Rokwiia
WKR
Hawk Vittles are excellent. William Redhawk was a chef and an avid backpacker. You won't be disappointed.
They may have updated their menu, but their staples are their chicken chili, red rock chili, beef stew, and one other chicken dish (caldera something). You can not go wrong with those options.
As for the size, yes they are smaller in portion than Mountain House, but the ingredients they use seem to fill you up better (in my opinion).
Take a beef stew along with you on your next trip, you'll be glad you did.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G891A using Tapatalk
Off grid blueberry rad oatmeal is delicious. I eat it sometimes just for a normal breakfast
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
This guy operates on a small batch, at-home sort of setup. But, his food is clean, reasonably priced, and freaking amazing tasting! I'm partial, I suppose because he's semi local, but the food is amazing and the packaging is excellent.
HawK VittleS
In a podcast we just did with Ryan from HHH (shameless plug, it will be out soon) , we chatted a lot about how he dehydrates his regular dinners for meals on hunting trips. It sounds like he has been doing this for a while and has it down to a science. I plan on trying it this year and will have him on speed dial!!!
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
A good place to start is with the base/pasta of couscous. Buy the box at the store of your flavor of choice, separate the box(WITHOUT COOKING) into 2 or 3 portions and dump into bag. Then decide your protein and sauce. Cook protein or sauce or whatever you want with your pasta as you would normally, dehydrate until its hard gravel and then dump into bag with couscous, and you're done. Way easy and incredibly hard to screw up when starting out.
My first meal was chicken breast chopped up and browned in skillet, dumped in a can of cream of mushroom and cooked for a bit until chicken was done. I then separate serving sizes and place in dehydrator. Once dried I dumped into a vacuumed seal bag that has the ziplock opening on the one end that had a serving size of roasted garlic and olive oil cous couse that I found at Walmart. Turned out amazing and stupid simple.
hopefully that makes sense.
THANK YOU!!! I need all the help I can get and I am super excited to try that!
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
This is spot on. Dehydrating your own food is likely cheaper than buying several cases of MH meals per year too. A Nesco FD-75A dehydrator is $75 and a good vacuum sealer and bags are about $60. Dehydrating your own food is definitely healthier. MH have a lot of sodium.A good place to start is with the base/pasta of couscous. Buy the box at the store of your flavor of choice, separate the box(WITHOUT COOKING) into 2 or 3 portions and dump into bag. Then decide your protein and sauce. Cook protein or sauce or whatever you want with your pasta as you would normally, dehydrate until its hard gravel and then dump into bag with couscous, and you're done. Way easy and incredibly hard to screw up when starting out.
My first meal was chicken breast chopped up and browned in skillet, dumped in a can of cream of mushroom and cooked for a bit until chicken was done. I then separate serving sizes and place in dehydrator. Once dried I dumped into a vacuumed seal bag that has the ziplock opening on the one end that had a serving size of roasted garlic and olive oil cous couse that I found at Walmart. Turned out amazing and stupid simple.
hopefully that makes sense.
This is spot on. Dehydrating your own food is likely cheaper than buying several cases of MH meals per year too. A Nesco FD-75A dehydrator is $75 and a good vacuum sealer and bags are about $60. Dehydrating your own food is definitely healthier. MH have a lot of sodium.
Sent from my Moto G (5) Plus using Tapatalk
i'll try a few Hawks.
those MH ones get old on long trips.
Isn’t one of the reasons for higher sodium to replace the salt you lose from sweating? I’m no health nut but thought that’s what I saw on some article.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Here's a picture so you know what you're looking for at the store. they are $3-$4 a box, this ad is for multiple boxes, I couldn't find a single serve on the internet.
https://www.walmart.com/ip/Near-East-Wild-Mushroom-Herb-Couscous-5-4-oz-Pack-of-12/17236314
Another that I did that turned out awesome was...
Brown ground elk, break it up as finely as possible in the skillet. Dehydrate until gravel like.
Dice an onion and dehydrate that at the same time as elk. When elk is done the onion will be done.
Throw those two in a bag with the broc&cheese couscous, easy peasy and very tasty on the mountain.
https://www.walmart.com/ip/Near-East-Broccoli-Cheese-Couscous-Mix-5-4-oz-Pack-of-12/17236306
You'll have to do one at home to get your hot water amounts right before heading out though.
My food serving size bags take about 1.5 cups of boiling water. Throw the water in the bag, zip it up and into a food cozy I made out of foil bubble wrap and let it do it's thing for 30 minutes or more while you get camp set up, open and eat.
Another one I want to try. But man $15 for an entree seems steep.
Here's a picture so you know what you're looking for at the store. they are $3-$4 a box, this ad is for multiple boxes, I couldn't find a single serve on the internet.
https://www.walmart.com/ip/Near-East-Wild-Mushroom-Herb-Couscous-5-4-oz-Pack-of-12/17236314
Another that I did that turned out awesome was...
Brown ground elk, break it up as finely as possible in the skillet. Dehydrate until gravel like.
Dice an onion and dehydrate that at the same time as elk. When elk is done the onion will be done.
Throw those two in a bag with the broc&cheese couscous, easy peasy and very tasty on the mountain.
https://www.walmart.com/ip/Near-East-Broccoli-Cheese-Couscous-Mix-5-4-oz-Pack-of-12/17236306
You'll have to do one at home to get your hot water amounts right before heading out though.
My food serving size bags take about 1.5 cups of boiling water. Throw the water in the bag, zip it up and into a food cozy I made out of foil bubble wrap and let it do it's thing for 30 minutes or more while you get camp set up, open and eat.