"being a dirt bag" ... Best quote of the whole video. You can tell that man grew up on the "southshore" ha! Rock On Tim.... We all love what you are doing!
No embarrassment needed, bro. You're an inspiration and ramen noodles (we just call 'em instant noodles in Ireland) are such an easy meal, whether camping or at home! Keep up the great work.
I started carrying a pair of skewers with me. If I want to cook a steak or pork chop over a small open fire I use the two skewers to prop the meat over the fire. They are small and light weight.
Love the streaming water. I do that with a Sea to Summit camp shower. Same theory. Fill with water and you have a gravity feed faucet. Great ideas and very minimal. Well done.
Tim: Thanks for sharing your kitchen and pantry items. I also use a “Jet Boil” as well as the larger “Camp Chef Stryker”. I appreciate the super quick boil times as well as being able to heat water to just warm, to do clean up, take a “cat bath” and so on. I am not a fan of actual cooking a meal while travel camping, but also shy away from foods like Ramen noodles. I buy a couple of freeze dried meal entrées but also bring easy to prepare items like instant mashed potatoes, Packaged soups, oatmeal and dried fruit. I also have brought a military MRE as my “iron ration”. I use a MRE plastic spoon and for my coffee, I always take my tall “Starbucks” travel mug. It is instant coffee for me until I run into a coffee shop. Here is a freebie, I always ask for my creamers on the side. They need no refrigeration and I get 4....enough for coffee in the morning. I’ve been on a budget as well, but I try to make the best use of the money I budgeted for food. Good luck on your travels, eat well, sleep warm, and know you never travel alone.
Tim, thank you for the awesome video. The eating portion of my adventure riding has always been a weak point for me. I want to step up my game on cooking my meals. I need to slow down take my time I want to say thank you for the thoughts
Simplicity, utility, form (size & weight), and lastly costs are my criteria... I try to pair down my gear after every trip. My Mess Kit consists of a spork, titanium mug, foil, P51, s/s water bottle, tab stove, bic, instant coffee, oatmeal, and seasonings. Boiling water is the common denominator of my prepared meals... instant potatoes, oatmeal, soup mix, pasta sides, rice sides, eggs, and freeze dried meals... Happy Trails Tim!
I need to get one of those collapsible cups that fits over the fuel canisters. Another tip for washing dishes is to break off a twig to use as a scrub brush/sponge. You can get 99% of the cooked on grit off and finish it off with water and a wipe. Also, hard pannier lids make good plates/trays if you need another surface to eat or work off of.
If you want to carry dish soap, I use an eye drop bottle. I use Walmart eye drops, because my eyes get dry when riding. After the bottle is empty, the eye dropper top will pop off, and snap back on. Just drill the dropper hole out a little bit, fill the bottle with dish soap, and you're good to go. Takes up less space than your hand sanitizer bottle, and doesn't leak.
Very minimalist! I should take a lesson here as I tend to take everything including the kitchen sink! 😂 Glad to know the collapsible cup fits on the bottom of the fuel cell! I would have never thought of that! Ride safe Tim!
Glad to see you doing great, I haven't watched in a month or two due to work and also saving for my own motorcycle camping trip. I donated through your website. Keep up your amazing videos!
On our late trip, my riding buddy pretty much ate nothing but naan with peanut butter, or naan with canned chicken. Not my thing, but he didn’t starve to death and spent less than I did so hey more power to him I guess.
Pretty cool how the collapsible cup fits so perfectly onto your stoves fuel tank. Hmmm the nano espresso is a cool gadget. I like how you have everything so compact and organized. Thanks for sharing.
I love Ramen! Take Chicken Ramen, add a little $1 can of chicken, and finally some chopped green onion right before you eat. Cheap, packs small and light, and tastes awesome to me. Keep up the good work! I'm enjoying your book.
As always thanks again Tim. The Jetboil rocks and served me well this week on my first solo trip. It’s insane how fast it boils water. I’m interested though in that bag on your bike w water. I haven’t seen it in any other video yet but maybe I missed it.
Just to add to the knowledge bank ., you pack differently & eat differently , if you destination camp ( you go camping and stay a week).. Just putting coffee in the pot(loose) makes great coffee ,but it will soon teach you why coffee pots are shaped like they are., (it will boil over ).You can buy a cheap adapter to convert your butane type stove (jet boil) to propane . Bring a soldering tip or ordinary tip for propane torch & now you can start a stubborn camp fire, or heat up a tool kit item to solder a wire.With a tank full of gasoline & a discarded pop can you can get anything to burn even on a rainy day.Powdered drink mix of any kind can make water into just about anything from orange juice to coffee , tea ,whiskey sour , or just make it more palatable .Tasters Choice is the instant coffee to buy if you get stuck having to drink instant.
