Combining Hobbies! Overlanding and Eating!

  • HTML tutorial

GLOCKer

Rank IV

Pathfinder II

1,209
Marietta, Georgia, USA
First Name
John
Last Name
Battersby
I love cooking and eating. I love cars and trucks. I'm just starting out in the overlanding hobby and I'm excited about the prospects of getting out into some beautiful places and cooking. I've got a food blog here:

And I've got two overlanding related articles so far:
and
 

Alanymarce

Rank IV

Trail Mechanic III

1,392
Colombia
We've improved our cooking capability over our trips - open fires (where allowed), and on minimalist kit.

On eating - where do I start? Empanadas in Mexico, Salteñas in Bolivia, Moapne worms in Botswana, chorizo in Buenos Aires, Mezze in Algiers.....
 
  • Like
Reactions: GLOCKer

GLOCKer

Rank IV

Pathfinder II

1,209
Marietta, Georgia, USA
First Name
John
Last Name
Battersby
We've improved our cooking capability over our trips - open fires (where allowed), and on minimalist kit.

On eating - where do I start? Empanadas in Mexico, Salteñas in Bolivia, Moapne worms in Botswana, chorizo in Buenos Aires, Mezze in Algiers.....
Damn! All of that sounds so good! Well...

...maybe not the worms? LOL
 

MidOH

Rank IV

Off-Road Ranger I

1,298
Mid Ohio
First Name
John
Last Name
Clark
Ham/GMRS Callsign
YourHighness
Did anyone else read the thread title as ''combining hobbies, eating overlanders'' on accident and then click?

Long pork mixed with Mountain House Chili Mac, is still better than worms from worm trees. Trying to explain to Bundutec that my camper has to have a wine rack.........is going to be interesting.
 
  • Haha
Reactions: GLOCKer

Alanymarce

Rank IV

Trail Mechanic III

1,392
Colombia
Did anyone else read the thread title as ''combining hobbies, eating overlanders'' on accident and then click?

Long pork mixed with Mountain House Chili Mac, is still better than worms from worm trees. Trying to explain to Bundutec that my camper has to have a wine rack.........is going to be interesting.
We have a wine rack - or more correctly three wine bottle holders built in to the storage below the bed - padded canvas so no clinking. Minimalism doesn’t mean we can’t have a glass of wine at camp.
 

cgranier

Rank VI
Member

Trail Blazer II

3,340
Miami, FL, USA
First Name
Carlos
Last Name
Granier
Member #

30043

One thing I've found very convenient on weekend outings is our SousVide cooker. Get everything cooked and ready before heading out and keep it on ice until needed. Medium-rare tri-tip ready in minutes once you have a hot fire going. And if for some reason (rain?) you can't get a fire going, you can easily finish it off on the Coleman stove.
 

bgenlvtex

Rank V
Launch Member

Member III

2,268
Texas
First Name
Bruce
Last Name
Evans
Member #

19382

One thing I've found very convenient on weekend outings is our SousVide cooker. Get everything cooked and ready before heading out and keep it on ice until needed. Medium-rare tri-tip ready in minutes once you have a hot fire going. And if for some reason (rain?) you can't get a fire going, you can easily finish it off on the Coleman stove.
This interests me, if you can when it is convenient, expound on this process some as it applies here. I am modestly familiar with what's taking place but will expect that this is a heavily nuanced style.
 

grubworm

Rank V
Launch Member

Member III

2,358
louisiana
First Name
grub
Last Name
worm
Member #

17464

Service Branch
USN-Submarines
One thing I've found very convenient on weekend outings is our SousVide cooker. Get everything cooked and ready before heading out and keep it on ice until needed. Medium-rare tri-tip ready in minutes once you have a hot fire going. And if for some reason (rain?) you can't get a fire going, you can easily finish it off on the Coleman stove.
i'm with you on the sous vide...
i made my own using an element from a hot water heater mounted inside a sink tail piece with a PVC housing and a $15 thermostat off amazon. it gives GREAT results and having the meat already cooked and in a vacuum bag for transport works very well for overlanding/camping.
i take a pork loin and slice it into 1-1/2" pieces and put 3 pieces in a bag and season each pack with a different rub and get about 5 meals out of one loin.
i just did some rib eyes with the sous vide and it was probably one of the best steaks ive ever eaten...


