5 Easy Backpacking Meal Recipes [5 Ingredients or Less]

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  • čas přidán 3. 08. 2024
  • Here are five of my favorite backpacking meal recipes. No dehydrators necessary. All ingredients should be pretty easy to source. Hopefully all of them taste pretty good as well! Keep in mind these are all:
    ✔️ One-pot meals
    ✔️ Ready in 15 minutes or less
    ✔️ 5 ingredients or less
    ✔️ 600-700 calories
    0:00 Intro
    0:42 Chili Mac
    1:27 Jerky Noodles
    2:02 Mediterranean Couscous
    2:35 Chicken and Rice
    3:12 Lentil Curry
    -RECIPES-
    I. Chili Mac (00:42)
    Ingredients: dried beans, instant macaroni, cheddar cheese, and chili powder
    1. Boil water (2:1 ratio)
    2. Add beans (10 minutes)
    3. Add noodles (5 minutes)
    4. Add cheese, chili powder
    **********
    II. Jerky Noodles (01:26)
    Ingredients: rice noodles, beef jerky, and peanut butter
    1. Boil water (2:1 ratio)
    2. Add noodles (15 minutes)
    3. Add beef jerky, peanut butter
    **********
    III. Mediterranean Couscous (02:01)
    Ingredients: couscous, parmesan cheese, pesto mix, olives (optional: sun-dried tomatoes, canned fish)
    1. Boil water (3:1 ratio)
    2. Add couscous (5-10 minutes)
    3. Add pesto, parmesan, and olives
    **********
    IV. Chicken and Rice (2:35)
    Ingredients: cooked chicken, instant rice, dried broccoli, olive oil, and soy sauce
    1. Boil water (2:1 ratio)
    2. Add broccoli (5 minutes)
    3. Add rice (5 minutes)
    4. Add chicken, soy sauce and olive oil
    **********
    V. Lentil Curry (03:11)
    Ingredients: dried lentils, dried veggie blend, curry powder, and coconut oil
    1. Boil water (2:1 ratio)
    2. Add lentils and veggies (10-15 minutes)
    3. Add curry powder, coconut oil
    **********
    For the complete nutritional breakdown of each meal, visit: www.greenbelly.co/pages/best-...
    Brands mentioned in this video:
    Mother Earth Products Dehydrated Vegetable and Beans (bit.ly/2Xex7oL)
    Valley Fresh Natural Pre-Cooked Chicken (amzn.to/2XQxXqU)
    Minute Rice (amzn.to/2M9kRPV)
    **********
    Greenbelly Meals: www.greenbelly.co/
    Music provided by Free Vibes: goo.gl/NkGhTg
    Extreme Energy by MusicToday80: / rock-music
    Attribution 3.0 Unported (CC BY 3.0)
    creativecommons.org/licenses/...
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Komentáře • 101

  • @lesstraveledpath
    @lesstraveledpath Před 4 lety +39

    Good ideas. Most of the simmer times can be reduced by adding the first ingredient to the cold water, and bringing both to a boil together. This will take 5-ish minutes off most of the simmer times that you mentioned.
    With the Chili Mac, you can add the beans to the water cold, and let it come up to a boil together. For a gourmet touch, adding a bit of tomato paste (from a tube), and a fresh clove of garlic will make a big difference in the flavor and texture. Pre-shredding the cheese is OK if you are going to use it within a day or so. The more whole you leave the ingredient, the longer it will last.
    The Jerky Noodles would benefit from a packet (or two) of soy sauce, and a clove of fresh garlic.
    Chicken and Rice. I am surprised that you repackaged the chicken. Chicken in the pouches is shelf stable for years. Once opened, the chicken will go bad in a day or two without refrigeration. This might be OK in lower temperatures -- but I would not risk it. Also, you can add the broccoli to the water cold, and bring both to a boil together.

    • @Greenbelly
      @Greenbelly  Před 3 lety +8

      Good notes, thanks Stanley. +1 for cold soaking and +1 for keeping chicken in the packets (just made more sense for filming outside the packets).

  • @matthewwalter4210
    @matthewwalter4210 Před 9 dny

    Do you have some great ideas. I’m glad to see that you don’t have all the processed junk that so many other people bring to the trail and very little waste. Good job.

  • @ubvrox
    @ubvrox Před 2 lety +7

    Finally a american chanel that makes a video about hiking food and actually teaches you to make backpacking food, not just list brands of pre-made stuff that are specific to that country and can’t be bought anywhere else.

