ultralight hiking frypan falafel

Out of the Frying Pan:

How do you cook a fish (or some falafels: http://www.theultralighthiker.com/he-hiked-with-a-falafel-in-his-hand/) and what to cook them in – and with what?

ultralight hiking frypan falafel

A larger frypan lid will still fit a smaller pot to keep the steam in, etc. Suppose you have the excellent Toaks 900 ml Ultralight pot (the lightest of its size on the market) at 77 grams (pot) plus 27 grams (lid), you could add around an ounce (leave the lid at home) and have a useful frypan lid instead if you want to do a bit of frying, (eg if you are an Ultralight Fisherman: http://www.theultralighthiker.com/the-ultralight-fisherman/) You will notice for example that the 6″ (15.5 cm) Toaks ultralight frypan weighs 71 grams https://www.traildesigns.com/cookware/toaks-145mm-frying-pan so an addition of +44 grams in weight will give you the ability to fry! If you needed an even larger one you could choose the Evernew 7 1/4″ (18.5cm) at 133 grams ( +106 grams) or you could even run out to the 8″ (20cm) Evernew at 155 grams (+128 grams)  https://www.traildesigns.com/cookware/evernew-20cm-titanium-non-stick-frying-pan-eca443

I have the Evernew 900 ml Ultralight Deep Pot with Frying Pan lid https://www.traildesigns.com/cookware/evernew-titanium-ultra-light-deep-pot-9l-eca265 which weighs 123 grams all up. The frypan is a little small (but manageable) for a bowl of cereal, and is certainly handy for cooking that second item or for a very small fry-up at 250 ml and 4.3″ (11 cm & 45 grams) but any decent sized fish is a problem, so a slightly larger frypan lid such as the first one above will solve two problems for me – and as I said before only adds an ounce (71 – 45 = 26 grams).

Dripping or Tallow (Beef or Mutton Fat) 40C & Lard (Pig Fat) 30C have the highest melting temperatures of all the edible lipids (fats and oils). Cofa or Cocoa Butter has the highest melting point 34C of the vegetable fats, but will still melt on a hot day, as will butter. I know you could take some kind of vegetable oil (such as olive) to do your frying with, but you would have the extra weight of the bottle as compared with a small ziplock bag for the tallow and there is always the danger that the oil will leak out creating a dreadful mess on your clothes, sleeping bag etc. I have had this happen! Best avoided. A small ziplock bag with exactly the required amount of tallow or dripping inside the ziplock bag containing whatever is to be cooked (eg the falafel, omelet or pancake mix) will never leak – and of course per gram pretty much nothing is as calorific as fat! On the trail for long periods you will find your body craves it, which is maybe why so many people take some peanut butter or chocolate with them! Though I do like fish baked in Alfoil, fish fried in fresh dripping is even more delicious!

 

 

 

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedintumblrmail

2 thoughts on “Out of the Frying Pan:”

  1. Tread carefully when carrying anything fatty or oily in ziplock bags (Re: “Out of the Frying Pan”).

    I had a bright idea once: bring smashed-up Doritos Nacho corn chips for trailside lunches. Worked fine. Spicy, salty, greasy.

    What’s even higher in fat content? Potato chips. Bingo! Filled my pack with standard-weight ziplocks full of potato chip crumbs. All set then.

    First day on the trail, I reached into my food bag and retrieved my first meal of potato chips, and withdrew my hand covered in potato chip oil. It was all over the inside of my food bag. It goes through standard-weight ziplocks like smoke through a window screen. Oops.

    Years later I carried food deliberately almost soaked in vegetable oil for extra energy (powdered off-the-shelf ingredients with lots of oil well mixed in), which I needed for that trip. Used freezer-weight ziplocks. Almost worked – there was still a bit of oil diffusing through the ziplocks, though I squeaked by. This was in heavy bear country too.

    Butter has worked fine so far. I’ve never had it melt, which is probably part of the reason why. I wanted to try lard, but I can’t find it – not sold any more in ordinary supermarkets as far as I can tell. Powdered butter, which I used last year is the best so far: no water content, no need to cut it up or reshape it, easier to measure out, tastes great.

    So anyhow, look out for oil. It can be sneaky.

    P.S. Once upon a time I tried making falafels rolled up as balls with oil mixed in, and then steaming the balls. Eventually I got something that wasn’t terrible. This was at home. Never tried it on the trail. But I once bought some small silicone rubber muffin/cupcake molds, and tried those a few times as holders to steam cornmeal on the trail. That worked too, but I prefer just dumping hot water into a ziplock bag and squeezing the eats out a torn-off corner – simpler all around.

    1. Yep, that’s why I’m recommending ‘tallow’ . It doesn’t melt at room temperature so it won’t escape from a ziplock bag which is inside another ziplock bag of the stuff to be cooked, eg falafel mix). As I said, mutton fat melts at 40 Celcius. You wouldn’t be doing much cooking (or hiking) at that temperature! I used to cook with butter which I carried in a screw cap jar. Oil is very awkward to carry, I agree.

Leave a Reply to Dave Sailer Cancel Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *