CHOOSING SWEET POTATOES
Friday, May 18 2012
Sweet potatoes, unlike regular potatoes cannot tolerate cold weather and therefore are never available until around the Mother's Day season. Sweet potatoes are easy to grow as they prefer "bad" soil, compact and dry, are just fine. Sweet potatoes... Read more...
GENE STRATTON-PORTER STATE HISTORIC SITE OFFERS WILDFLOWER WALK
Friday, May 04 2012
Enjoy beautiful wildflowers and a delicious brunch at the Gene Stratton-Porter State Historic Site on Saturday, May 5, from 10:30 a.m. until 12:30 p.m. Take a stroll through the beautiful Wildflower Woods and adjacent Sower's Woods as site staff... Read more...
I THINK IT’S TIME - SPRING GARDENING
Friday, May 04 2012
The weather forecast is finally what we have all been waiting for. The lows are high and the highs are perfect. The recent warm/hot weather of early March was simply ridiculous. Now, even though it may be a little bit early still, the forecast is... Read more...
PRUNE AFTER FLOWERING
Friday, April 20 2012
It seems like I keep harping about the same old thing, must you need to prune your flowering shrubs just as soon as they are finished blooming. Forsythia, magnolia, azaleas and some early rhododendron have already bloomed and now is the only time of... Read more...
BOYS OF FALL BACK IN PADS
Friday, April 20 2012
After several practices in 'pro pads', the University of Saint Francis donned full pads for full contact practice recently at Bishop D'Arcy Stadium and engaged in a spirited workout for nearly two hours. Mostly sunny, dry weather prevailed for last... Read more...
ELIMINATING BROADLEAF WEEDS
Friday, April 06 2012
Most of the questions that are coming my way are about weeds growing in the yard and how to get rid of them. Pulling and digging is maybe alright for a small area but getting down to the root, literally is another matter. Most broadleaf weeds... Read more...
SEED POTATOES
Friday, March 23 2012
It is agreed that buying certified seed potatoes is best to help avoid any potato diseases or viruses that could be present in regular store-bought potatoes. These viral problems can get established in your garden soil and cause problems to re-occur... Read more...
HOME COUNTRY: GARDEN CATALOGS
Friday, March 23 2012
The garden catalogs start coming out when the snow is too deep to even find dirt. But we don't care. This is a catalog time of year, a time for making plans and figuring out how to do something even better than we did last year. There in the fishing... Read more...
SHAMROCKS (OXALIS)
Friday, March 09 2012
St. Patrick's Day is just around the corner so many of you will be looking to buy a shamrock plant, i.e. oxalis plant. Oxalis is grown from tiny bulbuls, which rapidly re-develop underground and continue to grow year after year, making it a... Read more...
HOME COUNTRY: WASHBOARD
Friday, March 09 2012
Life is kinda like a corrugated, washboard ranch road, I believe. Give anything enough time and experience and warts and scars and grooves will get worn in it. The down times and the up times, and the way they tend to alternate can lead to a... Read more...

The Waynedale News

Serving South & Southwest Fort Wayne


AROUND THE KAMPFIRE (TIPS ON LIVIN' OUTSIDE.)
Written by Ray McCune   
Friday, October 22 2010

LEARNING TO COOK OUTSIDE

To learn to cook outside, first learn to cook inside. I know; I know; you want to go right outside, build a fire or fire up the ol’ charcoal grill and get to cookin’ something exotic. Well it isn’t that simple but then again, maybe it is if you do some comparison. We’ll eliminate microwave ovens and solar cooking here to begin with and stick to the basics of just plain cooking/baking your conventional foods both inside and out.

IC (inside cooking) – heat source is an electric stove or a gas stove.

OC (outside cooking) – heat source is a camp stove – (which we won’t discuss because it’s almost like cooking inside) - or hot coals (never cook over an open wood burning flame).

IC – adjust heat by turning knob up or down.

OC – adjust heat by moving pan closer to or farther away from heat source or adding more hot coals or taking some away – here it’s best to remind you to keep your source fire or hot charcoal away from your cooking spot – use only to replenish the coals under where you are cooking be it on a charcoal grill or on an old refrigerator rack or oven rack between a couple of logs or bricks.

IC – use cover or lid according to food cooked.

OC – always have a lid handy and use to keep ashes and bugs from getting into food.

IC – Baking is done in a protected kitchen oven with a built in thermostat.

OC – Baking is done in aluminum foil over a source of heat (no flames), in a reflector oven in front of a source of heat, or in Dutch ovens (with covers). Outside it’s best to build windbreaks to conserve heat – (I use old cookie sheets that I buy at garage sales to deflect the wind and to put my Dutch ovens on to keep the ground from sucking the heat from the charcoal briquets).

IC – Recipes usually tell you to bake at certain temperatures for a specific amount of time.

OC – Here you will have to learn to ‘judge’ cooking temperatures and cooking times – this will come with experience.

NOTE: My advice is to practice, practice, practice both inside the house and outside the house in the yard – make your mistakes at home and not when you’re camping with friends; good luck. More about cooking outside in future columns.

 

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