What do you cook in/over a campfire?

What do you cook in/over a campfire?

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Damper

Wrap some potatoes in aluminium foil with a bit of butter and a dash of salt, sit on ashes or rocks near fire, turn every so often - maybe 15-20 minutes - after about an hour it'll be glorious potato cooked by campfire

>fire ensures that we would become the dominant species on this planet
>2.5 million years later
>"How do I cook with this?"

If they could only see us now

English not your first language?

go' za'

Ironically, no, but I was cleansed of my spic tongue early in life. Regardless, that doesn't distract from the point that you can cook just about anything in a camp fire. Fuck, I'm leaving tomorrow to do the same thing.

>meat
>vegitables

It's not rocket science, you shit for brains yuppie.

i've never been camping but in the movies i've watched they cook beans in a can. the people in the movie seem to always complain about them, htough.

never really understood why - beans are pretty good.

This so much.

I'm a geologist and lucky enough to be in the field fairly often, and I usually make things that don't require anything with temperature control or being particularly careful. I use an old beat up pan I could not give a fuck about, and my staples are:

*Oatmeal
*Hot drinks
*Pasta
*Beans, rice, and vegetables
*Bratwursts

freshly caught fish

I heard an anecdotes about geologists having orgies when out in the field. Is this true?

Never? Your childhood makes me sad.

Damn user for some reason this makes me feel really bad for you and your childhood.

This.

youtube.com/watch?v=VRgrj63VJiU

marshmallows

Wood fired 'go 'za???

Has it ever been done? Pure madness.

Poor duck why did you set it on fire?

What kinda fish?

Cast iron and aluminum foil are my camp preference. But I can cook anything from asparagus to yucca over wood. Want fresh bread or muffins? No fucking problem. Fried Chicken? I'm on it!

Freshly caught

Bring frozen cheap steaks and a grill basket

Steak cooked over an open campfire is delicious

I like boiled carp

trout

Carne asada and tortillas. I just got back from camping where I did it.

The hard part of campfire cooking isn't what to cook, it's managing the heat. It's much hotter than you're probably used to. Many people make the mistake of trying to cook when it's still at a full burn like OPs pic too. You gotta get it to coals, and possibly separate some from the rest of the fire.

pork always pork

Souls

youtube.com/watch?v=d8hhRbd41rA

This.

Read that as boiled crap

a variation of this. make some cuts in the potatoes and insert some cheese, garlic and/or chilli too taste. Before wrapping them in foil and puttingin the fire.

for a dessert.
Get a banana and make a slit in the skin down one side. insert some chocolate and marshmellows under the skin. Wrap the whole thing in foil and roast in the coals.

Chicken

Pork stew

>puff paste
fuck, why is it so jarring every time he says it

Like most scientists, geologists reproduce by budding.

decadence breeds decay

Back ribs are delicious over the fire

>puff paste
I take it the video is of that Townsend guy. Take everything with a pinch of salt, he has spread false information before.

Y u no hobo packet Veeky Forums?

Same thing with corn

boiled carp is boiled crap. why do you hate flavor user?

>grill
>boiled

do people actually do this shit?

Im curious about what you'd cook over the flames like s'mores and hot dogs what else is an easy thing to cook this way?

Anything you'd grill: burgers, steaks, chicken (cut up, of course), vegetables (either small, or cut up large ones).