I’m going to be camping for 4 days at a location without easy access to fire (hence no boiled water). As such, I’m going to be packing a bunch of canned stuff for my daily meals. The place is in England, where we’re expecting a few hot days this week and maybe some rain over the weekend.

However, I have some free time before the trip to cook food. But I’m not sure if there’s any good foods I could bring along that could keep for 3-4 days without a fridge. I guess that crosses out most meat dishes.

Some ideas I had were: falafel, fritters, bread, calzones, pasties. Have you tried taking such foods camping and if so, did they last a few days without spoiling? Are there any other foods you’d recommend? Thank you so much!

  • Beef jerky and salted/tinned fish.

    Butter.

    Eggs (unopened; only if not pasteurized/cleaned which you will not find in a typical US grocer for anyone other than OP).

    Pretty much any baked goods.

    Pasta (uncooked obviously).

    Avocado, onion, tomato… Pretty much any fruit or veggie that isn’t kept refrigerated at the store really.

    Nuts.

    Chocolate

    Marshmallows

    Graham crackers

    Edit: NO FIRE?! The hell you camping?! Could you at least get some sterno or an electric camping stove? How you gonna have a camping trip without s’mores? 😩

    Although I also would suggest a basic ass ice chest. My family went camping all the time for that length of time when I was growing up and we would bring regular food to cook over a portable electric stove and keep it in an ice chest. It would keep for at least 5 days.

    • dan@upvote.au
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      13
      ·
      1 year ago

      Eggs (unopened; only if not pasteurized/cleaned which you will not find in a typical US grocer for anyone other than OP).

      You can usually tell by where the eggs are located in the grocery store. US eggs are ‘cleaned’ and kept in the fridge at the store (and at home), whereas a lot of other countries don’t clean them and you just find them on a regular shelf instead of in the fridge.

      It’s interesting… It’s mandated to wash eggs in the USA, whereas it’s mandated to not wash eggs in Europe. Different standards.

        • TenderfootGungi@lemmy.world
          link
          fedilink
          arrow-up
          2
          ·
          1 year ago

          Pickled or boiled eggs. I buy the 2 packs of already boiled eggs so there is never a partially opened container in my cooler.

          Also carry quarts of eggs in cooler and cook all at once. Good with a bag of frozen hash browns. But this takes a way to cook (we carry Coleman style stove).

    • Drusas@kbin.social
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      12
      ·
      1 year ago

      Some places have fire bans due to dry conditions and high likelihood of forest fires. Those don’t include little stoves, though…