mph wind (4.5 mph) >Use it in tent ( saw a video) Seems legit
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1273504 i was fine for three days down in big bend, granted i used single serving hummus cups so that could have helped. but with how well preserved food is you can really stretch things. but remember hummus is basically just fat, you gotta get that good protein.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1273536 >jetboilfag rationalizing this hard that he wasted $100 when he could've got a remote canister stove and a diy windscreen for $15 off ebay Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1273467 The burner screws onto the fuel bottle and it has a little valve to adjust gas flow. Then when you are done you take it off the bottle. The gas bottle is designed such that it's hard to screw up. Just don't use it in a situation where the wind is pushing the flame toward the bottle.
Anonymous
>>1265613 Place food in fire. Remove when cooked.
Anonymous
>>1265613 i'm only out for a full day so i take that opportunity to fast: good for the health, time saver, hassle saver, travel lighter.
Anonymous
Need a backpacking skillet. Something light, campfire safe and 8-10 inches. Any recs?
Anonymous
>>1274433 is that aluminium?
Anonymous
>>1274433 That's very clean looking pot for cooking on the coals
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1265613 Hot food is for faggots. Master car-camping race only eats hydrated meals at ambient temperature. Get fucked, backpackers.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1274451 also: collapse and die
Anonymous
You should be able to survive on peanut butter and raw vegetation for months. No cooking required.
Anonymous
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1265621 I just bought a whisperlite. Any protips? Ive had a bit of trouble getting the right pressure in the tank i think. Should i just stick with canisters?
Anonymous
I usually cook with one of those metal hand grills that clamp your meat/toppings/bread/et cetera. I really have to burn down some coals to get good even heat when cooking multiple servings but I"m usually by myself so I try to do everything at once. Which is stupid, some stuff gets underdone and some stuff scorched.
Anonymous
>>1276130 I do like it though. I've got a smaller one and if I got another smaller one I could do onions/peppers cooking down in one hand and hamburger or spam in the other hand cooking evenly.
Anonymous
>>1269553 Wow that's such a pretty fucking picture. Max-envy here.
I'm thinking of camping on the creek not that I've got my tent-cot, a lot easier on the gravel bars you find here in NW AR.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1267795 Japanese take food very seriously. If you watch Japanese TV usually 80% of it is about food. Their travel brochures for remote parts of Japan or other countries are all pictures of local food to eat. They teach kids at school how to cook and prepare their own food from a young age and they spend 1/3 of their PE classes studying healthy eating, cooking and preparing balanced diets.
I have 5th grade students that already know how to scale, gut, fillet and cook a fish.
Makes sense that they'd put some effort into drawing pictures of food well.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1275623 Seems to be, yeah.
>>1275728 That was the first time I used it.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
Serbian mess kit I keep on my belt, cheap pocket stove, jetboil fuel for the stove. It's not perfect but it does the job for me.
Anonymous
>>1276130 >>1276133 >>1276135 Thats a pretty cool sleep system, seems pretty heavy though? Is that the bag for it on the floor?
Anonymous
>>1273467 The gas canisters are self-sealing. There's a simple spring valve that closes when you unscrew the burner.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1267568 And it will simmer really good, better than most others.
Anonymous
>>1276509 It is heavy unfortunately, but excellent for most of my camping which is rarely more than 100 yards from a road, our national forest is pretty small.
But, I figured out a way to carry that makes it much easier provided you don't have much brush or limbs to fight through so it's really not bad.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1276509 And yeah that is the bag. I was mistreating it and using it as a porch in pic, I need to knock that off.
Unfortunately I went and jammed a hole in the corner of the bag with the tent roads, they don't have any proper way to pack into the sack and somehow got pressured in a way to poke through. Fine for now as long as the holes don't get bigger.
Anonymous
>>1277044 >100 yards from a road, our national forest is pretty small. sounds like it's about 4 football fields, or 5 acres. That's not a forest, it's a woodlot.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1277140 No, it's five miles+ across in any direction, but rarely do I find a desirable spot that's any more than 100 yards. It's a very boring forest and the roads go near anything good.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1267568 These are good shit. I've been using mine for years. Cheap, easy and not too heavy
Anonymous
gals and guys. cooking ware is expensive around here, especially camping stuff. so i have figured out i could buy an enamel cake pan which would be around 1/3 of the price of a real pan. any opinions on this before i buy it?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1278228 what cooking do you plan to do?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
fried stuff. maybe some eggs, veggies, potatoes.
Anonymous
stupid question, is the connector on those coleman campfire fuel canisters proprietary or is that a (relatively) universal connection? pic related
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1265902 Thats a nice find.
Best I've done in thrift stores is a Whisperlite International for $35 that was missing all the parts for non canister use (which I never bothered buying).
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1268591 Ive got a rando stainless 0.8L pot thats tall and skinny. Its a pot, bowl, and cup in one for me.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1269290 No alcohol stove compares in power to a gas stove.
