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Best Meals While Boondocking

mikeandlisa
Explorer
Explorer
Can any of you suggest some boondocking meals? I'm trying to come up with some good ones to conserve water.

I would love your ideas/suggestions of what you make while boondocking. Thanks:)
http://mikeandlisaworld.blogspot.com/
45 REPLIES 45

jefe_4x4
Explorer
Explorer
There is nothing 'general' about preparing your meals when camping away from the madding crowd. To me, this means you prepare your menu fully expecting to have no support stores along the way: fully self contained. This varies from excursion to excursion, and varies with the capabilities of your camping vehicle. This also becomes much more critical the farther and longer you are away from our current civilization.
Since we ply the poor or doubtful byways in our prepared 4WD truck and Lance hardside camper, we have different limitations on how much we can stuff into a 3 c.ft. refrigerator and limited storage accommodations, as compared to a 40 foot MoHo.

Here are a few of our favorite meals 'out'. (Jeanie edited this post so the 'I' refers to her domain.)
I like to start with the meats frozen. That gives us complete flexibility on the road. Just remember to take it out of the freezer early on the day you want to use it.

Tacos: ground beef cooked ahead with taco mix seasoning then frozen in a ziplock bag, which is easy to reheat on the road. I use sliced cabbage, not lettuce because it holds up so much better on the road. We use any kind of Salsa and shredded Mexican cheese. Jeanie's Tequilla Sunset. (what is the Tequilla Sunset, you ask? No matter what time of day or night you consume said elixer, the sun goes down)


Chicken Baja is another favorite. Raw boneless chicken breasts dumped into a zip lock with oil and lemon juice, wine or tequila, or prepared oil and vinegar salad dressing marinade and then frozen. Cooked outside on the Weber.

Black bean salad with canned black beans, canned corn, canned french green beans, and canned peas, chopped red bell pepper, chopped green onion, and chopped carrots. Dressing: olive oil with lemon or lime juice with seasonings to taste or bottled oil and vinegar dressing. This lasts very well in the fridge over several days and is full of vegetables.

Marinated skirt steak, with same marinade as above in ziplock bag and frozen and cooked outside on the Weber grill. We also bring carne aside from Trader Joes which is already marinated. I cook bell pepper and onions in a skillet and then add the sliced grilled meat to the skillet. Served with corn or flour tortillas, and shredded cheese, and salsa. A great one dish meal.

We also like to bring precooked sausages or bratwurst. again from Trader Joe's. We grill them on the Weber also. If I have left over cabbage from the tacos I cook it in a skillet with potatoes and onions to go with the sausages. Great with beer.

The trick is to keep it simple and portable by making,cooking, and freezing somethings ahead at home. This makes the food prep so much more enjoyable.
Regards, Jeanie, with a few edits by jefe.
'01.5 Dodge 2500 4x4, CTD, Qcab, SB, NV5600, 241HD, 4.10's, Dana 70/TruTrac; Dana 80/ TruTrac, Spintec hub conversion, H.D. susp, 315/75R16's on 7.5" and 10" wide steel wheels, Vulcan big line, Warn M15K winch '98 Lance Lite 165s, 8' 6" X-cab, 200w Solar

bukhrn
Explorer III
Explorer III
mikeandlisa wrote:
bukhrn wrote:
mikeandlisa wrote:
Thanks for all the great ideas. I am the easy one and will eat anything. My DH on the other hand is much pickier.

I would love to have that steak and lobster dinner:)
I usually do when we go to Maine, but up there I usually forget the steak. :B :S



I hope to make it to Maine and eat my way through the state next summer;)
I try, but can't seem to get past the Whole Lobster, Lobster Rolls, Lobster bisque, Lobster Newburgh, Lobster salad, Lobster Mac & Cheese, only a few things you can do with Lobster.:B ๐Ÿ˜›
2007 Forester 2941DS
2014 Ford Focus
Zamboni, Long Haired Mini Dachshund

Strabo
Explorer
Explorer
Use the grill of smoker, propane single burner hooked to a big tank. I can cook almost everything outside and look cool doing it.

Tall, Dark and Handsome ๐Ÿ™‚
04' F350 PSD TB SC FX4 XLT, TH-04' 32' Sandpiper Sport Fifthwheel WB Dual Axle
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05' Honda 400 Ranchers quad

profdant139
Explorer II
Explorer II
Before leaving, we precook boneless bbq chicken thighs or pork or beef. We pack the cut-up pieces in ziplock bags and freeze them in meal-size portions. When camping, we dump the stuff into a nonstick skillet and heat it up. Serve on paper plates.

