Dutch Oven Cooking for Beginners – Camp Cook Week Day 1

UPDATED APRIL 2018 Dutch Oven cooking can be the most delicious way to prepare food outdoors…if you know these beginner tips.

Welcome to Camp Cooking Week! We’ll be cooking outdoors all week long so come back tomorrow for more outdoor cooking tips and tricks.Dutch oven cooking tips

Dutch Oven Cooking for Beginners

Dutch Oven Cooking makes some tasty outdoor food. I mean real good. Setting a cast iron pot directly in the coals is a great way to get some delicious dinner (or breakfast or lunch) and once you know the basics it’s a fairly straightforward process.

  1. Heat the coals.
  2. Prepare the food and place it in the dutch oven.
  3. Place the coals and let the food cook.
  4. Enjoy!

Heat the Coals

Before we get to the food, we’ve got to talk heat. Dutch ovens are great at staying warm for a long time, but getting them warm takes a while.

We start our charcoal briquettes in a charcoal chimney, a nifty metal tube with space at the bottom for a small fire. This heats the coals quicker – in 15 to 20 minutes – just enough time to get your ingredients together.

Heating coals in a charcoal chimney

Anything you can bake in an oven or cook on a stove top you can make in a Dutch Oven as long as you heat things up right.  But just how many coals do you need when dutch oven cooking?
A quick guide I’ve heard for how many coals you need – take your diameter and multiply by two. One third go on bottom, two thirds on top. The fact that more coals go on the dutch oven lid when baking throws a lot of people.
Psst…I talk all about Dutch Oven cooking and other kinds of outdoor cooking on this episode of the Hungry Squared podcast. Give it a listen!
The most common dutch oven size is a 12 inch diameter. That’s the size we have so we need 24 coals total, 16 on top, 8 on bottom. Here’s a convenient chart from Dutch Oven Mania that gets more precise.

Photo from www.dutchovenmania.com

Let it Cook

You put down some hot coals, put your dutch oven on then add more coals to the top. How long until you can eat that mouthwatering meal? Dutch oven cooking is for the patient.

Most recipes require at least 45 minutes of cooking time, rotating the oven and lid every 10-15 minutes for even heating. Rotating the oven and lid often during cooking prevents burn spots and gives more even heat for your food. Don’t forget to stir too!

Dutch Oven Meal

I like to line up the lid handle with the pot handle when I begin cooking. When a ten minute timer goes off I rotate the lid a quarter turn in one direction and rotate the oven body a quarter turn in the other direction.

You may not want to wait 45 minutes or more for dinner, but there’s a benefit for having your food cooked this way – it stays warm for hours. The cast iron in a Dutch Oven holds its heat well so going back for seconds is never a problem.

Dutch Oven Features

You’ve waited patiently but now your ready to eat! How do you get those coals off without getting ash in your food? Trust me, it’s happened. Dutch Oven Cooking works best if you have the right tools.
The most important gear item you need for dutch oven cooking is of course a dutch oven. It should be cast iron, rust free (although you can clean and reseason it if you need to), have a holder handle on the pot, legs on the bottom and a flat top to hold coals.
Coals on dutch oven
They make Cast Iron Dutch Ovens for regular kitchen use that may not have those features. Those still make tasty meals, but if you’re using the dutch oven outdoors the legs on the bottom, holder handle and flat top lid are essential.

More Dutch Oven Cooking Tools

After the Dutch Oven itself, the most important tool we use is a lid lifter. When the dutch oven gets hot and the lid handle is surrounded by coals it is near impossible to move it without burning yourself. Hence the lid lifter.
We also wear fireproof gloves and use barbeque tongs to help place coals and of course we have a charcoal chimney to help heat the coals. Having the right tools makes dutch oven cooking a burn-free, ash-free process, plus it’s the only way to not burn yourself.
CampMaid Dutch Oven Cooking System
Some of the coolest Dutch Oven gear that I tried out for my 30 Outdoor Meals in 30 Days Challenge was from CampMaid. I really like that all of the items fold down to fit inside the dutch oven for storage.
You can see all the outdoor gear our family uses and loves on our gear page.

Dutch Oven Cooking Pros and Cons

Dutch Oven Cooking is a great way to eat outdoors because the food is so delicious, but it takes a while and those ovens can be heavy.

Pros

  • Baking – not many outdoor cooking options can do this easily.
  • Food stays warm a long time.
  • Delicious food. Really, really good.

Cons

  • Heavy – you’ll be getting a work out.
  • Clean up can be messy especially when camping. A food scraper (we use an old library card or national park pass) or aluminum dutch oven liners or parchment dutch oven liners help.
  • Time. Dutch ovens are the original slow cookers.
Now you’re ready to try for yourself! Sign up for my camp cooking challenge in the box above for even more outdoor cooking tips then try our quick Dutch Oven Potatoes recipe below.
We make these potatoes in our home fire pit several times every summer.

