Texsport Aluminum 4-Person Cook Set
There is nothing more enjoyable than going camping. After enjoying the day in the fresh air, you're going to want a wonderful meal. The type of camping stove you utilize when you go camping can make all the difference.
Camping Cook Pots
Texsport Aluminum 4-Person Cook Set
camping cook pots – click on the image below for more information.
- Set contains: 6 qt. stew pot, 1-1/2 qt. cook pot
- 6 cup coffee pot with lid
- 9 fry pan with detachable insulated handle
camping cook pots
NEW 15 – Pc. Aluminum Cook Set serves 4. Enter the chuckwagon! Aluminum cookware and plastic tableware merge to serve up delicious grub for 4 hungry eaters. 15 pieces total for complete cooking and dining! Excess inventory means top value! Safe to use, easy to clean; 9″ diam. fry pan; 1 1/2-qt. kettle; 6-qt. kettle; Aluminum bucket or 6-cup coffee pot (used for both); Detachable handle; 4 plastic plates; 4 plastic cups; Salt and pepper shakers. Camping to picnics, this is the way to go. Order your set today! 15-Pc. Aluminum Cook Set
Texsport Aluminum 4-Person Cook Set
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camping cook pots question by corvyvw: Food supplies for group camping?
I’m going on a camping trip for 4-5 nights with a group of 8 people. Four of those will be kids 12 and under. The campsite will have bathroom facilities and cooking utensils (stove, pots and pans). My question is, without refrigerator access for 5-6 days (long drive to get there) what kind of food should we bring with us to allow for some variety? Which fresh foods will last the trip (veggies, fruits, meat)? Ideas on fireside meals would be appreciated too.
Pretty sure it won’t be cold weather. We’ll be in southern Pennsylvania in July. Yes, we’re planning early but that’s due to the fact that we’re combing families and half of us are flying across country for it. So far ideas are great. Keep ‘em coming!
camping cook pots best answer:
Answer by Jeremiah J
If its cold weather dont worry too much as the outdoors will be the refridgerator….otherwise, hotdogs, lunchmeat, bread, potatos, eggs, pancake mix, cocao, coffee, salt and pepper, and a bunch of canned whatever you like, just comman sence stuff. …bring at least 20 gal. of water to use only for drinking.






You can buy various dehydrated foods in camping stores, but those are pretty pricey for stuff that doesn’t taste as good as normal food. Since there will be bathrooms where you’re going, I’m guessing you are not backpacking. You may as well have real food!
If temperatures at the time and place you are going will reliably stay the temperature of a refrigerator or freezer, then you can bring whatever you want. Just make sure any food you store outdoors is secure from wildlife. However, if conditions are more iffy, I’d suggest some of these things:
pasta with sauce from a jar or can
instant rice or couscous (I recommend cooking by adding to boiling water in a wide-mouth thermos, instead of trying to keep the heat adjusted over a fire or a camp stove.)
fully cured meats, such as summer sausage or REAL cured bacon
canned meat or fish
canned pork and beans
peanut butter
potatoes
apples (keep these with the potatoes; they slow down each other’s spoilage)
raisins
cheese (in moderate weather, real cheese will easily keep for a few days)
carrots
onions
cabbage (chop up with the carrots and onions for a nice fresh salad; cabbage keeps a lot longer than lettuce)
canned milk and instant pudding (or skip a step and bring canned pudding)
Don’t forget some traditional campfire snacks:
popcorn (Pop it in a few tablespoons of melted coconut oil, a yellow substance the texture of shortening, and it will taste just like movie theater popcorn used to)
marshmallows (You can have plain roasted marshmallow, or add graham crackers and chocolate bars to make s’mores.)
Enough just-add-water cocoa mix to make at least a gallon per person (You can make your own more cheaply using powdered milk, cocoa, sugar, dry coffee creamer, and malted milk powder. The proportions depend somewhat on your personal taste. Experiment before your trip, starting with the basic directions on the box of milk and the “traditional hot chocolate” recipe on the cocoa can, plus a spoonful each of coffee creamer and malted milk powder per cup.)
Have a good time!
A good cooler, iced down, will keep things fresh for at least three days, particularly if its not being opened and closed constantly.
You can extend that even further if you start with frozen foods. Fill one cooler with frozen animal protein of your liking (beef, chicken, what have you) already prepped for cooking. The food in that cooler should last the length of the trip.
Fresh produce can go in another cooler. It’s best, with produce, to not let it sit directly on ice. Use newspapers or an old blanket to separate them.
With any cooler, it’s important that you drain it frequently, because you do not want any food sitting in water.
Have fun.
Why not take tinned meal like sausages & bean also a cooler box for fresh food
OK You have a long time to plan what you are doing.
I’d have a quick look on the internet to find loca shops that you can pass by during the day. Can’t think that you will ever be more than an hour away from one and if the campsite is well set up with kitchens and utensils then there is a chance of a shop there or near. That makes things easier.
You can plan a whole menu round tinned, preserved and dehydrated food (such as powdered milk, canned vegetabled, etc). You can keep fresh food for a day in most weathers but very warm if you choose it carefully. Vacuum packed meats are possible, vegetables keep for ever, milk about a day, chease a day or so in hot weather. If you are driving you can buy a cool box and when you go to the shops get a bag of ice to throw in to keep it cool and food fresh for an extra day.
Really the possibilities are huge, look at what you normally eat and I am sure you can eat that. Then add things like sausages and marshamallows to cook over the fire.
Buy some MRE meals ]
get freeze dried food, never spoils, even in the heat of the desert. backpackers take it cause it’s light and you lose none of the flavour, you’ll need to order it though.