The biggest tip is the cleanup: wet a paper towel. Rub inside the skillet. The grease and sauce, if any, will come right off. Then a drop of soap, rub with a brush or sponge, and rinse in a little water. This method uses very little water. Don't use too much soap!
2012 Fun Finder X-139 "Boondock Style" (axle-flipped and extra insulation)
2013 Toyota Tacoma Off-Road (semi-beefy tires and components)
Our trips -- pix and text
About our trailer
"A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single list."

LenSatic
Explorer
Explorer
We just freeze leftover portions of meals that we normally eat and either nuke them or reheat them on the stove. We have a micro/convect in our Casita and even make scratch pizza. We bake a chicken or game hens in our Dutch oven and do lots of grilling on our Weber Baby Q.

LS
2008 Casita SD 17
2006 Chevy Tahoe LT 4x4
2009 Akita Inu
1956 Wife
1950 LenSatic

Roy_Lynne
Explorer
Explorer
Anything fried, anything you can cook on a stick, in a foil pouch, Z

greenrvgreen
Explorer
Explorer
I'm going to get shouted down for this, but Dungeness crab that's steamed in a microwave tastes exactly like lobster. Throw some melted herb butter on it and you'll figure out how I gained 30 pounds.

mikeandlisa
Explorer
Explorer
bukhrn wrote:
mikeandlisa wrote:
Thanks for all the great ideas. I am the easy one and will eat anything. My DH on the other hand is much pickier.

I would love to have that steak and lobster dinner:)
I usually do when we go to Maine, but up there I usually forget the steak. :B :S



I hope to make it to Maine and eat my way through the state next summer;)
http://mikeandlisaworld.blogspot.com/

bukhrn
Explorer III
Explorer III
mikeandlisa wrote:
Thanks for all the great ideas. I am the easy one and will eat anything. My DH on the other hand is much pickier.

I would love to have that steak and lobster dinner:)
I usually do when we go to Maine, but up there I usually forget the steak. :B :S
2007 Forester 2941DS
2014 Ford Focus
Zamboni, Long Haired Mini Dachshund

mikeandlisa
Explorer
Explorer
Thanks for all the great ideas. I am the easy one and will eat anything. My DH on the other hand is much pickier.

I would love to have that steak and lobster dinner:)
http://mikeandlisaworld.blogspot.com/

AJBert
Explorer
Explorer
Went camping a few weeks ago with my grandson and my cousin. We went old school using tents out in the NF. Brought the propane stove yet never used it. Ended up roasting hotdogs over the fire on whittled willow sticks.

Best dang hotdogs I've eaten in many years, even better than those at the ballpark!

Moral of the story, go simple with comfort foods. No sense in getting fancy. One of my favorites is Frito pie: ie, Frito chips, smothered in chili and cover with as much shredded cheese as you like.

KISS: Keep it simple, stupid (or Simon, for those that a overly offended at jokes)

2gypsies1
Explorer II
Explorer II
We never get tired of grilling and do so nearly every day. You can even do veggies on it. We rarely cook a big meal indoors when boondocking.
Full-Timed for 16 Years
.... Back in S&B Again
Traveled 8 yr in a 40' 2004 Newmar Dutch Star Motorhome
& 8 yr in a 33' Travel Supreme 5th Wheel

bcbouy
Explorer
Explorer
we got a camp chef portable oven with twin cooktop burners from our kids for christmas 2 years ago and we cook anything we want.last easter the wife and i had a full on turkey dinner in the middle of nowhere.runs of 1 lb or 20 lb tanks.instant mashed potatoes and stovetop stuffing used less than a half a bottle of water,if that.
2012 ram 2500 hemi crew cab sb 4x4 2015 northstar 850 sc 14.5 g3 guide custom fly fishing boat

brdprey
Explorer
Explorer
greenrvgreen wrote:
Frozen pizza heated up in the microwave. Absolutely no water required, just add beer.


now your just taking the fun out of camping. ok at least the eating part

dave54
Nomad
Nomad
Fresh caught fish, washed down with a local microbrew bought at the last town we passed through.
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So many campsites, so little time...
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