  • @VladimirPrsic
    @VladimirPrsic Před 2 lety

    Nice man! Enjoyed watching being prepared. Cheers 🍻

  • @AmDragonStar
    @AmDragonStar Před 3 lety +2

    Ooooh, I'll have to try some of these out. Awesome healthy meal ideas!😁

  • @annnonomys3132
    @annnonomys3132 Před 3 lety +1

    Thumbs up for brevity. Well presented.

  • @chrisbrodroy1183
    @chrisbrodroy1183 Před 2 lety

    This is perfect, thanks a lot!!

  • @gbaker1a775
    @gbaker1a775 Před 3 lety

    Looking forward to doing some hammock camping with my oldest. Thanks for the recipes.

  • @wanderingcalamity360
    @wanderingcalamity360 Před 4 lety +6

    Great recipes.
    I'll see about trying some of these next time I go camping.

    • @Greenbelly
      @Greenbelly  Před 4 lety

      Awesome. Let us know if you make any tweaks :)

  • @jimbojet8728
    @jimbojet8728 Před 3 lety +1

    That was really good. I enjoyed the variety you achieved with so few ingredients. For a two or three night trip the fresh foods can easily be carried in those zip loc bags. For longer trips the dependency on dried foods increases unless the fresh can be augmented as the journey progresses. You have fed my imagination , given me some great tips. Thank you.

  • @anaisabelmarileon8189

    Very nice recipes, than you for sharing!

  • @mjoyparks
    @mjoyparks Před rokem

    I tried the Jerky Noodles today, trying out what I might want to take with me next summer. I wasn’t sure I’d like it, but I find it inspired! I like that you don’t have to strain the noodles, and I like the way the peanut butter works with the jerky. I tried adding soy sauce, which I love, but no. It’s best left the way you present it. I have dehydrated veggies ordered to try the Lentil Curry. I’m shying away from gluten because my camping buddy might have Celiacs Disease. (We’ll know soon.) Thank you for sharing!

  • @asimgeekhan
    @asimgeekhan Před 3 lety

    Thanks for the video! Been browsing arounds for simple meals. also been contemplating this pot but wasnt sure about the lid

  • @hoser7706
    @hoser7706 Před 3 lety +1

    Great recipes. Talked through quickly but simple to follow so that works lol. My fav stove too.

  • @markdick5574
    @markdick5574 Před 2 lety

    Great job!! Thanks

  • @nicholasjay3932
    @nicholasjay3932 Před 2 lety +1

    Pro tips for adding ingredients and packability for those of you reading comments.
    Get some piping bags from the cake deco isle of your big box grocery store, also buy yourself concealable flasks from Amazon. Soften your (salted) butter and pipe it into your flask and you've got a resealable butter squeeze pouch for dispensing that's reusable. Works with peanut butter too. I fill them with coconut oil, olive oil, and other stiff too. Once it's empty it rolls up neatly and cleanly.

  • @danemmerich6775
    @danemmerich6775 Před 3 lety

    Awesome job!!

  • @SeymourAss54
    @SeymourAss54 Před 3 lety +15

    That jerky noodle recipe is like some backwoods pad thai, thanks for the recommendation!

    • @DB-xo6xh
      @DB-xo6xh Před 3 lety

      thats not very close to pad thai.

  • @angelaranda4563
    @angelaranda4563 Před 3 lety

    Nice!!!!

  • @tomsitzman3952
    @tomsitzman3952 Před 2 lety +1

    I find that Asian markets is great place to buy quick cooking dried foods. I just stopped at a large Asian Market a mile from my house. I'm getting ready for a bike tour. I like to have an evening meal in camp. Today I bought Whole powdered milk to add to soups, fast cooking egg noodle's boil 3-4 minutes , roasted, dried squid. to eat as a snake or fried, and served over rice noodles (boil for 2-3 minutes.) For desert I like a, Just add hot water Italian Supremo Cappuccino with a sprinkle of chocolate granules on top (they come individually packaged instant coffee) served with a fig bar. Soup of choice is a Knorr European style soup (just add water or add to instant mashed potatoes, noodles etc) or Kikkoman brand Japanese dry soups. A good cheese to carry is Paneer an Indian no melt cheese, (at home cut into small cubes and stir fry with your favorite species in olive oil. It keeps about two weeks on the trail ) I carry my trusty small pressurized Kerosene stove .

