TASTE OF
WISCONSIN
Campfire cooking can be way more than s’mores KYLE CHEREK
Some people jump at the opportunity to set up an amalgamation of geometry made out of nylon and polyester and collapsible poles, sleep in the unpredictable outdoors, cook over an open flame, endure bees, beetles, mosquitoes and many other manner of critter — all for the fun of it. Others, meanwhile, consider camping a form of penance for earlier unknown wrongs. For them, the smell of wood smoke and wind through trees is best experienced from a deck, attached to a fully climate-controlled home. Maybe I am drawing too sharp a contrast, but the divergence between those who consider a Wisconsin summer without camping a partially wasted summer and those who don’t is mighty, and real. That said, among those in the procamping camp there are nuances. That may be especially true in the realm of culinary adventures in camping, about which I know a few things, for the camping set is full of variations. I have known friends who plumbed the depths of true rustic outdoors cooking: a rock circle, a wood pile and all the heating and eating left to what could be foraged, fashioned and forked. Then there are others who bring enough pans, stands and plans to make Julia Child’s well-appointed kitchen — now ensconced at the Smithsonian — seem like a half-hearted outfitting. Most of us land somewhere near the rustic, but not without some of the advances of the modern age. While winging it may be OK for some, packing for camp and
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Enjoying morning coffee at Devil’s Lake State Park, Kyle Cherek uses his measuring cup as a drinking mug to streamline camp packing.
its cooking is a crucial part of the whole endeavor for me and my wife. Between her insistence that we will not run out of, or need to run into town for, anything and my enthusiasm for a neat and well-packed car, cooler and cargo rack, our pack game is pretty solid. MAKING THE MOST OF IT
Planning what you will cook in the open air is a balance between faith and risk: the substance of things hoped for
COURTESY OF KYLE CHEREK
When it comes to camping, there are generally two types of folks.
vs. the reality of who knows what the weather will be like while you cook. Would that a few campfire cast iron skillet meals would have been less gritty, courtesy of out-of-nowhere winds, if only we had packed a splatter guard or something of the sort to cover the skillet. Packing for cooking outdoors is also a clever game of doing the most with the least. My wife relishes this sort of challenge and inevitably comes out with something delicious I could never have imagined made with a skillet, fish spatula and some kitchen twine. Truth be told, I am somewhat new to camping. It was part of my childhood only in the way that trips to Disneyland and the opportunity to order whatever I wanted at Baskin-Robbins were — few and far between. As with so many good things in my life, I came back into the camping fold when I fell in love with my wife, who embraced camping as a way to engage the natural world and relax. Our phones are turned off, we sing instead of listening to music, we honor the sun and its cycle. She definitely falls on the side that considers it a partially wasted summer if we do not sleep in a tent perfumed by the combination of fresh air and wood smoke, our stomachs full from a meal cooked in cast iron over a campfire. Thankfully, we don’t have to go far in our gorgeous state. Replete with dozens of state parks and forests in which to camp and explore and dozens more state trails to hike, we have an amazing variety of outdoor spaces to enjoy. CAST IRON IS KEY
For my wife and me, the one essential of good camp cooking is cast iron. You can have your tripods, your rotisseries, Dutch ovens, camp stoves or weenies on a stick cantilevered over a flame daring the fire gods to burn them with every sizzle and spit. But for us, the balance of ease and attention cast iron gives is surely the way to go. There is something elemental, pioneering and present about cast iron. It takes a bit to heat up, but that is one of the reasons we are so drawn to it for camp cooking, a study in planning and patience. Camp cooking with cast iron pushes us into inventive culinary corners.