Sunday, April 10, 2016




Ahhhhhh... the Dutch Oven


Well, as I threatened you in the previous post that we'll delve into the Dutch oven this time around:

Dutch oven cooking can turn into an addictive pastime, either at home or out on the range. It can involve almost any culinary style, from dumping in a bunch of hopefully compatible ingredients to make a quick 'n easy hearty camp meal, to finessing ingredients, herbs, and spices that would rival the offerings of some of the finest eateries around.


-Google
Typical Dutch oven (D.O.) design for use with coals.


-Google
 Cooking directly with coals


-Google
 Cooking over a campfire using a tripod


Dutch Oven:

Lodge is the Cadillac of camp Dutch ovens here in the U.S. Camp Chef is also well known. (Disclaimer: Camp Chef D.Os. are made in China, but under stricter specs.) Beware though of cheaper offerings -- mostly made in China -- that aren't built to American made tolerances such as Lodge. The foreign ovens are a crap shoot, with many units having ill-fitting lids that allow precious heat and steam to escape. Plus, many don't come pre seasoned like Lodge ovens deliver. Again, the adage applies: "You get what you pay for."

Slowly, over time, I'll be trying out camp recipes that if I subjectively like, will share under Recipes. The first one to go up is Andy's Dutch Oven Cherry Cobbler with Vanilla Cream Cheese. I took naming rights, as this recipe is an amalgam of different cobbler and dump cake recipes I found online, incorporating ideas from several I found especially appealing.

Cobblers, or dump cakes as they're commonly referred to in camp D.O. circles, are super easy to make. The name dump cake comes from the action of dumping in all ingredients into the D.O., covering, and baking. My cobbler isn't technically a dump cake, as one needs to side prep the vanilla cream cheese/yummy goody stuff before adding it to the pot.

For those who are feeling especially frisky and wish to try out the recipe but don't have a Dutch oven, it can be baked in a conventional oven using a glass baking pan, oven set to 350°, and baked for roughly 35 - 40 minutes.

¡BON APPETIT!



Sunday, April 3, 2016




Joshua Tree National Park, California: A Teardrop Gathering


Made it out to JT once again, this time for a teardrop gathering of roughly eight other fellow teardrops and their owners at Black Rock Canyon Campground.

This is a very nice campground featuring large sites, many which one can pull through for those with RVs.  Heated bathrooms contain flush toilets and sinks with running water. No showers. Water to the campground is supplied via well water pumped uphill to a storage tank. Has a bit of a taste to it, although not that unpleasant. Bring your own drinking water if that sounds off-putting. the nearby town of Yucca Valley has rapidly grown in the last decade, home to just about any store you may need in order to acquire services or buy supplies from, including a large Walmart for one stop shopping.




Some tears were bigger than mine; another was certainly smaller, but what we all shared equally was we all love our tears, and  agreement we all had a great time.


-Andrew Kliss
The Road Toad at camp.


-Andrew Kliss
Chillin' at camp in the afternoon.


-Andrew Kliss Photography
One of many wildflower species blooming.


There wasn't a multitude of individual blooms per se, but there were a goodly number of diverse species present. This beautiful, rayed bloom belongs to the tidy tip family of the genus Layia... (me thinks)


-a fellow hiker
At the crest of the moderately demanding Warren Loop Trail with two fellow teardroppers.


Debbie (pictured) wanted to do a hike, so she volunteered Matt (above) and myself to accompany her. Such a commanding view of the desert floor surrounding us, and of several distant mountain ranges. A 6.6 mile hike from campground and back, I was a happy but sore little puppy on the return to camp.


-Andrew Kliss
What the heck is it???


These two girls found some bones alongside the loop trail, posing a conundrum. We mulled it over extensively amongst ourselves as to what animal this spinal column belonged to. It was eventually identified as deer bones.


