This simple but delicious camp meal was a breeze. I marinated the London broil and made the quinoa, avocado and mango salad at home. Our garden peas were stir fried tender crisp with butter and spring onions. |
A few of you may have read a post I wrote in August 2009 in which I declared a hiatus from river trips. Obviously I have come around. I thoroughly enjoyed the trip described here. Of course, we had benevolent weather and there were just four of us. It was heaven. It will be my one river trip this year. More than that, and I could get sick of river trips for the reasons described in the earlier post.
But back to camp cooking. We do not suffer. Through the years we've developed a proper kitchen that weighs a ton and is getting harder to sling around as the years accumulate. However, once it's set up, it's deluxe.
This custom-made aluminum box holds enough cookware, cutlery and
dinnerware for preparing breakfast, lunch and dinner for about 16 people.
But eeeuuwww. I don't like those big groups anymore.
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We haul a giant cooler packed with anything we want to eat or drink. And I mean anything. On one trip, another couple prepared a salt-encrusted prime rib roast on a 100-degree day! (They later divorced, and that may have been the reason.) We've had stuffed cornish game hens, eggs Benedict with hollandaise made from scratch, pork roast, lasagna, cherry cobbler, chocolate cake—whatever will fit into a Dutch oven, over a grill or into industrial-sized cooking pots or fry pans.
The homemade table folds up as does the muslin utensil organizer. |
Here's PK, always ready to ply his companions with quality tequila. After the big rapids, of course. |
Our home for the night in our vintage Moss tent. Ahhhh. |
PK packing up the kitchen on day two as we prepare to move downstream. |
Here I am at our second and last camp enjoying a cold drink and cool river on a hot day. My bikini days are long over, by the way. I'm now a cover-up girl. |