So as it goes I made a promise to my daughter to take her camping every year. She is five and we are ready to embark on our second camping trip. Our first camping trip was a blast and we both look forward to going camping again ( I am going to start preparing her and I for section hiking the Appalachian trail, but we are at least 1 to 2 years out from that) . From our first camping trip I realized my skills for camp meals have dwindled over the years. I am a decent cook(at home), grew up camping in the scouts and have tons of field time in the Marines. Marines are easier than a five year old to "camp out" with. We are not hiking we are just staying at a State Park here in Florida. No packing in our food. So coolers are readily available.
This brings me to my question for this post What are some good/easy recipes for camping with a child or just in general? It is just me and her. I get as much good help as I can from a five year old but it is just me and her so of course I do all the work. Any ideas for easy food for camping that she may participate in the creation of or that I could execute easily would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks
Tags:
Permalink Reply by Joseph on January 30, 2013 at 2:19pm Great activity to bond with kids!
I love cooking at home and at camp. I ave a 6 year old. He is helping more and more.
I give him jobs to do and let him do as much as he wants. Usually I end up "finishing" but he is into it.
breakfast
Obviously pancakes. Mix. Bring eggs and some canola/vegetable oil for the batter and for the griddle. A cast-iron griddle or fry pan makes life better. Especially with the concentrated heat of a Coleman stove, thin cheap pans, non-stick or otherwise, are very prone to burn foods.
Frogs in a hole. The old camping classic. Slice of bread, cut hole with edge of last nights empty soup or bean can, lay on hot greased pan, drop egg into the "hole". cook, flip.
Dinner
We like spaghetti and meatballs 9or sausage). Meatballs for kids can simple be ground burger or turkey-burger rolled into a ball. They don't like all the garlic and oregano and everything else in a normal meatball. So kiddo can roll up some meatballs- you can "finish up" any that have no resemblance to a sphere. Spaghetti needs no instructions.
I like what my dad used to call "goulash".. But this camp version is not real goulash. big fry pan. Brown up some hamburger. Set aside. slice potatoes pretty thin (maybe 1/8"), start cooking in fry pan with plenty of oil, add one sliced onion, a bit of fresh garlic chopped if you want, maybe some sliced peppers, salt, add the cooked hamburger. Medium heat. or medium low. Keep cover on; helps cook faster. Keep scraping the bottom with the flipper and turn over the cooked stuff and let the uncooked stuff hit the bottom. Scrape and flip, scrape and flip. done when potatoes are done...maybe 35 minutes.
those are my sure bets.
Have fun! don't forget the s'mores stuff!
Permalink Reply by Nick Kosiek on January 31, 2013 at 10:05am Joseph,
Thanks for the ideas. I will definitely incorporate these into our next outing in a few weeks. S'mores are definitely on the list all ready. We look forward to trying these out.
Permalink Reply by Robbie on February 5, 2013 at 2:04pm Campfire chili dogs are great if your daughter is in to spicier food. They're relatively easy to put together -- basically just hot dogs with some extras -- and very tasty. And for breakfast there are some surprisingly tasty variations you can put on oatmeal (peanut butter and banana for instance) that most kids will like and which are very easy to put together.
Permalink Reply by Paul_of_TX on February 5, 2013 at 2:54pm One item that my family loves when camping is the pie iron. We bring along pizza sauce with some cheese and peperoni and make hot melty pizza sandwiches. Even your regular meat and cheese sandwich taste better toasted with the cheese melted. For breakfast I sometimes scramble up a raw egg and put that into the pie iron then cook it in the fire; just be careful not to spill any egg out the side. Then I take that egg and make a breakfast sandwich. We have not done this but I have talked to others that take pie filling and make dessert type sandwiches with pie irons. Prep work and clean up are easy with the pie iron and the kids can help out and actually be the one who does the cooking. It's easier than cooking a hotdog over a fire.
Permalink Reply by Brian Splash on February 7, 2013 at 6:24am
Permalink Reply by Rafal Szpiczakowski on April 6, 2013 at 10:06pm Hi well she is only five, so she will have particular taste and favourite foods. Ask her what she would like to eat at camping, and/or what she likes at home. Use your observasion skills at home to see what she likes at home, and try to match it on small scale on camping trips. There are alot of food for camping so you would find something that's long lasting and easy to cook, especially for her needs. Also there are a lot of sites for cooking on budget, and/or kids. Some big supermarkets would or should have some magazines for free, on how to cook quick and easy meals for young kids. Ask around what kids like, and start doing it at home in the backyard like camping. So if anything gose wrong you can learn from it. Thank you
Chuck Knight replied to James!'s discussion Best Manly Insults
Todd Serveto replied to Beowulf87's discussion Not looking for pickup lines, but.... in the group Christian Men
Ian Wilson replied to Jared J. King's discussion Best places to buy kilts in the group The Kilted Ones
Chuck Knight replied to J. Packard's discussion Looking for some haircut suggestions!
Chuck Knight replied to James!'s discussion Best Manly Insults
Michael replied to Frost's discussion surviving anywhere.
© 2013 Created by Brett McKay.
Powered by