Dutch Oven Potatoes

Ingredients:
1 onion, sliced
1 lb bacon
4-6 russet potatoes, peeled and sliced
1 T butter
salt and pepper to taste
1 c shredded cheese
Cut onion and bacon. Fry in uncovered dutch oven* until onions are translucent and bacon crisp. Remove bacon and grease. Add sliced potatoes, butter, salt and pepper. Stir. Cover and place coals. Cook for 40-50 minutes, rotating frequently until potatoes are tender. Crumble reserved bacon over potatoes, add cheese and serve.
*Sometimes I cook the bacon and onions in a frying pan on my stove if I’m trying to speed things up.

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Camp Cooking Week and Summer Snapshots Photo Essay

Next week is big around here with two big promotions on Mountain Mom and Tots. Here’s what we have planned!

1. Camp Cooking week – Just in time for your outdoor meals on Labor Day! Mountain Mom and Tots will be trying as many outdoor cooking techniques as we can and posting recipes and tips each day from September 1 through September 7, 2015.

Have you ever wanted to try dutch oven cooking, roasting over a fire, or solar cooking? We’ll be checking them out for you so you’ll have all the info you need. Plus we’re working on a giveaway for one lucky reader at the end of the week. Stay tuned.

2. Summer Snapshots Photo Essay. This year Mountain Mom and Tots is participating in an multi-blogger photo essay and we need your help. Do you have a family photo that embodies the theme Seeking Adventure? What was your best summer adventure? 

Join Play Outside Guide, Kid Project, AdventureTykes, and Hiking Along in this end of summer photo celebration.

Share your photo on instagram or twitter and be sure to tag @mountainmomtots and add #seekingadventure.

Don’t have instagram or twitter accounts? No problem, just email me at mountainmomandtots@gmail.com to be included. Photos must be submitted by September 7th and will be posted September 9, 2015.

 

Liberty Bottleworks Gear Review

This post begins a series of weekly gear reviews. Check back most Wednesdays for reviews of cool gear for outdoor families.

What are you willing to sacrifice in the name of beauty? It’s a question every high heeled shoe wearer must answer, but when it comes to water bottles the answer is easy. Nothing.

Liberty BottleWorks is an American company with some really awesome water bottle designs. Their cute and colorful array of stainless steel bottles instantly caught my eye at Outdoor Retailer and they were kind enough to give me some samples to review.

My Hawaiian flower Liberty bottle and the kids Blue Narwhal Liberty bottle have quickly become favorites at our house. I just feel cool carrying it around because it’s beautiful and eco-conscious. The factory at Liberty BottleWorks strives for a zero waste footprint, the bottle is made of recycled aluminum and 825 plastic bottles are kept from a landfill with each aluminum bottle purchased.

The cost of each aluminum bottle is $23.00. Here’s the run down on these eco-friendly bottles.

Pros:

  • Amazing designs. Their display of bottles was like a rainbow in stainless steel.
  • BPA free plastic liner prevents any metal taste.
  • Cool flip top lid.
  • USA made. Their company is proud to employ veterans and previously unemployed workers.
  • Made from recycled aluminum.
Cons:
  • Not Dishwasher safe.
  • Regular cap (not flip top) requires two hands to open. Not a big deal unless you want to use it driving or while holding an infant.

Pike Place Market and Olympic Sculpture Park, Seattle, WA

Earlier this month Baby L and I visited Seattle and Bainbridge Island with my sisters-in-law for a fun sisters weekend. Normally kids are not invited, but Baby L is still breastfeeding so it’d have been tough to leave her. Luckily she did great being carted around everywhere.
We happened to schedule the trip on the hottest weekend on record. Three days hitting 90 degrees with a baby strapped to me constantly made for a sweaty time, but even with the heat, the attractions were amazing.
We enjoyed shopping at Pike Place Market, a Seattle shopping icon. Unique shops, flower vendors, and farmers stalls all come together in one place. You can find anything from hand painted Polish pottery to fresh fish at Pike Place Market. 
I picked up a print from Ugly Baby and LaRu, we saw the original Starbucks and enjoyed lunch at a local deli. Pike Place Market is a fun place to go shopping with the girls – the perfect sisters weekend stop.
After shopping and walking in the heat all day, we took a break at Olympic Sculpture Park to soak in the scenery. The Seattle Art museum converted a nine acre industrial space into a beautiful water front park for residents and visitors to enjoy.
The collection of larger than life sculptures set against the backdrop of the Puget sound was the perfect place to relax and enjoy the Seattle sun set. While there I spied some yogis practicing near one of the sculptures and couldn’t help but see the contours of the sculpture reflected in the movements of the people.
The Olympic Sculpture Park was a beautiful way to enjoy Seattle scenery and as a bonus admission is free! Don’t be confused by the name – the Olympic Sculpture Park is named for the Olympic mountains not the Olympic Games. It was a great place to relax on a busy sisters weekend.