So every year I seem to overpack in the food department, by day two or three I'm sick of Mountain house style meals and MRE's aren't much better and usually weigh a fair bit more. I make it another day or two on Idahoan potatoes and tuna and then I find myself snacking on less than healthy treats more than eating real meals. As I look at my food situation I constantly find myself wanting to find food that doesn't dip into my water supply and doesn't require a stove or fuel canisters. I often start real fires while up hunting and am often crossing areas with fish. Ive been debating replacing my stove and canister with a some fishing line and hooks/bobber/sinker set up, cooking fish or even fresh venison over an open fire seems far more appealing to me. Then Im just stuck with trying to find a food system that will keep a good weight to calorie/nutrient ratio to rely on if the fishing or hunting isn't supplying food.
I see the biggest benefit while scouting as its a short few days of covering lots of miles and sometimes in areas ive never been. However I don't know what to do for reliable body fuel. I have packed in protein and granola bars and fruit chews and of course starburst candies are my weakness in the backcountry. These all seem like they are more supplemental than nutritional enough to supply your self for 7+ days in the back country. I plan to still pack in my small titanium water boiling pot and I always pack some aluminum foil to cook on over a fire if I need it. Cutting a stove an canister is not a huge weight gain and I know many are looking at this as someone trying to cut very minimal weight but I just see carrying something for 3-4 days that im no longer using as a weight penalty I could avoid. I rarely make coffee in the back country and there isn't much I couldn't do over a fire if I really wanted to, sure its a little more effort but not a crazy amount especially with a little fore thought or while doing some downtime work like glassing. Plus I always seem to have issues in the mornings when I do want coffee with my canister being cold and having to heat it up to get it to work right and by then I am usually over the desire.
Overall Im just never truly happy with the whole set up and looking for anyone who has made similar changes to their food system. Ive thought of home made meals and sandwiches but not sure what will really be enough for extended stays and was hoping someone else has already made some advances in that department.
I see the biggest benefit while scouting as its a short few days of covering lots of miles and sometimes in areas ive never been. However I don't know what to do for reliable body fuel. I have packed in protein and granola bars and fruit chews and of course starburst candies are my weakness in the backcountry. These all seem like they are more supplemental than nutritional enough to supply your self for 7+ days in the back country. I plan to still pack in my small titanium water boiling pot and I always pack some aluminum foil to cook on over a fire if I need it. Cutting a stove an canister is not a huge weight gain and I know many are looking at this as someone trying to cut very minimal weight but I just see carrying something for 3-4 days that im no longer using as a weight penalty I could avoid. I rarely make coffee in the back country and there isn't much I couldn't do over a fire if I really wanted to, sure its a little more effort but not a crazy amount especially with a little fore thought or while doing some downtime work like glassing. Plus I always seem to have issues in the mornings when I do want coffee with my canister being cold and having to heat it up to get it to work right and by then I am usually over the desire.
Overall Im just never truly happy with the whole set up and looking for anyone who has made similar changes to their food system. Ive thought of home made meals and sandwiches but not sure what will really be enough for extended stays and was hoping someone else has already made some advances in that department.