
The wider stove burner really helps with cooking fish, per Mark's recommendation.
Over the years, have decided that there are two kitchen utensils that are really important, BTW, you do not need anything that comes in a "set". 1) A long-handled Ti spoon/or spork - will not ever melt or snap, turns over trout easily, stirs pasta, and can easily get to the bottom of all boil-n-bag meals without getting food on your hand...and 2) a small SAK - the one with scissors and a short blade knife...(here shown in fishing mode - tied to my hemostats?)Adrn wrote: Is a Ti spork/set not necessary or will my LMF plastic sporks or guyot designs 5 in 1 utensils just melt if I cook with them?? As for bringing something to store it in to prevent smells, what do you use or recommend? Also being new to this, I'm going off a lot of standard info I have read up on. I noticed one of your tents really close to your "kitchen". No concern of bears etc??
Thanks again for any and all advice.
Adrian
I have had that problem with canisters at altitude, especially when less than half full, but never with alcohol.BTW, alcohol stoves are pretty much useless up high for cooking fish - (just not enough heat to cook chunky, fat trout) when higher up Sierra.
I really like those little olive oil packets. I use this site http://www.minimus.biz to pick up all the little items that are hard to find or repackage.markskor wrote:Adrn wrote:
RE the small nalgene for oil...now 1 oz individual olive oil packets are available - better.
Remote canister stoves - you have the ability to invert the canister...(much like a paint can where you turn it upside down to clean the nozzle - but here the exact opposite), the stove canister has the most volatile/lightest gas at the top...first gas to escape. At lower ambient temps, rendering low pressure when canister approaches 1/2 empty. By inverting, this forces the heavier gas out first - no drop in pressure.freestone wrote:I have had that problem with canisters at altitude, especially when less than half full, but never with alcohol.BTW, alcohol stoves are pretty much useless up high for cooking fish - (just not enough heat to cook chunky, fat trout) when higher up Sierra.
Inverted - creates equal pressure through the entire life of the canister (allowing for temp and altitude issues too of course.)gabe&mel wrote:
Does inverting the canister cause any change in fuel efficiency (more fuel used per burn) enough that on a longer trip 7+ days you would consider bringing a larger/2nd canister?
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