-Andrew Kliss


 One evening towards the end of the gathering, we held a potluck. Me? I made my famous (some would consider infamous) Andy’s Dutch Oven Cherry Cobbler with Vanilla Cream Cheese desert, a self-concocted recipe that gleans several ideas from other cobbler recipes I found. Fortunately, the only thing people succumbed to were second helpings.



Thursday night's potluck video  

One doesn't necessarily need a D.O. (Dutch oven) to make it. It can also be made in a greased glass oven pan with the oven temp set to 350°.


-Andrew Kliss
Andy's cherry cobbler. YUM!!!


OK: so now you ask, "What is a Dutch oven, and how do you use it?"  Well, we'll have to wait until the next post to get into that.



Sunday, March 13, 2016




..and a bit more gear...


  
A cool item I found online is a set of nesting wine glasses. Come with black, red, or pink stems.


-Google


The collapsing measuring cups by Progressive work great and are space savers too. I picked mine up at Walmart; can also be purchased online at Amazon. Several other makes and models are also offered online.


-Google


Gotta go, as the Road Toad is getting prepped to head out to Joshua Tree National Park this coming week for a little gathering of like-minded teardroppers. I've been practicing cooking up grub at home using a Dutch oven. Never even heard of 'em until the Road Toad came into my life and I began interacting with other teardroppers.

Right now I'm honing a cherry cobbler I've been concocting. In the wings are a mountain man breakfast and my own camp chili recipe I'm perfecting, all for a Dutch oven. What's a Dutch oven, or D.O. for short, and how are they used? Stay tuned for a subsequent post!



Sunday, February 28, 2016




Some Gear I've Packed: It's All About the Space


The time is fast approaching when I'll slip down the cover, dust off whatever needs dusting, polish up the chrome and aluminum, and open up the Road Toad for a breath of fresh air.

Mid March will herald the traveling season with a teardrop gathering at Black Rock Canyon Campground in Joshua Tree National Park. There are 8+ teardroppers so far participating, this being the first time the Road Toad will be attending such an event. For those who are interested, the next few posts will detail what some of the Road Toad has been outfitted with up to this point.

Cost of accoutrements has approached the purchase price of the Road Toad itself it seems. As with a house, one has to fill it with furniture, appliances, kitchenware, bathroom essentials, and a quantity of other trailer and camping related goodies.

Space is naturally at a premium when one tows a small trailer like a teardrop. Fortunately, we have online access to sharp, designing minds, plus there is Google and Amazon to peruse. With these three elements (and some wonderful ideas gleaned from the Little Guy Forum) I was able to maximize precious galley space via folding and nesting utensils, coupled with many hours of organizing, "deorganizing", and reorganizing the galley over and over again, eventually gaining maximum benefit of storage space and satisfying my OCD at the same time. At least so far...

There are several things I've learned about configuring and outfitting a teardrop:
  • Rule #1: You'll never have enough room.
  • Rule #2: You want to purchase "Just one more thing." for your tear (pronounced"teer": a contraction for teardrop).
  • Rule #3: Now you're going to have to find room for that one more thing.
This is a collapsible coffee drip made of food grade silicone. It uses a Melita No. 4 paper filter, making about one to two cups of coffee. Yummy! I love drip. A French press is cool too, but there isn't enough room in the tear for one, at least for the moment.


-Google



-Google


To compliment a collapsible coffee drip, one must have a collapsible tea kettle, also made of silicone. It can be plopped on top of a propane stove to boil water in. Can't use it over a campfire though, or the sucker'll burn up. Comes in several other vibrant neon colors besides lime green.


-Google


-Google


And what would compliment a neon green collapsible tea kettle? None other than a neon green collapsible colander. This one is the perfect size for rinsing berries and enough vegetables, etc. for 1 - 2 people.


-Google


This is a mug that a dear friend of mine gave me, expressly for camping with the Road Toad. Been looking high and low online for one by the same artist, but apparently, he's taken a sabbatical creating this particular series. How fortunate my friend had this one to offer. (Thanx Tommy!)



-Andrew Kliss