  • @Everydaybackpacker
    @Everydaybackpacker Před 4 lety +4

    Those sound amazing, can’t wait to try them. Though your meals are pretty darn good too!

    • @Greenbelly
      @Greenbelly  Před 4 lety +1

      Awesome. Let us know if you change it up/ have any notes. And thanks - we like 'em too!.

  • @jam_is_jammin
    @jam_is_jammin Před 2 lety +5

    Love these recipes. Have you tried using the chicken, beef or veggie broth concentrates that come in individual packets? I bet they would add a lot of flavor to your couscous, rice, pasta dishes.

    • @Greenbelly
      @Greenbelly  Před 2 lety

      Ooh. Honestly never heard of those. Bet they would. Thanks.

  • @supersonnyd7369
    @supersonnyd7369 Před 2 lety

    Thank you

  • @danielh6992
    @danielh6992 Před 3 lety +3

    Carry some veg. You'll feel better for it. Try cold soaking Alborio rice in the morning then fry a small shallot, small zucchini, capsicum, olives, dried porcini mushroom, a stock cube and parmesan cheese for the best Risotto.

  • @anaissloman
    @anaissloman Před 3 lety +1

    I found that lots of "homemade backcountry recipes" out there basically call for buying mac and cheese and throwing some meat in... which doesn't quite cut it if you a) want to eat somewhat healthy while you're out there and b) are vegetarian. Not to mention all the waste if its prepackaged. So thanks for sharing :-)

  • @weezypeezy1725
    @weezypeezy1725 Před 3 lety +39

    I live by a simple rule: *no* *chili* *while* *camping*

    • @innawoodsman
      @innawoodsman Před 2 lety +4

      Just don't have a weak colon lmao gottem
      But fr I've got pretty good gut health and one time I ate chili out innawoods and regretted it very deeply the next couple days lol

    • @cavemandancer
      @cavemandancer Před rokem

      How do you get your jet power to get up those steep inclines?

    • @MK_ULTRA420
      @MK_ULTRA420 Před rokem

      That's why cowboys don't eat chili with beans.

  • @miken7629
    @miken7629 Před 2 lety

    I had to switch to No Carb meals due to diabetes. But before I did, my favorite meal was Spanish Rice & Beans. 1/2 cup minute rice, 1/2 cup dehydrated refried beans, 1/2 TBSP Tomato Bullion, 1/2 TBSP Taco Seasoning. I put it in a freezer bag. Add 1 cup boiling water and let sit 5 minutes. Add some cheese & Fritos. For breakfast, I would put 1 cup Raisin Bran + 1/3 cup NIDO in a freezer bag. I would add enough water to cover cereal in bag, shake, and have milk & cereal. An alternative breakfast is to crunch up RAMEN into a freezer bag + 1/2 packet Pioneer Country Gravy. On trail, add 1 cup boiling water & let sit 5 minutes. Taste like Biscuits & Gravy. I just started using a new dessert. Put 1 packet of Jello Sugar Free Pudding mix in a freezer bag + 1/3 cup NIDO. On trail, add 10oz cold water to bag and stir for a couple minutes to make sure no lumps. Pudding will set up in about 10 minutes. Since I went to Low Carb, my main snacks are Pecans or Walnuts. I can resupply with mixed nuts at dollar stores. My main meals are SPAM Singles, Salami, Pepperoni, & Sausage, or maybe a steak on first day. I still eat the pudding since it is sugar free & low carb.

  • @trytheoutdoors
    @trytheoutdoors Před 4 lety +4

    Great job. Thank you. Super recipes. Won't you go through alot of gas ( partic on longer hikes) though if you're boiling / simmering for 10 mins and 15 mins per meal? Perhaps ok if only going away for a night or two?

    • @Greenbelly
      @Greenbelly  Před 4 lety +1

      Good point. Fuel consumption will be an issue if boiling lots of 15 minute meals on a long trip. Maybe try to prioritize those meals... and know some recipes will lend themselves better to less fuel (ie - couscous can be cold soaked).

    • @lesstraveledpath
      @lesstraveledpath Před 4 lety +5

      If you add the first ingredient (or two) to the COLD water, and bring everything to a boil, that will reduce the simmer times by "half." The time to initial boil will be slightly longer (there is more mass in the pot), but the total cook time will still be reduced.
      Also, with a pot cozy, the last 5-ish minutes of simmering can often be replaced with a "time out" in the cozy to just let the carry over cooking do its job.

