CookWare
Baking
Bread
Cakes
Chocolate
Cookies
Desserts
General
Muffins
Pastry
Pies
Pizza
Meals
Appetizers
Breakfast
Brunch
Soups & Stews
Sweets
Outdoor Cooking
Barbecuing & Grilling
Camping & Hiking
General
Picnics
Tailgating
Special Diet
Diabetic & Sugar-Free
Dietary
Healthy
Kosher
Low Cholesterol
Low Fat
Low Salt
Vegetarian
Special Occasions
Brunch & Tea
Christmas & Hanukkah
General
Gourmet
Holidays
Party Planning
Seasonal
Tablesetting
Vegetarian
Fruit
General
Health
Potatoes
Salads
Vegan
Vegetables
International Cooking
African
Asian
Canadian
Caribbean & West Indian
Chinese
Indian
Japanese
Pacific Rim
Thai
Vietnamese
Wok Cookery
Latin American
Mexican
Middle Eastern
Native American
INFORMATION
Payment Methods
Shipping
Safe Shopping
Contact Us
Links
In association with
 
   

Learn to COOK - Backcountry Cooking: From Pack to Plate in 10 Minutes (Backpacker Field Guides)

Backcountry Cooking: From Pack to Plate in 10 Minutes (Backpacker Field Guides)
List Price: $16.95
Our Price: $12.71
Your Save: $ 4.24 ( 25% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Mountaineers Books
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5

Buy it now at abc-fishing.com!

Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 641.578
EAN: 9780898865516
ISBN: 0898865514
Label: Mountaineers Books
Manufacturer: Mountaineers Books
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 173
Publication Date: 1998-05
Publisher: Mountaineers Books
Studio: Mountaineers Books

Accessories
National Geographic TrailSmart 15 Major National Parks of the USA
Garmin GPS III Plus Personal Navigator (12 Channel)

Related Items

Editorial Reviews:

Over 144 recipes and how to plan simple meals.


Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Not my first pick, but may be good supplment for hikers.
Comment: After reading many reviews, I purchased this book, BACKCOUNTRY COOKING, and THE BACK-COUNTRY KITCHEN by Teresa Marrone. I can't help but compare the two books, so my opinion on this book is relative to my opinion of the other.

The introduction of BACKCOUNTRY COOKING categorizes camp chefs as Ascetics, Pragmatists or Gourmands. This book leans heavily toward the ascetic-pragmatist end of the scale. As the subtitle, FROM PACK TO PLATE IN 10 MINUTES, may suggest, the emphasis is on quickly-prepared meals. As a consequence, the meals tend to be simple. If you're someone for whom part of the challenge of the camp experience is to create fabulous multi-course meals in the wild, this book is not for you. And, as expected for a book from BACKPACKER magazine, the emphasis is on light packing and cooking with a single-burner stove.

The first part of the book discusses ingredients, tool and procedures as does Marrone's book, but I find the discussion in THE BACK-COUNTRY KITCHEN to be better and more complete, in particular, providing much more detail in home drying foods. BACKCOUNTRY COOKING discusses a plethora of grains, most of which I've never seen in a grocery store. (Different kinds of oats, different kinds of rice, bread bases, etc.) Baking methods are very briefly touched upon, but the book goes little beyond single-burner stove-top cooking.

Sidebars from different magazine contributors are interspersed throughout the book, and give good tips. Some black-and-white photos are also sprinkled throughout the book.

After the introduction, the book goes into the chapters containing the recipes, with each chapter representing a meal or course. One very nice thing is that each recipe includes nutritional information.

Now, I just have a so-so opinion of this book, and it was hard for me to establish why. Like I said, I found the introductory information to be better in the other book. But I think part of my indifference is due to the recipes. There seem to be a lot of ethnic foods - Oriental, Middle Eastern, Mexican. The desserts are mostly rice and bread puddings (yick), and include mincemeat (for dessert?!). Maybe you eat a lot of hummus, but I suspect many people will find that a lot of the recipes are not the kind of things you find at home, and perhaps the trail is not the best place to find out that your body has strange reactions to strange food. Furthermore, many of the ingredients, such as the grains and beans, are things I just don't see in the local supermarket. To the author's credit, they give a complete appendix of mail-order companies, but I'm not particularly excited about paying shipping to experiment with recipes.

Teresa Marrone's book, although including more multi-burner, multi-pot recipes for canoeists, car campers and others able to carry more gear, also has many single-burner lightweight recipes for hiking. It seemed to me that her book had more recipes that BACKCOUNTRY COOKING but, in fact, the number of recipes were similar. (BACKCOUNTRY COOKING has 144, and THE BACK-COUNTRY KITCHEN has 150.)

My recommendation is to start with Marrone's THE BACK-COUNTRY KITCHEN. If you feel the need for more single-burner meals, or more quickly-prepared meals, augment it with BACKCOUNTRY COOKING.



Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Eat Well
Comment: This book has a good amount (it's not War and Peace) of recipes that are tasty and easy for backpacking! Also a chapter or two of good advice concerning food in general...how to pack it, what kinds of things work, making your own dried foods, etc. Each meal has a chapter, like Breakfast, Lunch, whatever...there are no-cook things, all the way to fresh baked bread on the trail and pizza. Yum! (well no I haven't done the pizza or bread but I'm going to try it since they sound so good! And easy too)

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: Mostly recipes
Comment: If you are looking for a book full of recipes, then this is the book for you. I would say they make up about 80% of the book. The first part is about gathering ingredients and there is a little wisdom about taking precautions against animals. I got this book to complete the series, but I don't really like to read a bunch of recipes, but someday I might.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Finally a book for those that like to eat
Comment: This book is excellent. It may not have the largest number of recipes, but the ones it does have are well thought out, backpacker friendly, and just plain good. The book has a lot of variety too. Each recipe is organized into two parts, the pre-hike preparation (what to do at home) and then then a on-trail section. The authors have tried to simplify the on-trail requirements making meal time easier. The book emphasizes using standard ingrediants (no more expensive store bought freeze-dried stuff) and includes instructions for preserving (dehydrating) your own.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Lots of useful advice and stories mixed in with the recipes.
Comment: If you subscribe to Backpacker magazine the things in this won't suprise you, but having them all collected together is great. Lots of interesting recipes, good stories about cooking, and useful advice really rounded out my bookshelf.


Buy it now at abc-fishing.com!

Cooking with ...
Cheese & Dairy
Fruits
Herbs, Spices & Condiments
Wild Game Cooking
Meats
Poultry
Seafood
Pasta
Rice & Grains
Sauces, Salsa & Garnishes
Drinks & Beverages
Bartending
Beer
Coffee & Tea
General
Juice
Smoothies
Spirits
Wine
Cooking in Europe
Eastern European
English & Welsh
French
German
Greek
Hungarian
Irish
Italian
Mediterranean
Polish
Portuguese
Russian
Scandinavian
Scottish
Spanish
Turkish
Cooking in USA
African American
Amish & Mennonite
Barbecue
Cajun & Creole
California
General
Hawaii
Middle Atlantic
Midwest
New England
Northwest
Soul Food
South
Southwest
West
More Cooking...


Get Chitika eMiniMalls
© 2006 Learn to Cook
Design by Learn to Cook   Powered by ASM2