huntersdog
FNG
- Joined
- Jan 9, 2022
- Messages
- 14
A selection of mountain house freeze dried food packs.
Not if you burn it every evening like I do.the weight of your trash adds up.
Lots of good replies already, but one thing I've done to save weight is by putting my Jetboil meals in freezer bags instead of the plastic they come in. You save a few oz per meal, but over a long enough journey it shaves a few pounds. I've used the "Ziploc Slider Freezer Bags, Stand-and-Fill" ones before and it's way better. Another thing to consider, after you have used the food, the weight of your trash adds up.
Looks familiar! Nice Hyperlite flex.
Tuna in foil packs is a good idea, my very first sheep hunt I packed canned tuna, didn’t have anything to open the cans, tried smashing with rocks and I can’t remember what brand I bought but they were tough ass cans and couldn’t get them open. Too heavy and had to pack the darn things out!Lot's of good stuff here. I like the ideas of adding oil. A couple things to add/consider:
- For meat, I've precooked bacon. It lasts, it's calorie dense, it tastes good cold, and who doesn't like bacon.
- Tuna in foil packs added to vegetarian freeze dried meals.
- I always bring garlic powder for freeze dried.
Things I haven't tried but am curious about.
- Bullet proof INSTAMIX Keto Creamer packets to add to my morning Starbucks via. I drink my coffee black, but I think this would be a good calorie dense boost in the morning. I figure if I'm already drinking coffee, I can calorie up at the same time.
- Ghee - shelf stable, concentrated butter
My experience is more with long distance hiking and backcountry trail work than hunting, but I think modularity is really key. If you can come up with meals you can throw your trail mix/gorp and oil/ghee in, regardless of whether it's breakfast lunch or dinner, it simplifies things while still landing just short of monotony.
Little things I've thought of here and there:
-Ghee is my preference, since olive oil in oatmeal is a little strange.
- I take halva instead of chocolate sometimes, since it has decent ratios of sugars: fats: proteins, and is around 145 calories / oz. I also throw it in oatmeal.
- cold soaking is almost never worth it. Boiling water for cold soakable staples like couscous, instant potatoes, oatmeal etc. is a valuable comfort boost.
- dehydrated smoothies with your protein powder of choice become a weird fruit leather that's an excellent lazy snack
- peanut butter or tahini are excellent additions to ramen, but peanut butter is obviously more versatile
- for first days out, fruit that you can eat whole with no waste like apples or kiwis are worth the brief extra weight