Camp Recipes for an Open Fire
Let’s be honest, food tastes better after a hard day on the trail. Even a PB&J tastes delicious after a few hard hours of climbing or paddling. However, there are times where days outside need to be followed by a gourmet spread, cooked over an open flame.
In this edition of Therm-a-Rest Beta, contributor Greg Hatten introduces us to a few of his favorite recipes following hard days on the river. Fair warning, reading further may induce extreme hunger and food envy.
Bacon and eggs on an open fire smells like heaven in the early morning hours on the river. The aroma mingles with the morning fog and draws us from our tents and our bags in a trance to the pan where it sizzles and pops.
When we’re out on an adventure, our days are spent on treacherous rivers, rowing big boats with nine foot oars, taking hundreds of powerful strokes a day. It’s strenuous. It’s physical. At the end of the day we’re tired and we’re hungry. Our meals become more than just a way to refuel, they are a key element of the outdoor experience.
The smells, sounds and warmth of eating around the campfire is what I miss the most after an outdoor adventure and what I look forward to the most when planning the “next” adventure. Whether cooking on a camp stove, a dutch oven, over an open fire, or with charcoal, getting the fire “right” is the most important ingredient for getting the food “right”.
On a typical river day, we cover roughly ten miles before setting up camp in a new location and the first thing we set up is our kitchen and our campfire.
Each one of our meals requires “fire” and depending on who’s cooking what, we use wood, charcoal or gas on cookstoves, fire pans, or dutch ovens. Cooking is an important part of the whole outdoor experience and we enjoy celebrating the tastes, the smells, the cooking styles, the cooking skills, and the creativity that goes into each meal.
Here are a few of the methods I use for cooking over an open flame:
Fire Pit (wood) - In order to turn a wood fire into cooking fire we usually bring our own firewood. Hardwoods like oak or ash provide the best coals for a cooking fire. We start cooking when the flame has died down and the wood turns into cooking coals which requires approximately 30 minutes of patience.
Fire Pan (charcoal) - In Wild and Scenic area’s, Fire Pan’s and Fire Blankets are usually required for fires. I use Phantom Fire Pans and Blankets because I know they meet all the National Park requirements for height, depth, materials etc... For the best cooking fire, we use the highest quality hardwood charcoal possible to get a long slow burn. Personally – I like Cowboy brand all natural lump hardwood charcoal.
I use a charcoal chimney but a coffee can cylinder will work in a pinch to get the charcoal lit and burning quickly and evenly. It usually takes twenty to thirty minutes after being lit to get the coals in cooking shape. Once the edges begin turning to embers, we spread the coals out evenly and start cooking. Once again – patience is required and cooking slowly is recommended.
Camp stove – With such a wide variety of camp stoves to choose from it comes down to personal preference on the style, the burners and the brand… personally, I prefer the Partner Steel Stoves for our river adventure cooking. Having a wind break for the cook stove (natural or built in) is a good idea. Both butane or propane are options for most camp stoves but our group prefers propane because it burns hotter. We clean our stove after each use and always pack plenty of fuel.
Dutch oven – Cooking with dutch ovens is all about charcoal management. Once we have a nice bed of coals, we spread them out evenly for a smooth level bed. I usually start with fewer coals on the bottom than on the top because the food is touching the bottom of the pan and I don’t want it to burn. My rule of thumb is 10 coals on the bottom and 14 coals on the lid – which generates about 350 degree’s of cooking heat. As tempting as it is to check on the food by taking the lid off – I fight the urge knowing that everytime I do it, the temperature in the oven drops quickly and takes another ten minutes to ramp back up. I like to rotate both the oven and the lid a quarter turn every fifteen minutes to prevent “hot spots”. Keep back-up coals available because they tend to burn out quickly.
Now, here are three of my favorite meals to cook on the river:
Steelhead on a Cedar Plank – McKenzie River
When Jim Sansone and two of his sons came out west from St. Louis for a river adventure, they had never been to Oregon, never run a river in a wood boat, and never eaten fresh salmon cooked on a cedar plank. One of the greatest joys in this season of my life is introducing people to those things. That trip turned into one of my favorite trips of all time.
It started with the campfire - which was the first thing they saw when we hiked into the campsite beside the McKenzie River. I used every trick I’ve learned over the years to make sure the salmon was cooked to perfection on that campfire - (which can be a little challenging). If the cedar plank catches on fire before the Salmon is “done” it’s ruined. To prevent that, I soaked the cedar plank in the river all afternoon and when I laid the slab of salmon on it and began to season it - the Sansone’s asked a million questions - clearly engaged in every little detail. It was a memorable trip because Jim and his sons were so engaged in the entire experience - not just the fishing or the campfire. All of it. The sound of the river running right beside our camp, the bright red stripe of the rainbow trout we caught for two days, the Mahogany grain in the wood boat….. they appreciated all the little things that many people miss.
Ingredients:
Cedar plank – soaked in water for at least 2 hours before cooking
Fresh steelhead filet or salmon
Honey mustard
Lemon pepper
1 Fresh lemon
Directions:
1. Brine the filet while you brine the cedar plank for 2 hours:
- -Ice water
- -1 tablespoon sea salt
- -Aromatic herbs – (Rosemary, Sage, Dill, Parsley, or Thyme – whatever is fresh and accessible)
- -Add roast
- -Walla Walla Onions
- -Carrots
- -Raw Idaho spuds