Great set-up! I think you're at the sweet spot where performance and compactness intersect. Mosko Moto, those folks really think things through to the next level. Wait. What? No shout out for the Walmart cup on the bottom of fuel canister idea? Sadness. Lol, just kidding. Be safe out there Brother!
Tim, I'm sure you must have heard of this, but you really need to carry instant mashed potatoes to mix with your raman. Noodles alone are OK but mixed with the potatoes you have a real meal!
I love coffee and the stuff to arrive at my preference, a full cup x4 maybe more takes up so much space. I have celiac and have given up a lot food wise, so I’m stubborn about the coffee. 😉 Thanks for the video.
LOL, am I the only person who packs Ramen because they actually LIKE it?? 😄 Good video, thanks for sharing the links. The nanopresso is a neat little gadget!
More people pack and eat Ramon, and Spam, for that matter, than you may realize. It has become quite fashionable to put down both. People who do will consider themselves cool, what ever "cool" means.
I like Jet Boil. However, butane has a rather high boiling point (-1C) which means it will not function in cold weather. I have switched to a propane stove as propane will evaporate and burn at -40C, making it more reliable. It is also easier to find in North America. Yes, I understand there are a few people who will not ride in cold weather, still I am up for full adventure touring and I believe in being prepared.
Seeing what you have in your food bag makes me very, very hungry. Thanks for the kitchen suggestions. That’s an area I alway overpack. I always bring a plate as well Usually my riding buddies and I cook steaks and grilled veggies over the fire. Trying to fit a steak in your cup/bowl does not work so well.
Hey Tim, great vid! I use the jetboil flash as well with the coffee press and it works awesome. I like the running water out of the bag, I'll have to save up for that accessory.
its called the Optimus Sliding Long Spoon about $8.00 on Amazon, just looked it up, if you don't like that I use the human gear go bites duo its a fork and spoon set it connects together to make a long spoon to get into jetboils, and dehydrated food packets like MRE's and Mountain House. I like it better because it has a fork, spoon and has sort of a knife edge to cut with. The Optimus long sliding spoon www.amazon.com/Optimus-8018909-Sliding-Long-Spoon/dp/B00F5EUU24/ref=sr_1_2?crid=3RUAEMG74IX2C&dchild=1&keywords=optimus+long+spoon&qid=1601667589&sprefix=optimus+long+%2Caps%2C297&sr=8-2 the humangear go bites www.amazon.com/humangear-HG0410-Gobites-Duo-Gray/dp/B00GTXC1S6/ref=sr_1_13?crid=11AJ1DCDDYTFU&dchild=1&keywords=humangear+spork+uno&qid=1601667493&sprefix=human+gear+spo%2Caps%2C404&sr=8-13
I wish they would sell the pots independent of the stove (they used to but discontinued it.) I have a MiniMo because I wanted better heat control but I'd love to have a Sumo cup as well for times like the trip I just returned from - camping for my honeymoon. We traveled by car and we're staying in one place so I did larger quantities of coffee. I used my Jetboil got that despite having a Camp Chef stove for our main cooking because it boils faster but I really wanted more that 1L.
Darn you, now I just bought the Pipamoka and spoon. You're always costing me money Tim! LOL. Although I am sticking to my Marmot 2P tent. I just cant get my head around a $400 tent for as little as I camp.
You have to have fruit and vegetables Tim , man I sound like a nagging parent but you need good nutrition for living a longer healthier life . I like coffee too but if I have any in the afternoon I need to eat a fair bit like a sandwich or something kinda filling . I have a Scandinavian stomach so that for me means cream in the coffee and food with it or I am suffering later . I like those cider packets too . Dang I wish I could have the ability to teleport you a bacon cheeseburger during this video , now that I think about it I wouldn't mind one myself . I do the same cleaning like you do when camping but when I am with my girlfriend and dog we make some fancy meals and pots and pans need a good cleaning . Love that spoon and those collapsible cups bowls etc are going to be in my grub kit . Take care now and thanks for the video .
Tim, what happened to your original wacaco? Sorry if I missed it in past videos. BTW, thanks for introducing it, I had mine since your first review came out.
