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<blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="PADDING-LEFT: 1ex; MARGIN: 0px 0px 0px 0.8ex; BORDER-LEFT: #ccc 1px solid">Shane wrote:<br><br>> Hello. I am somewhat new to the SCA and will be going to a few events<br>> in the near future. Does anyone have ideas as to what type of food to
<br>> bring for a family of 3 that will keep well and does not have to be<br>> cooked? (dried foods, etc) Would need breakfast and lunches as we<br>> always attend feast for dinner. Thank you.<br>> <><br>
> Shane Beal<br>> Eadric Wynnflaed of Falcon Cree<br>></blockquote>
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<div>Shane,</div>
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<div>I've been watching this thread, and there's no real reason you can't bring along almost anything you're used to eating at home. It's basicly what I do for a long weekend event. I'll have stashed in my cooler whatever meats I'm in the mood for, frozen, with an assortment of fresh veggies (onions travel well, as do carrots, summer squashes, potatoes, celery, and a lot of other things as long as you keep them cool), often eggs (don't really need refrigerated as long as you don't leave them in the hot sun- those plastic egg carriers you can get from the camping section at WalMart work well to protect them), and there's stuff available like canned bacon, tomatoes, fish, if you like tuna or sardines (I do)- all kinds of things. I usually have my forge along, as well as a good supply of lump charcoal, so finding heat to cook with isn't a problem ;-) but there are plenty of handy dandy cooking devices available to suit any budget or packing preference.
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<div>With a family-sized mess kit, and my Omigosh wok, and a few metal strips, I can grill or boil or stir fry to my heart's content. I try to keep things flexible, because I may just be feeding myself, or I may be feeding an assortment of busy involved students and apprentices, so I usually have rice and/or noodles of some sort as a stretcher.
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<div>It really depends on what you want. I keep my coffee pot mumbling away next to my forge fire, and I have a 5 gallon drink cooler I load with ice, cleaned beer cans, and water nearby, so I have hot or cold beverages, as I prefer.
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<div>One really easy modern convenience is boil in bags, that you can fill with stew or spaghetti sauce, drop in boiling water, and heat-n-eat. I don't use them myself- I prefer to make myself a good curry, fresh, but have plenty of friends that do use boil in bags.
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<div>And, for kids, an excellent snack is a baggie of already cut up carrot and/or celery sticks, and maybe some radishes. Keep them in water, and they look as fresh as when you cut them.</div>
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<div>Breads travel well, too, as does that old favorite, PBJ ;-)</div>
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<div>What sorts of things do you and your family like? A carefully packed cooler and a dry goods basket can have you eating at events as well as you eat at home.<br clear="all"><br>-- <br>Saint Phlip <br><br>Don't like getting old? Beats the Hel out of the alternative.
<br><br>The purpose of life is not to arrive at the grave, a beautiful corpse, pretty and well-preserved, but to slide in sideways, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, proclaiming, "Wow! What a ride!" </div></div>