Travel AND backpacking cooking tools (Pots, pans, cups, utensils)

แชร์
ฝัง
  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 4 ต.ค. 2024
  • Most people think of these as backpacking or camping pots and tools but they are wonderful travel companions too. I will usually at a minimum take a spoon and cup of some kind with me everywhere I travel. Using plastic utensils is a huge waste and with titanium and other materials these days, it's so easy to carry your own.
    Amazon affiliate links:
    Titanium long handle spoon: amzn.to/3TTslqx
    Military cutlery set: amzn.to/3EI3n9f
    Mini spatula: amzn.to/3TKqTa1
    MSR stowaway pot: amzn.to/3hUOgk7
    GSI Kettlist: amzn.to/3EJjFil
    Titanium pot: amzn.to/3EJjPWZ
    Titanium plate: amzn.to/3GtCTKe
    BRS stove: amzn.to/3Oxv0FH
    MSR pocket rocket: amzn.to/3OpzcXW
    Fozzils snapfold plate and bowl: amzn.to/3EjQbpR
    Fold-a-cup: amzn.to/3gkct2O

ความคิดเห็น • 19

  • @gud2go50
    @gud2go50 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Very good video. I also like to keep camping cook gear with me in my travels because I have been caught short at times. I keep a couple of haversack cook kits I made up on my own and they stay in my car. I bought a few cheap Polish military canvas haversack bags from Colemans Military Surplus and did a wax coating on them. I have one with an alcohol stove and another with a propane stove depending on the weather. All I do then is throw in a packet or two of noodles, coffee and some tuna or chicken sides and I am good to go. I am ordering the cup and militay cutlery set you showed to replace what I have now. Thanks for the ideas.

  • @jelkel25
    @jelkel25 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The foldacup stuff is very useful. Have most of that stuff (but in all different colours that's been collected over years) The case that turns into plates is a good lunch box for when you want to avoid eating overpriced garbage at lunch. You have somewhere to lay out your lunch, a foldacup and flask of coffee and you're set. I use a stainless steel outdoors kettle to do herbal remedies in at home or regular tea, it's easy to get the strength you need, easy to pour (it has a spout) and easy to clean.

  • @LaineyBug2020
    @LaineyBug2020 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I love the concept of alcohol stoves. You've got a completely renewable fuel, smoke free for stealth and more safe for less ventilated areas.

    • @Jfree441
      @Jfree441  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Efficiency is my only gripe honestly. A totally silent stove and it's easily packable and lightweight. Can't go wrong, I just wish they were more efficient.

    • @Tiger-789
      @Tiger-789 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@Jfree441 I'm an alcohol-stove-aholic :D
      I think if you optimize your system further you can make quite the efficient alcohol stove and make your wish come true!
      A trangia type burner + a cross stand is ineffcient in my experience for the below reaons:
      1. No wind protection
      2. The gap between the burner and the pot is very small (generally you'd want 1.25 to 1.5 inch gap)
      3. The stove is losing heat through the floor
      4. I'm not too sure about this but I think the original trangia might be a little more efficient (?)
      So how to remedie these issues?
      1. Make a windshield from an aluminum disposable baking tray, these make amazing light windshields!
      2. Try a different pot stand that gives you the right gap. Off the top of my head some options are the trangia triangle, clickstand, firebox nano...
      3. This is solved by the above pot stands as they lift the stove off the floor. Alternatively you can fold up some aluminum foil and place it under, or skip this step unless there's snow.
      4. There are many DIY/factory made alcohol stoves out there and a trangia type stove is by no means the most efficient! especially if all you do is boil water.
      5. bonus point: some alcohol stoves are spill-proof if you are ever concerned about safety ;)
      Okay, hope this is helpful. If you have any questions or would like to see my own alcohol stove set-up I'm more than happy to show, tell or answer
      Edit: Oh and when I say efficient, I mean ~30 ml = 2 cups boil kinda efficient

    • @rubengomezocana5974
      @rubengomezocana5974 ปีที่แล้ว

      Trangia 25 or 27 is the way

  • @justinfreeman2401
    @justinfreeman2401 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The sea to summit cup was my very first cup purchased for camping and still use it every time. Never had an issue either. 8-10yrs o use maybe?

    • @Jfree441
      @Jfree441  ปีที่แล้ว

      I use it as a hiking dog bowl more now than I do for myself...but still great. I agree.

  • @mnight207
    @mnight207 ปีที่แล้ว

    As far as the alcohol stove, if im burning inside, I use 151 everclear because its the cleanest burning. But other than that I use the yellow bottle of heet. Alcohol leaves too much soot. but its probably the cheapest

    • @Jfree441
      @Jfree441  ปีที่แล้ว

      Hmm everclear. Hadn't thought of that. Is it cleaner than denatured alcohol? I can't imagine it's cheaper either.

    • @mnight207
      @mnight207 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Jfree441 Not sure if it burns cleaner then denatured alcohol but you can drink Everclear of course. You cannot drink denatured alcohol.

    • @Jfree441
      @Jfree441  ปีที่แล้ว

      @@mnight207 ha, fair point!

    • @Tiger-789
      @Tiger-789 ปีที่แล้ว

      Here in Spain they sell 96% ethanol to clean your hands with basically. It's amazing for alcohol stoves, it's in every store big and small, and it generates quite a bit of heat, and multiuse!
      Anyway, ethanol is your best bet for alcohol stoves. Everclear from my understanding is all ethanol (that's why it's drinkable). Denatured is ethanol mixed in with a little methanol*, heet I suppose is maybe 1:1 ethanol and methanol or something along the line.
      *Methanol is the simplest alcohol, it burns cleaner than ethanol (i.e. with less soot) BUT it generates less heat and generates some toxic gases aside from your standard CO2 and CO, and you cant use it to clean your skin. On the flip side it is cheaper.

  • @impermanenthuman8427
    @impermanenthuman8427 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What size is your MSR stowaway pot?
    I’ve heard people say they fry on the base of the pot but I think they had the 1.6 liter (largest) size, others have used wire to mod a handle to go through the handle of the lid to use the lid as a fry pan on the fire but it doesn’t sit properly on flat alcohol or gas burners properly

    • @Jfree441
      @Jfree441  8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Mine is the 1.1L version but I should have gotten the 1.6. The 1.1L is much smaller than I thought.
      I have not fried in the lid before, I have a titanium plate I use as a skillet but I could imagine it would work well enough.

  • @archuka1
    @archuka1 ปีที่แล้ว

    Where is the link for the alcohol stove pot lifter to put pots on ???????

    • @Jfree441
      @Jfree441  ปีที่แล้ว

      affiliate link: amzn.to/466coEh

  • @Brian-yx5vo
    @Brian-yx5vo ปีที่แล้ว

    Trangia mini 28?

    • @Jfree441
      @Jfree441  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      That stove actually came out of a BattleBox subscription month so it is a cheap clone but it works ok. Definitely not the same quality or performance as an actual Trangia.