You're trading power for weight and convenience of sourcing fuel.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1273504 Unflavored hummus is just olive oil with chickpeas emulsified in it. It's fine unrefrigerated for a few days, even open.
Anonymous
>>1279046 it's universal
the BernzOmatic brand cans fit too
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1279066 good to know breh, thanks. i had one that i bought with the blowtorch attachment for creme brulee, but i found a shitload more of the canisters at work and was hoping i could use them on a different brand stove
/blogpost, i guess
Anonymous
Been using this, its fantastic. But it being round means that its an inefficient use of space in the 50cal ammo boxes mounted on my bike. What's the best square messkit that I could use?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
I use an alcohol stove, never had any problems with it
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1279606 Could try a Yugoslavian messkit.
Madsen Maskingevær !!o9Rj2xAYif5
Sometimes it's more about having a good time then it is being lightweight
Anonymous
>>1279909 how are those kuplika cups?
Anonymous
>>1279909 >scabcakes gross due
Anonymous
Quoted By:
MSR with a 1.5 or 1ltr pot. Or vargo Ti stove and Ti pot for lightweight. Only in cold weather summer and spring hiking I usually just cold food.
Anonymous
Can anyone answer a quick question? I have a screw on stove backpacking top for pic related. Could I unscrew it and rescrew in the same canister the next night or do I need it keep it all together once I screw it on the first time. I don't know if it is resealable or a one time puncture thing like a CO2 canister. Thanks.
Anonymous
>>1280094 See
>>1276750 The canisters have a self sealing spring valve.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1267615 nothing besides the unavailability of the canisters, and incompatibility with other type canisters.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1276130 I use the hinged basket thing for steaks/burgers/brats over coals
also foil wrapped items in the coils, like sweet potatoes, carrots, red onion with some butter and seasoning
to boil water it's a MSR pocket rocket , use both pic related and a MSR stainless pot set
Anonymous
>>1280094 I was also wondering this
Anonymous
Anonymous
Quoted By:
Earthen rocket stove or just a campfire and tripod. I carry an aluminium pot and some chunks of firelighter if it's raining.
Madsen Maskingevær !!o9Rj2xAYif5
Quoted By:
>>1280057 fantastic, all the aesthetics and ergonomics of a kuksa, but none of the drawbacks, also still has some of the thermal propperties of wood
>>1280061 >not liking blood sausage suit yourself i guess
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1279606 Yugo works well, my setup is a british army large mess tin with the complete Yugo kit nestled inside.
Anonymous
>>1265613 Made a simple alcohol stove out of an old coke can, but most trips are long enough that I make camp fires.
We use gas stoves in groups only
Madsen Maskingevær !!o9Rj2xAYif5
>>1280445 have you tested its efficiency against something like a real Trangia burner?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1280991 Not the stove guy but the weight of pop can stoves probably overcome the trangia by being lighter so letting you carry more fuel to make up for the inefficiency, However I had just assumed this. I will have to get something to measure fuel with and test mine against the trangia.
Anonymous
>>1279909 how do you transport the eggs and how long are they eatable? They'd brake on me instantly
Madsen Maskingevær !!o9Rj2xAYif5
>>1281160 i just keep them in the cardboard box they come in, should be good for a while, check the expiration date on the pack when you buy ´em, wouldn't bring eggs on longer trips, unless i stop in town, buy some and then use them the next day
Anonymous
>>1281161 >cardboard box well, that's smart. Have you tried cooking them on a gas stove yet or would that be a waste of gas?
Madsen Maskingevær !!o9Rj2xAYif5
Quoted By:
>>1281177 no, most of the time i just boil em, or make ash eggs
Anonymous
I have two pocket rocket style stoves, but theyre kind of a bitch to use in wind. any ideas for a good windshield for a pocket rocket stove?
Madsen Maskingevær !!o9Rj2xAYif5
Quoted By:
>>1281217 just fold some heavy duty tin foil
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1268027 Is that Yuru Camp soundtrack? If not, why didn't he just use that?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
This. Just kidding. Looked it up though, turns out the size of Japanese camping equipment is absolutely laughable. This thing is about seven by five inches in grill area, you'd have to be careful how you even put your skewers on it.
Anonymous
>>1272134 You should get a combat spork. Shit's stupid awesome.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>1274635 You can get an 8-inch skillet from Walmart with a collapsable handle. I've been using it and it works just great. Cleans easy, too.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
Just got one of these, been using a 1950s coleman stove til now
Madsen Maskingevær !!o9Rj2xAYif5
Quoted By:
>>1281352 heh, saw that while browsing Lamnia once, didnt know it had a knife in it lol.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
So Australian here, planning on buying me a trangia alcohol stove, will methylated spirits from woolworths do for fuel? I read that that's what australian version of denatured alcohol is.