Camping Cookware
Comparisons: Which Is Best For Camp Cooking?
By Marc Wiltse
What type of
camping cookware is best for you? Camp cooking and clean-up can
be easy or a hassle, it all starts with great camping
equipment.
Camping cookware, like any camping equipment, should be
versatile and tough. A lot of campers have a set of cookware
just for camping because they don't want to risk damaging their
good kitchen set and/or it's easier to keep all your camping
gear organized and ready-to-go in big plastic bin(s). Kitchen
cookware usually won't last long in the field anyway. Camp
cooking outdoors can be a lot more demanding than what most
kitchen utensils are made for.
Heavy duty camping cookware is not only a good idea, it's
almost a necessity. If you're camp cooking and your only pan
cracks or burns through making it unusable, you're either going
to have to find a way to use tin foil creatively or eat cold
sandwiches the rest of your camping trip.
Remember to get camping cookware with tight-fitting lids to
help heat food on your camping stove more quickly and to help
save fuel, this is especially important to hikers that carry
everything. I'd stay away from non-stick coatings as it only
takes over-heating them once and the surface is junk. Also once
the surface is scorched the chemical make-up is permanently
changed and I'm not sure how healthy it would be for you.
Non-stick surfaces can also scratch, it's hard enough keeping
them in good shape at home let alone camping or hiking. Some
pots/pans come in sets that mate together or "nest" for storage
and even allow you to tuck a canister of fuel inside them. This
comes in handy when you're looking to save room while camping.
Look for camping cookware with rounded corners/edges to help
reduce hot-spots and for ease of cleaning.
Remember that most camping cookware handles can get hot so
bring something you can use to protect your hands. For quicker
boiling and heating look for camping cookware with black
colored bottoms because it will absorb heat better and save you
some fuel.
Backpackers: One liter pots are a good size for two people
who don't eat much, if you and you're buddy have a normal
appetite you'll want to use a 1.5 liter pot. A two liter should
supply about three hikers with a bigger appetite each with a
good-size meal. If you're in a bigger group you'll want to bump
up the size.
There are several different types of camping cookware and
they have different advantages and disadvantages...
Aluminum pans and cookware: Advantages: Lightweight, heat
quickly, and cheap. Disadvantages: Possible link to
Alzheimer's, food has a tendency to stick, hot spot heating can
easily burn food so you'll want to stir it, hard to clean, can
taste bad, pans can get bent/dinged easily, and aluminum has a
tendency to react with foods. I've seen tomato sauce eat
through...
Marc Wiltse learned how important good quality hiking
equipment and camping gear were after his pup tent flooded with
over 3 inches of water forcing him to sleep in the front seat
of his 2-seat Honda CRX (translation: research is a good
thing). His hiking equipment & camping gear guides &
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