  • @zacharybonner9188
    @zacharybonner9188 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Chicken and rice
    Add a chicken bouillon cube for some extra flavor! Easy to pack

  • @christimartin8512
    @christimartin8512 Před 4 měsíci

    Have you tried Shredz dehydrated meat? The pulled pork is fantastic! It’s a little pricier than jerky, but tastes and has the texture of shredded pork straight from the BBQ joint.

    • @Greenbelly
      @Greenbelly  Před 4 měsíci

      Seen it many times. I actually have not tried it though. Looks yum.

  • @mariawhite7337
    @mariawhite7337 Před rokem

    How about this: 1 cup ditalini pasta (Small tubes to cook fast) 1 packet of cheese sauce, and a packet of ragu. Then a pack of tuna and a piece of jerky. It rounds about to 1k+ with a dessert course. The cheese sauce is velveta and Ragu is making single-serve packets. I looked up a backpacking dessert which is basically just pudding. So a few tablespoons of pudding and powdered milk. Then some gram crackers. I want to ensure I have enough calories. So I added in three sugar cubes to it as well. Because glucose is important, and to ensure that I'll have plenty of calories.

  • @ricardojorge5886
    @ricardojorge5886 Před 3 měsíci

    Nice to see a backpacking food video that isn't completely filled with ultra processed food and a tonne of sugar.

    • @Greenbelly
      @Greenbelly  Před měsícem

      Thanks! Can be hard to keep it healthy out there

  • @aceystar1478
    @aceystar1478 Před 2 lety

    If I font want to buy beans online what can I do? Is it possible to buy beans, make them at home and dehydrate them to reduce cooling time?

  • @_..____
    @_..____ Před 2 lety +2

    Finally food items that don't look like you robbed a 7-eleven.

  • @rossghiotto9236
    @rossghiotto9236 Před 4 lety

    What do you put the coconut oil in for the curry lentils when you bring it on the trail?

    • @Greenbelly
      @Greenbelly  Před 4 lety

      Small plastic bottle (just like the olive oil). Or if it solid/ cool weather, a ziploc. They also make coconut oil packets.

    • @SeymourAss54
      @SeymourAss54 Před 3 lety +1

      Nalgene makes some sturdy little bottles similar to the one in the video

  • @jdshl8423
    @jdshl8423 Před 2 lety

    I only liked the ones with actual meat in them. LOL!
    And instead of peanut butter (just not my favourite spread), how about crushed peanuts (picked out from trail mix) and parsley (dehydrated at home)? At least that's what I thought would give the noodles a more Asian feel to it.

  • @Private.Willie.Stroker
    @Private.Willie.Stroker Před 2 lety +2

    For spices you can use the boxes of tic tac candies, tie them together with a rubber band so they all stay together
    Dont have to bring the "heavy" glass bottles or plastic bags wich you will end up throwing away...

  • @Edub-em3rr
    @Edub-em3rr Před 2 lety +1

    How do you keep the cheese refrigerated?

  • @camperdrew61
    @camperdrew61 Před 2 měsíci

    Do you prefer cook everything?

  • @williamstorey5024
    @williamstorey5024 Před 4 lety +1

    How did u get the chicken to store like that?

    • @Greenbelly
      @Greenbelly  Před 4 lety

      That brand of chicken (Fresh Valley) comes in cans and packets. You can just put it into a ziploc from there if you want.

  • @jackrogers6792
    @jackrogers6792 Před rokem

    Quick question, does cheese stay fresh when you're backpacking for 6-7 miles in 50 degree weather?

    • @echofoxtrotwhiskey1595
      @echofoxtrotwhiskey1595 Před rokem

      Cheese would probably be one the first things I’d eat, and keep it in a block, not shredded.

  • @avig144
    @avig144 Před 4 lety +2

    How do you keep the cheese from spoiling?

    • @Greenbelly
      @Greenbelly  Před 4 lety +3

      Eat it early into the trip... and/or use a hard cheese (parmesan, etc). Hope that helps :)

    • @Alpacabowl98
      @Alpacabowl98 Před 3 lety

      @@Greenbelly hard cheese, that's brilliant! =-)

    • @nrgltwrkr2225
      @nrgltwrkr2225 Před 3 lety +2

      I know it's not real cheese, but I use Nutritional Yeast for the longer trips as a cheese-flavored replacement. Tons of B vitamins, dry, light and cheesy deliciousness on everything.