Hey Tim , looks like a peaceful campsite , hey just out of curiosity , when you say your "out being a dirtbag " is that when your hangin out with your buddy Cody ..or just camping in general ✌
I still use my original Jet Boil, I don't see the need to upgrade it boils water fast, Tim check out my reply to Pete Keener and the humangear goblets duo, you can connect the fork and spoon together to get a extended length to get into those food packets and cans. Back in the old days we sometimes cooked in right in the can with the label removed until we found that might release chemicals into the food and here hobos have been making their billy or hobo stoves out of them for years. 😆 I use to love a heated up can of chili or beans with a hot dog cooked on a stick. we didn't use stoves back then just made a fire and made do with that hotdogs or chunks of meat on a stick and put it on a slice of bread. The Jet Boil I love it, Moto Camping I not looking to do big gourmet meals either, since I changed my eating habits and what I eat small meals are it now. I keep my fuel and stove inside the pot on my jet boil and one canister lasts a long time. the only option I bought for my stove is that stabilizer for the fuel canister which makes sense but I usually camp near a bench or find a flat spot somewhere I would like to bring a folding table with me but don't want to be bothered with it, I did see one guy use a plastic cutting board on his luggage rack he just use a squeeze type plier clamp to hold it in place me I would probably use my vise grips.
Not a huge fan of spam but a can of corned beef hash goes a long ways. Probably 800 calories in a single can and fills you up good, but it does give me heartburn time to time
Thanks for the videos. I have a question about carrying this small gas canister, is it safe on high temperatures? I live i Brazil and during summer it get up to 42 degrees Celsius. I wonder it's ok to carry in on my aluminum side cases due to the increased temperatures. I appreciate your opinion
Yowies put me off camping at night but I discovered i hate caravan parks for all the noise and lights! I could carry a 44 Magnum incase yowies come but Im afraid of guns!
Older Jetboil here (I don't really cook stuff - ramen, coffee, cocoa, tea)(P.S. Fuck Jetboil for not make parts I need - there is a Chinese knockoff by the way). Plastic REI cup, plastic spoon (Ozark trails), plastic plate as cutting board, pocket knife, random scavenged seasonings (pepper, hot sauce, soy sauce), collapsible java coffee thing, filters and coffee. I can't stay out more than two days (water) so I love burgers and huevos rancheros when I'm in town for water or gas.
i am also simplifying my kitchen gear, down to a small pot and spoon and a cup. if you want to save money on camping food and have time, dehydrating your own meals is a great way to go. boil the water, pour it in the meal and leave it sit for 20 minutes. check "kevin outdoors" for great videos on dehydrating almost any meal.
"being a dirt bag" ... Best quote of the whole video. You can tell that man grew up on the "southshore" ha! Rock On Tim.... We all love what you are doing!
Your an inspiration to many motorcycle campers! Keep up the good job your doing.
No embarrassment needed, bro. You're an inspiration and ramen noodles (we just call 'em instant noodles in Ireland) are such an easy meal, whether camping or at home!
Keep up the great work.
I started carrying a pair of skewers with me. If I want to cook a steak or pork chop over a small open fire I use the two skewers to prop the meat over the fire. They are small and light weight.
Thanx Tim, great vid. I've had my jetboil for 10 yrs, I make coffee with it. I only put water in it, and it always stays clean.
Love the streaming water. I do that with a Sea to Summit camp shower. Same theory. Fill with water and you have a gravity feed faucet. Great ideas and very minimal. Well done.
Tim: Thanks for sharing your kitchen and pantry items. I also use a “Jet Boil” as well as the larger “Camp Chef Stryker”. I appreciate the super quick boil times as well as being able to heat water to just warm, to do clean up, take a “cat bath” and so on. I am not a fan of actual cooking a meal while travel camping, but also shy away from foods like Ramen noodles. I buy a couple of freeze dried meal entrées but also bring easy to prepare items like instant mashed potatoes, Packaged soups, oatmeal and dried fruit. I also have brought a military MRE as my “iron ration”. I use a MRE plastic spoon and for my coffee, I always take my tall “Starbucks” travel mug. It is instant coffee for me until I run into a coffee shop. Here is a freebie, I always ask for my creamers on the side. They need no refrigeration and I get 4....enough for coffee in the morning. I’ve been on a budget as well, but I try to make the best use of the money I budgeted for food. Good luck on your travels, eat well, sleep warm, and know you never travel alone.
A very simple and affective system.
