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10 Tips to Healthy Eating
While Camping
Camping is one of my
family’s favorite activities.
It is so wonderful to get out in the woods,
to enjoy nature and all of it’s beauty and wildness and to be
able to spend
time together as a family getting lost in the woods, catching fish and
drowning
worms, canoeing down rivers and creeks, fending off over-fed raccoons
and
squirrels, roasting marshmallows while trying to avoid roasting
ourselves and
making memories which will last a lifetime.
The two things we don’t like to do while
camping is to eat so much junk
food we ruin our trip by feeling bad and to spend much time preparing
our
healthier food. Below
are ten tips we’ve
gathered through years of camping which help us spend our time outdoors
doing
what we love while properly fueling our bodies.
- Plan ahead – Prepare a simple menu with
fruits and veggies
at every meal. Without
planning, I am
tempted to fall back on junk food and fast food.
A little planning in advance allows me to
take only what we will need.
- Take lots of fruit – Apples, oranges,
pineapples, bananas
and cantaloupe travel well. A
sharp
knife provides all the tools you need to prepare them.
- Freeze meals ahead of time - In the weeks prior to
our
camping trip, we make a little extra of some main courses and freeze
the
leftovers. Placed
in our cooler, the
frozen entrees can take the place of ice for the first few days. Once defrosted, heat and
serve.
- Take frozen vegetables – Bags of frozen
vegetables also take
the place of ice in our cooler. Once
defrosted, they will keep their shape and texture for a few days in the
cooler. A small pan
of boiling water is
an easy way to prepare them once defrosted.
- Take homemade muffins and/or sweet breads for
breakfast and
snacks – The day before we leave to go camping, I take a few
extra minutes in
my kitchen and prepare some whole wheat muffins and/or breads. We love them for breakfast
and for
snacks. No
refrigeration or toasting is required.
- Take along some shelf stable meat replacements - We
love to
take Soy
Curls with us
camping. (Soy
Curls are a delicious, dehydrated, delicately textured soy bean which
we use a
substitute for meat.) I just premeasure the soy curls into a baggie
along with
the dry seasonings that we like best.
Once again, a small pot of boiling water to
rehydrate the Soy Curls and
we have a filling main course. With
the
addition of some barbecue sauce, we have another entrée. Any leftovers are great
stored in the cooler
and when reheated, we serve them over bread.
- Keep a lookout for produce markets along the way or
once
you’ve arrived – There is nothing like fresh,
locally grown produce to fill out
our meals while camping. We
love to find
neighborhood markets to explore the local treasures we may not find at
home.
- Freeze gallons of water ahead of time –
Often while camping
we are tempted to indulge in sugary soft drinks when what we really
desire is a
nice cold glass of liquid. By
freezing
gallons of water ahead of time, we have cold water to drink for days
and ice
for our cooler. As
the water starts to
defrost, we use it and refill it with fresh room temperature water. By our next meal, we once
again have a cold
beverage.
- Take along sweet potatoes, squashes and baking
potatoes –
All of these vegetables do not need refrigeration and are quite easy to
prepare. With the
addition of some onions and a cast
iron skillet, these core vegetables can take on a wide variety of
flavors.
- Relax and enjoy the margin you have built in to your
family’s health - By providing healthy and tasty meals the
vast majority of the
time, we go ahead and indulge our cravings when the mood strikes. When my kids were very
little, I remember the
advice to examine their eating habits over a week or month, not just
one meal
at a time. (This
was especially handy
advice when my son would go through his phases of only eating brown
rice, or
bananas, or avocadoes for a day or two.)
So, I look at our week as a whole. If the vast majority of
food our family has eaten has been healthy and
life-giving, then I go ahead and indulge in an occasional treat. A local ice cream store or
boiled peanut
stand might just be what everyone needs.
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