    • @squirrelcovers6340
      @squirrelcovers6340 Před 3 lety +1

      Baby bell keeps for days, so does individual land of lakes cheddar.

  • @deannaelauria3327
    @deannaelauria3327 Před 3 lety

    What type of pot are u using?

    • @Greenbelly
      @Greenbelly  Před 3 lety

      Olicamp. Believe the LT Lightweight pot.

  • @fredihle1468
    @fredihle1468 Před 3 lety +1

    what is Tomato powder? unless I misheard that...

  • @onepalerider
    @onepalerider Před 2 lety

    Where do I find the dried foods?

  • @billmcginnis5939
    @billmcginnis5939 Před 4 lety

    Delish
    What is your secret to pot cleaning?

    • @Greenbelly
      @Greenbelly  Před 4 lety +2

      Nothing fancy. Water and pine needles... then towel ;)

  • @stuartpreston362
    @stuartpreston362 Před 3 lety

    How are those dried beans cooking in only 10 minutes? Dried beans typically take 1.5+ hours to cook properly.

    • @bmiles4131
      @bmiles4131 Před 2 lety +1

      They are from some type of quick cook source (probably cooked, then freeze dried or something). He said from here: motherearthproducts.com/collections/beans-instant

  • @SonicAndTrippy
    @SonicAndTrippy Před 3 lety

    Chicken and cheese don't need to be refrigerated?

    • @Greenbelly
      @Greenbelly  Před 3 lety

      Before taking it out of the package, it does not need refrigeration. Yes, the cheese does though. Probably should eat that meal early in your trip... or use a 'harder' cheese.

    • @nrgltwrkr2225
      @nrgltwrkr2225 Před 3 lety

      @@Greenbelly Or use Nutritional Yeast instead of cheese. Works great!

  • @Draculapin
    @Draculapin Před 3 lety

    Nice idea but just by doing the first recipe , you’re using the burner for 20’ which emptied a canister of propane.

    • @Greenbelly
      @Greenbelly  Před 3 lety +2

      Yes, 'cooking' in the backcountry can drain fuel quickly. One tip I could have mentioned - let some of your ingredients cold hydrate for a few beforehand. It will help reduce the fuel consumption.

    • @Draculapin
      @Draculapin Před 3 lety +1

      @@Greenbelly cold soaking can save some fuel for sure.

  • @patrickploenzke489
    @patrickploenzke489 Před 3 lety

    How many meals will the gas canister cook?

    • @Greenbelly
      @Greenbelly  Před 3 lety +2

      An 8 oz canister lasts about 3 hrs. So, conservatively, should be able to get at least 10 meals x 15 minutes.

    • @nrgltwrkr2225
      @nrgltwrkr2225 Před 3 lety

      @@Greenbelly Thank you, I always kind of guessed. Now I have something more definite. I appreciate it.

  • @Mupworp
    @Mupworp Před 3 lety

    There's too much water in that cous cous, it's supposed to be individual grains rather than a goop. Personal preference of course, but 1:1 water and cous cous is usually suggested.

    • @Greenbelly
      @Greenbelly  Před 3 lety

      Thanks for the note. Indeed. Sometimes I mix up the ratios.

  • @alcatrazmiller1364
    @alcatrazmiller1364 Před 3 lety

    600-700 cal for every 100g? i doubt that

  • @ktownc936
    @ktownc936 Před 3 lety +1

    Cool but lots of fuel being used.

  • @Serious9185
    @Serious9185 Před 2 lety

    Beer jerky with peanut butter , Yuck. No offense. But it will never work for me.
    I can eat both separately though

  • @ripnlip33
    @ripnlip33 Před rokem +1

    Pour boiling water in a bag, not ingredients in your pot. Too much cleanup when you are exhausted and your first meal will taste like all your subsequent meals if you don't clean your pot well. Not efficient.

  • @alealdama6747
    @alealdama6747 Před 2 lety

    Not healthy

  • @damnman6755
    @damnman6755 Před 9 měsíci +3

    You need a lot of plastic to go to nature…

  • @jerk_store
    @jerk_store Před 4 měsíci

    That chicken...a foodborne illness waiting to happen.