1612365764026.png
 

GLOCKer

Rank IV

Pathfinder II

1,209
Marietta, Georgia, USA
First Name
John
Last Name
Battersby
I absolutely love my sous vide! I've been toying with using the sous vide to pre-prepare food items to finish on a camp, but then I wonder how well that would translate to food blog articles and photography.

Here are some of my favorites that I've prepared with the sous vide cooker:
(Ughhhhh. The photos show up in the preview but not in the actual post)
Steak Diane using New York Strip


Steak Diane using filet!


Sirloin steak with couscous and grilled corn


New York strip with couscous and veggies


Steak pinwheel


Burgers stuffed with baked beans!


Burgers stuffed with cheese. LOTS OF CHEESE!


Chicken tacos!
 
  • Like
Reactions: bgenlvtex

Anak

Rank V
Launch Member

Member III

2,741
Sandy Eggo
i'm with you on the sous vide...
i made my own using an element from a hot water heater mounted inside a sink tail piece with a PVC housing and a $15 thermostat off amazon. it gives GREAT results and having the meat already cooked and in a vacuum bag for transport works very well for overlanding/camping.
i take a pork loin and slice it into 1-1/2" pieces and put 3 pieces in a bag and season each pack with a different rub and get about 5 meals out of one loin.
i just did some rib eyes with the sous vide and it was probably one of the best steaks ive ever eaten...


View attachment 186354
That controller looks like the same one I use for the heat lamp for chicks.

I didn't think about finding other uses for it.

What sort of water heater element are you running off it? One of those little pony keg water heaters? Or are you torturing a 240v element?
 
  • Like
Reactions: grubworm

grubworm

Rank V
Launch Member

Member III

2,358
louisiana
First Name
grub
Last Name
worm
Member #

17464

Service Branch
USN-Submarines
That controller looks like the same one I use for the heat lamp for chicks.

I didn't think about finding other uses for it.

What sort of water heater element are you running off it? One of those little pony keg water heaters? Or are you torturing a 240v element?
use the controller with the heat lamp to warm the chicks, then use the controller for sous vide and REALLY warm the chicks! :grinning:

i got this 110vac element off amazon for $10


 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Anak

cgranier

Rank VI
Member

Trail Blazer II

3,340
Miami, FL, USA
First Name
Carlos
Last Name
Granier
Member #

30043

This interests me, if you can when it is convenient, expound on this process some as it applies here. I am modestly familiar with what's taking place but will expect that this is a heavily nuanced style.
I have a Joule sous-vide cooker, but there's many options. What you want is a way to control and maintain water temperature. The nice thing about the sous-vide method is that if your water is at "medium-rare" temperature, then your meat can't get cooked past that.

We're going camping this weekend (thunderstorms in the forecast, yeay!) so my plan is to take a tri-tip steak, season it and cook it sous-vide to medium-rare (pink). That vaccum-sealed bag goes into the fridge (or freezer) until Friday when it goes into an iced cooler until needed. As long as there's ice in there, it should keep fine. I'm also pre-cooking some ribs and/or chicken.

The nice thing about this is that once my fire is going, all I need is a hot grill to throw the steak on. I'll take the steak out of the bag and dry it with some paper towels while the fire is getting hot. Depending on your cooler (and if you stored it in the freezer) you may need to thaw it out before hand. Once the fire is going, couple of minutes (sometimes less) per side to brown it nicely and it's done.

At home you can thaw the steak using water at the same temp you cooked it - at camp, you may still have a colder inside. But you can slice it and flip it a few times to your liking, if needed. Usually, the hot grill takes care of that.

Now, if it starts pouring rain and we decide to stay, and the tarp isn't enough (or at a safe distance) to keep a fire going, I can always break out the Coleman Stove and heat the steaks/chicken on a pan. And if none of your kitchens work, it's still cooked... so just slice it like roast-beef!
 
  • Like
Reactions: bgenlvtex