A few summers ago, when my husband, Heath Kirschner, embarked on running the nearly 500-mile Colorado Trail, I saw it as a dual challenge: He and his buddy, Paul Landry, would run the monster distance and I would fuel their monster appetites. Neither challenge would be easy, but that was the appeal.
For this journey-one that topped out at 13,334 feet above sea level, crossed six national forests, six wilderness areas, five river systems and eight mountain ranges I didn't want to rely on the idea that everything tastes better outside. Instead, I wanted to nourish and replenish. I wanted to make real food in the forest and transform the campfire into a kitchen.
Just as Heath and Paul prepped for months prior to setting foot on the Trail, I did too. Amid the stacks of maps and books, the yellow satellite phones, the portable water filter small enough to fit into one of their lightweight packs and too many bags of Skratch Labs hydration mix to count, I had my own piles: cookbooks, printed recipes and camping pantry lists. I took apart and restocked our camping bins stuffed with everything from matches to a French press. I started a Pinterest board to help organize my thoughts. I began looking at food and cooking through a different lens. What could be rejiggered and prepared on the Trail?
As a food journalist and an avid cook, there are few things that make me happier than studying food, cooking it and, of course, eating it. This journey, though, was a unique riddle: Meals needed to be jammed with calories and healthy nutrients and there needed to be a meatless option for Paul, who is a pescatarian. Plus, I wanted the creative challenge of cooking gourmet, you-can't-make-that-in-the-wild dishes.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Summer 2022 / July - September 2022-Ausgabe von Clean Eating.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Summer 2022 / July - September 2022-Ausgabe von Clean Eating.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
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Summer Lovin'
Bushels of berries, peaches, nectarines, cherries, plums and more beckon at the market. Buy them all and soak up the sun in these bejeweled desserts.
Into the Wild
Cooking along the 500-mile Colorado Trail taught Clean Eating editor Amanda M. Faison how to transform the campfire into a kitchen.
[ Three Ways ] Tropical Punch
Of African origin, hibiscus or Jamaican sorrel, is an important staple in West Indian and Mexican cooking. Hibiscus is sour enough to make you pucker and tropical enough to evoke the islands. Popularly brewed as a tea, the dried petals play well in savory or sweet recipes, too.
You Had Meat Tacos
"When it's done properly, taco should be a verb," declared Jonathan Gold, the late restaurant critic of the Los Angeles Times. Tacos are much more than a meal; they're an action.
The Multitasker
Collagen usually makes headlines for its skin-saving benefits. But did you know that it's also an essential nutrient for joint health? (Especially if you sit at a desk all day.)
The Minimalist
Summer cooking is all about fresh and fast and avoiding the stove.
Lighten Up
If you've had an air fryer in your online cart since the start of the pandemic, it's time to commit. Let's just say it'll change your life.
JUST RIGHT
The classic low-country boil is a celebration of place, tradition and ratio.
Recovery Days
The mantra that food is fuel is gold, but food as refuel is equally valuable.
Lower your impact without sacrificing satisfaction.
Eat like a Reducetarian.