Tim, thank you for the awesome video. The eating portion of my adventure riding has always been a weak point for me. I want to step up my game on cooking my meals. I need to slow down take my time I want to say thank you for the thoughts
Simplicity, utility, form (size & weight), and lastly costs are my criteria... I try to pair down my gear after every trip. My Mess Kit consists of a spork, titanium mug, foil, P51, s/s water bottle, tab stove, bic, instant coffee, oatmeal, and seasonings. Boiling water is the common denominator of my prepared meals... instant potatoes, oatmeal, soup mix, pasta sides, rice sides, eggs, and freeze dried meals... Happy Trails Tim!
I need to get one of those collapsible cups that fits over the fuel canisters. Another tip for washing dishes is to break off a twig to use as a scrub brush/sponge. You can get 99% of the cooked on grit off and finish it off with water and a wipe. Also, hard pannier lids make good plates/trays if you need another surface to eat or work off of.
If you want to carry dish soap, I use an eye drop bottle. I use Walmart eye drops, because my eyes get dry when riding. After the bottle is empty, the eye dropper top will pop off, and snap back on. Just drill the dropper hole out a little bit, fill the bottle with dish soap, and you're good to go. Takes up less space than your hand sanitizer bottle, and doesn't leak.
Very minimalist! I should take a lesson here as I tend to take everything including the kitchen sink! 😂 Glad to know the collapsible cup fits on the bottom of the fuel cell! I would have never thought of that! Ride safe Tim!
Comes in really handy
Glad to see you doing great, I haven't watched in a month or two due to work and also saving for my own motorcycle camping trip. I donated through your website. Keep up your amazing videos!
I’m doing a two week trip summer 2021. Starting my homework now. Great video
My secret dinner - ramen, plus fresh jalapenos, tomatoes, cilantro and peanuts.
I never realized you can nest those collapsible cups with the fuel canisters! Useful information right there, thanks, Tim.
Very useful; thanks. Also, I have been reading your book. Very well written! Thanks for that too!
Wow you really did shrink it down quite a bit. Great tips, and the water in saddlebags is a great idea.
When on a budget I will carry peanut butter for the protein, it's easy and cheap ! Taste good with granola too.
On our late trip, my riding buddy pretty much ate nothing but naan with peanut butter, or naan with canned chicken. Not my thing, but he didn’t starve to death and spent less than I did so hey more power to him I guess.
Pretty cool how the collapsible cup fits so perfectly onto your stoves fuel tank. Hmmm the nano espresso is a cool gadget. I like how you have everything so compact and organized. Thanks for sharing.
Ramen noodles are great no matter what your budget is!!
La cafetera es genial. Yo compré una igual cuando la vi en tus vídeos. Es un poco pequeña, pero merece ła pena. Saludos desde España amigo.
I love Ramen! Take Chicken Ramen, add a little $1 can of chicken, and finally some chopped green onion right before you eat. Cheap, packs small and light, and tastes awesome to me. Keep up the good work! I'm enjoying your book.
As always thanks again Tim. The Jetboil rocks and served me well this week on my first solo trip. It’s insane how fast it boils water. I’m interested though in that bag on your bike w water. I haven’t seen it in any other video yet but maybe I missed it.
Very helpful. Just got your book. I’m looking forward to reading it this winter when my bike is sleeping in winter storage. 👍
Nice! Love my Jetboil, it serves my purposes well. Thank you, Tim.
Just to add to the knowledge bank ., you pack differently & eat differently , if you destination camp ( you go camping and stay a week).. Just putting coffee in the pot(loose) makes great coffee ,but it will soon teach you why coffee pots are shaped like they are., (it will boil over ).You can buy a cheap adapter to convert your butane type stove (jet boil) to propane . Bring a soldering tip or ordinary tip for propane torch & now you can start a stubborn camp fire, or heat up a tool kit item to solder a wire.With a tank full of gasoline & a discarded pop can you can get anything to burn even on a rainy day.Powdered drink mix of any kind can make water into just about anything from orange juice to coffee , tea ,whiskey sour , or just make it more palatable .Tasters Choice is the instant coffee to buy if you get stuck having to drink instant.
Great set-up! I think you're at the sweet spot where performance and compactness intersect.
Mosko Moto, those folks really think things through to the next level.
Wait. What? No shout out for the Walmart cup on the bottom of fuel canister idea? Sadness. Lol, just kidding. Be safe out there Brother!
