Camp & Survival Cooking with the Solo Backpacking Stove

Dinner cooked on the Solo wood burning backpack stove

I bought the Solo Stove because I thought it would be a wonderful little pyrotechnic toy to play with.  After cooking dinner with it this evening, I am amazed at what a serious piece of quality gear it is.  Since it’s double walled, embers from the fire grate do not touch the surface beneath it, so it is safe to use on wood tables or on the ground.  It truly leaves no trace!

This shows the pot support upside down, stowed inside the stove.

Anytime you cook directly over a fire, your pots get soot covered.  I initially covered mine with aluminum foil to prevent that.  But after tipping a pot, I realized that the foil made the pots more likely to slide around, so I removed it and will just deal with cleaning up the soot.

My purpose in cooking with the stove this evening was to practice survival cooking — the kind you would do after a natural disaster when you didn’t have access to your kitchen.  I wanted a stove that was small, simple, and that wouldn’t require having to buy extra fuel if the emergency continued for several days…. or weeks… like the power outages after a hurricane.

Nutritious additions to packaged Ramen.

I also wanted to experiment with cheap, easy storage food.  And what’s cheaper and easier than Ramen?  But no way could it be considered nutritious.  So my project was to concoct a nutritious meal using Ramen as a base.

I added onion, celery, carrots, squash and, after they started getting tender,  shredded napa cabbage for additional flavor.  Almost any veggie combination would work.  And the veggies could be fresh, frozen or dehydrated.

Soup’s on!

Since I added so many vegetables, I was afraid the Ramen flavor packet would not be enough to season everything, so I added an extra rounded teaspoon of bouillon.  When the vegetables were tender, I stirred in a small can of chicken, and added half a package of crushed Ramen noodles.  Finally I stirred in the flavor packet and boiled the soup one more minute.

It turned our surprisingly good–a flavorful, chunky, satisfying soup.

Fried cornbread on the Solo Stove!

I also wanted to experiment with pan bread, and the little Solo Stove proved to be a champ at cooking fried corn bread.  I did have to watch the pan carefully because the large handle made the pan unbalanced and it would have tipped easily.  But with a little care, it worked well.

The best part of the experiment was how evenly the stove burned on such a small amount of fuel.  I had gathered various sizes of sticks, but after I got the fire going, I found out that sticks about an inch around or larger seemed to keep the flame at an even

Fuel supply with dryer lint as a fire starter.

temperature best.  I was scoring the branches with the saw on my Swiss Army Knife, then breaking them, when Ron got out the pruning loppers and rapidly turned the rest of the branch into perfect chunks.

I very highly recommend the Solo Stove as an essential piece of emergency gear.

If you get it, remember not to use sticks you find on the ground if you have any other option.  Hanging deadwood is drier and if you are anywhere near the woods, you will find it everywhere.  You can use damp wood once you get a hot starter fire going, but it will not burn as cleanly or efficiently.

And one final tip — the fastest way to smother and mess up a good fire is to try to feed it too much too fast.  Wait until the fire in your Solo Stove starts to die down before adding two or three more sticks at a time.

My new favorite toy/best gear!

I have reposted this blog entry as a permanent page to keep it from disappearing in the archives.

Playing with Fire & Primitive Skills

My first DIY backpacking stove, built around 2001 or 2002

As much as I dearly love camping in the Casita, at times I truly miss backpacking and primitive camping.

The Pocket Rocket. (image from Amazon)

I’ve enjoyed making a lot of stoves over the years, from hobo stoves to tuna can stoves to various alcohol stoves.

I fell out of love with alcohol stoves while hiking back in 2003 when I was caught in a surprise snowstorm.  The wind was whipping, I was freezing, and was trying to get water to boil for hot chocolate.  Normally 3/4 ounce of alcohol would bring my little .7 liter titanium pot full of water to a rolling boil in 5 or 6 minutes.  But since I didn’t have a decent windscreen for my stove, I used up 4 ounces of my precious alcohol fuel and the water was nowhere near boiling.

A couple of days later I stopped into an outfitter’s and bought a Pocket Rocket stove… and it’s jet-like blast of high pressure isobutane fuel assured me of boiling water on demand.

But I hated having to worry about where I’d be able to find my next (expensive) canister of fuel.

Solo Stove — wood burning gasifier hiking stove (image from Amazon)

I was lurking at a hiking forum the other day, vicariously reliving the good old days, when I saw a new-to-me hiking stove mentioned.  It’s heavy for a backpacking stove — 9 ounces.  BUT you need NO FUEL since it burns sticks and twigs.  And in the East, that means a limitless amount of fuel is always available — free!  (Add an Esbit tablet, piece of wax, or Wet Tinder to get wet wood going.)  It has a fire grate up above a solid stainless steel bottom so you don’t leave any trace of your fire on the ground.  And it burns so completely that all that is left is white ash.

So I’ve got the Solo Stove in my Amazon cart…. until I can talk some sense into myself and delete it as the unnecessary item it is.  But man!  What a COOL TOY!!!!

And remembering the stoves and how much fun I had with them reminded me of all the fun

Primitive bread (like chapitas) with no yeast and no oven.

I had learning to do primitive cooking over coals.

Cooking directly over a fire gives you very little control over the heat — and it coats your pots and pans with a nasty layer of soot.  But I learned that if I built a small fire and let it burn until I got a good bed of coals, then moved the fire over with a couple of sticks exposing the coals, that I had a perfect outdoor “stove.”  A pan placed in the center of the coal bed would get very hot and quickly bring water to a furious boil.  Move the pot out from the center and I’d have medium heat.  And if I wanted a simmer, I just moved my pot to the edge of the coals.  And when you cook on coals instead of over fire, you get NO SOOT on your pan!

The first oyster mushrooms I found on our property

Thinking about all the fun Ron and I had building campfires and cooking over them naturally led to reminiscing about our adventures with wild edibles.  I got interested in studying wild foods in the late 1990’s.  It took a few years to become proficient at being able to make decent meals from foraged ingredients.

Then I started getting bored with roots and veggies, nuts and berries, so decided that wild mushrooms would add a nice touch to my wild meals.  So I plunged into intensive mushroom study.  I was very fortunate in that David Fischer, author of Edible Wild Mushrooms of North America, was extremely approachable by email and cheerfully helped me positively identify photos of my earlier finds before I dared to eat them.

Chanterelles found in the Talladega National Forest

I used to like to hike out into a national forest with no food except salt, sugar, coffee, tea and a small bottle of olive oil, and eat only what I could forage.  The first day was always a little scary, but after that I would just keep finding good things to eat so the problem would be to not gather so much that it would be wasted. (Except in winter, of course.  I would starve to death then!)

There were also experiments with all kinds of primitive shelter building.  My most elaborate was a wickiup, pictured here partially built.  Since I didn’t have good thatching material on our property, I cheated and bought hay.  😀

Wickiup building in progress

I think that what has made all of those experiences resurge in my memory is the knowledge that, due to health problems, I won’t ever be able to backpack again.  I guess that’s something everyone has to come to grips with as they age.  Some of the good times are forever gone.

But it has reminded me that even if I can’t climb mountains or backpack anymore, I can still get out, build a campfire, and relish the satisfaction of being self-sufficient enough to cook without all the modern trappings of society.

And, in doing so, to capture a little of what our ancestors must have felt as they went about their daily affairs.

(NOTE:  Since this subject is so special to me, I am re-posting this as a permanent page so that it won’t disappear into my blog’s archives.)

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