S. Heisley wrote:We like to cook fresh eggs for breakfast
QueticoBill wrote:Nothing quite like fried eggs and bacon around a campfire with some good cowboy coffee.
QueticoBill wrote: .... The cardboard/paperboard cartons are better than foam. Last, I wrap a double layer of bubble wrap - small bubble - around (and secure with a bungey dealy bob - but a rubber band will work.) Very successful. I know another couple who swear by taping it to the underside of a their canoe seat - so I imagine you could do similar in a trailer.
Nothing quite like fried eggs and bacon around a campfire with some good cowboy coffee.
working on it wrote:S. Heisley wrote:We like to cook fresh eggs for breakfastQueticoBill wrote:Nothing quite like fried eggs and bacon around a campfire with some good cowboy coffee.
- As Anthony Bourdain once said on his second TV series, No Reservations, "I am an egg slut". I am one, too. I'll eat eggs and bacon anytime, or either, with anything. Trouble with eggs is to keep them fresh; I've had problems keeping usually refrigerated perishable foods cold enough, over a long weekend camping, so I first resorted to liquid "Egg Beaters", which I would partially freeze (which would aid longevity later on), but would become just on the verge of getting too warm, on the third day forward. That might work better now that I'll be using my home-built/modified "supercooler", but maybe not. I've been considering using dehydrated eggs, such as
- if its eggs, I'll use it in any form...lots of it to use, too
- I've never tasted powdered eggs, but, as my wife can attest, when it comes to eggs, I'll just take them any way I can get them. This can should last me a week or two, in between campouts!
tony.latham wrote:One little tip on using eggs for baking: Use a can of 7-Up instead of the eggs. Just pour enough into your mix to give your batter the right consistency. Works great.
Tony
AzAv8r wrote:Many years ago, at the "Visiting Nurses Association Book Sale" (an annual event where used books are sold for fund-raising) I bought a book on cruising (as in long-term sailing). I remember reading fresh eggs would last several weeks unrefrigerated - just invert them fairly often. I don't recall the definition of "often", but it was probably every few days.
But we still refrigerate our eggs when camping. We have several sizes of plastic egg carriers. The paper ones probably provide better cushioning, but they absorb water...
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