Great kit
Thanks for the good information
Thank you Tim for sharing this video, is really good to learn from ur experience and get equipped the the right stuff … cheers from Cairo, Egypt...
Super helpful video. Subscribed!
Tim, I'm sure you must have heard of this, but you really need to carry instant mashed potatoes to mix with your raman. Noodles alone are OK but mixed with the potatoes you have a real meal!
I love coffee and the stuff to arrive at my preference, a full cup x4 maybe more takes up so much space. I have celiac and have given up a lot food wise, so I’m stubborn about the coffee. 😉 Thanks for the video.
LOL, am I the only person who packs Ramen because they actually LIKE it?? 😄 Good video, thanks for sharing the links. The nanopresso is a neat little gadget!
More people pack and eat Ramon, and Spam, for that matter, than you may realize. It has become quite fashionable to put down both. People who do will consider themselves cool, what ever "cool" means.
I like Jet Boil. However, butane has a rather high boiling point (-1C) which means it will not function in cold weather. I have switched to a propane stove as propane will evaporate and burn at -40C, making it more reliable. It is also easier to find in North America. Yes, I understand there are a few people who will not ride in cold weather, still I am up for full adventure touring and I believe in being prepared.
Seeing what you have in your food bag makes me very, very hungry. Thanks for the kitchen suggestions. That’s an area I alway overpack. I always bring a plate as well Usually my riding buddies and I cook steaks and grilled veggies over the fire. Trying to fit a steak in your cup/bowl does not work so well.
Hey Tim, great vid! I use the jetboil flash as well with the coffee press and it works awesome. I like the running water out of the bag, I'll have to save up for that accessory.
I kinda like that extendable spoon. Was looking for a link to that?
its called the Optimus Sliding Long Spoon about $8.00 on Amazon, just looked it up, if you don't like that I use the human gear go bites duo its a fork and spoon set it connects together to make a long spoon to get into jetboils, and dehydrated food packets like MRE's and Mountain House. I like it better because it has a fork, spoon and has sort of a knife edge to cut with.
The Optimus long sliding spoon
www.amazon.com/Optimus-8018909-Sliding-Long-Spoon/dp/B00F5EUU24/ref=sr_1_2?crid=3RUAEMG74IX2C&dchild=1&keywords=optimus+long+spoon&qid=1601667589&sprefix=optimus+long+%2Caps%2C297&sr=8-2
the humangear go bites
www.amazon.com/humangear-HG0410-Gobites-Duo-Gray/dp/B00GTXC1S6/ref=sr_1_13?crid=11AJ1DCDDYTFU&dchild=1&keywords=humangear+spork+uno&qid=1601667493&sprefix=human+gear+spo%2Caps%2C404&sr=8-13
@@bikecommuter24 Thanks for the link, I plan on getting one.
@@aquahombre 👍
@@bikecommuter24 THANK YOU DIR
@@bikecommuter24 thanks
Great video Tim, thanks for posting. 👍🇦🇺
Sugar free hot Apple cider is my drink!!👍👍
I gotta get that cup, it fits to good not to!
Great video Tim!
Spam singles and grits is good eats for me 👍
We should do a flat lay comparison of your moto kitchen and mine XD It would be pretty hilarious.
You make me look like a hoarder ;P
Lol its ok, I'm getting tired of just being able to boil water so I think this setup is expanding soon!
Could be a good future vid for sure!
Motocamping cook-off!
woohoo! new fta video!
Those are some great products. What brand is your 5L dry bag?
I wish they would sell the pots independent of the stove (they used to but discontinued it.) I have a MiniMo because I wanted better heat control but I'd love to have a Sumo cup as well for times like the trip I just returned from - camping for my honeymoon. We traveled by car and we're staying in one place so I did larger quantities of coffee. I used my Jetboil got that despite having a Camp Chef stove for our main cooking because it boils faster but I really wanted more that 1L.
I just realized ItchyBoots is using the same tent as you for her Europe tour.
Handy video. Spoon link please. Thanks
Given me some good ideas. Thanks 👍
Darn you, now I just bought the Pipamoka and spoon. You're always costing me money Tim! LOL. Although I am sticking to my Marmot 2P tent. I just cant get my head around a $400 tent for as little as I camp.
Thank you.Very informative(as usual)Ride safe,enjoy life.
Do not be embarrassed about anything brother! DO YOU! This is the only thing that matters!!
Tim just make sure you fill your dish with boiling water after use to be sure you don’t get sick 🇨🇦👍 then no soap required. Cheers & thanks .
Thanks Tim, great stuff as usual - do you have a link to the bag that you put your food in? PS - I just bought the book. . . . .
Good stuff! Thanks!
My love for you is endless.
You have to have fruit and vegetables Tim , man I sound like a nagging parent but you need good nutrition for living a longer healthier life .
I like coffee too but if I have any in the afternoon I need to eat a fair bit like a sandwich or something kinda filling . I have a Scandinavian stomach so that for me means cream in the coffee and food with it or I am suffering later . I like those cider packets too .
Dang I wish I could have the ability to teleport you a bacon cheeseburger during this video , now that I think about it I wouldn't mind one myself .
I do the same cleaning like you do when camping but when I am with my girlfriend and dog we make some fancy meals and pots and pans need a good cleaning . Love that spoon and those collapsible cups bowls etc are going to be in my grub kit .
Take care now and thanks for the video .
Fantastic
Tim, what happened to your original wacaco? Sorry if I missed it in past videos. BTW, thanks for introducing it, I had mine since your first review came out.
What was the problem with the X-set collapsibles?
Thanks Tim great suggestions! I missed the Moscow Painner w water storage. Could you post where I can find this? Thanks!
Search Mosko moto...
Hey Tim , looks like a peaceful campsite , hey just out of curiosity , when you say your "out being a dirtbag " is that when your hangin out with your buddy Cody ..or just camping in general ✌
Love wat u do
I still use my original Jet Boil, I don't see the need to upgrade it boils water fast,
Tim
check out my reply to Pete Keener and the humangear goblets duo, you can connect the fork and spoon together to get a extended length to get into those food packets and cans.
Back in the old days we sometimes cooked in right in the can with the label removed until we found that might release chemicals into the food and here hobos have been making their billy or hobo stoves out of them for years. 😆
I use to love a heated up can of chili or beans with a hot dog cooked on a stick. we didn't use stoves back then just made a fire and made do with that hotdogs or chunks of meat on a stick and put it on a slice of bread.
The Jet Boil I love it, Moto Camping I not looking to do big gourmet meals either, since I changed my eating habits and what I eat small meals are it now. I keep my fuel and stove inside the pot on my jet boil and one canister lasts a long time. the only option I bought for my stove is that stabilizer for the fuel canister which makes sense but I usually camp near a bench or find a flat spot somewhere I would like to bring a folding table with me but don't want to be bothered with it, I did see one guy use a plastic cutting board on his luggage rack he just use a squeeze type plier clamp to hold it in place me I would probably use my vise grips.
I saw a bushcrafter put 3 sticks as a tripod in handle hole of thin cutting board with one stick slightly longer under the board.
Where is the spam? I like to carry small packages of spam and tuna to add to noodle and such when I use my jet boil for dinner...
Not a huge fan of spam but a can of corned beef hash goes a long ways. Probably 800 calories in a single can and fills you up good, but it does give me heartburn time to time
jesus u cut down!
mine is still a massive green box that takes up half my 56litre top box xD
Thanks for the videos. I have a question about carrying this small gas canister, is it safe on high temperatures? I live i Brazil and during summer it get up to 42 degrees Celsius. I wonder it's ok to carry in on my aluminum side cases due to the increased temperatures. I appreciate your opinion
I spend a lot of time in the desert of Arizona in the summer and I've never had an issue. It should be OK 👌
Budget Camelback (MSR) = running water supply.
Yowies put me off camping at night but I discovered i hate caravan parks for all the noise and lights! I could carry a 44 Magnum incase yowies come but Im afraid of guns!
Older Jetboil here (I don't really cook stuff - ramen, coffee, cocoa, tea)(P.S. Fuck Jetboil for not make parts I need - there is a Chinese knockoff by the way). Plastic REI cup, plastic spoon (Ozark trails), plastic plate as cutting board, pocket knife, random scavenged seasonings (pepper, hot sauce, soy sauce), collapsible java coffee thing, filters and coffee. I can't stay out more than two days (water) so I love burgers and huevos rancheros when I'm in town for water or gas.
Why is your hand shaking? You seem tense 😅
I'm a vegan so I make all my own food and I use a JetBoil. Let me know if you need any ideas.
i am also simplifying my kitchen gear, down to a small pot and spoon and a cup. if you want to save money on camping food and have time, dehydrating your own meals is a great way to go. boil the water, pour it in the meal and leave it sit for 20 minutes. check "kevin outdoors" for great videos on dehydrating almost any meal.