|
![]() ![]() ![]() |
Author
Text
08/12/2018 09:50AM (Thread Older Than 3 Years)
I did a search & found lots of French toast threads...I make delicious French toast in a pan. I don't have a reflector oven or fry bake..yet, but from my non-experience they are for baking / dough. I might need an education here..
I did not find any toasting threads..seriously.
The way I toast is to butter/ghee something up good & put it in a pan butter side down until it crisps up.
I once tried toasting an English muffin over a fire on the grate, I ended up with smoked, doughy untoasted muffin. Not good. Anyone willing to share their methods?
I did not find any toasting threads..seriously.
The way I toast is to butter/ghee something up good & put it in a pan butter side down until it crisps up.
I once tried toasting an English muffin over a fire on the grate, I ended up with smoked, doughy untoasted muffin. Not good. Anyone willing to share their methods?
It does not matter how slowly you go, as long as you do not stop. -Confucius
08/12/2018 07:58PM
Rake a few coals out and toss a slice of bread on them. Flip it over and do the other side. Necessity is the mother of invention. Car camping with the kids when they were little and they wanted peanut butter and jelly toast.
Good way to cook a steak too, by the way.
Good way to cook a steak too, by the way.
“It is clearly absurd to limit the term 'education' to a person's formal schooling.” - Murray Rothbard
08/13/2018 10:51AM
The fire grates in the BW are too high - too far from the coal bed - to properly toast bread. For dry toast, we'll sometimes lay bread out on a square of hardware cloth supported just above the coals with a few rocks. But most often, we use your pan-fry in butter "Texas toast" method.
"You can observe a lot just by watching." -- Yogi Berra
08/13/2018 02:15PM
Clink our glasses together and say "Cheers!"
;^)
;^)
The river calmly flows, Through shining banks, through lonely glen, Where the owl shrieks, though ne'er the cheer of men Has stirred its mute repose, Still if you should walk there, you would go there again.
08/14/2018 10:50AM
Thanks all for your insight, yes..I felt it was too far from the coals/flame on any grate. I'm guessing you'd have to rig it up on one of those campfire contraptions I remember or tend it like a marshmallow close to the coals/fire for a while on a skewer or stick or like hooky, rake them out & put it on the coals. The ultimate trial & error. It could get toasted...or be toast.
Someone (jkavanaugh) mentioned English muffin pizzas in the pizza thread. I am an expert at these in my toaster oven for as long as I can remember & you have to toast the muffin first...so that's how I landed on how to toast. I'm headed car camping in a few weeks & I'm going to try these methods out at my campsite. I might even spark up my fire pit...
Sláinte! Haha...
Someone (jkavanaugh) mentioned English muffin pizzas in the pizza thread. I am an expert at these in my toaster oven for as long as I can remember & you have to toast the muffin first...so that's how I landed on how to toast. I'm headed car camping in a few weeks & I'm going to try these methods out at my campsite. I might even spark up my fire pit...
Sláinte! Haha...
It does not matter how slowly you go, as long as you do not stop. -Confucius
08/28/2018 11:09AM
bradcrc: " I love toast. Toasted english muffins in the morning, or hot pop tarts on a cold morning, I always bring one of these. They work great and take no space, worth their weight if you love toast and want it perfect every time."
I knew there was someone on this site that would come up with some awesome gadget that is great for toasting. That looks like the holy grail of toasters! Thanks so much! English muffin pizzas...here I come!
It does not matter how slowly you go, as long as you do not stop. -Confucius
08/28/2018 01:13PM
I learned how to make toast while in the Boy Scouts by buttering the bread first, then throwing it on the grill/griddle. Flip after a minute or two to brown the other side to taste.
When a man is part of his canoe, he is part of all that canoes have ever known. - Sigurd F. Olson, "The Singing Wilderness"
08/28/2018 04:52PM
I've been trying to figure out why this thread seems so odd to me - but we have never had bread or english muffins or anything you'd toast on a canoe or camping trip.
I'd go with the butter and griddle were I to have a toastable.
I'd go with the butter and griddle were I to have a toastable.
08/29/2018 01:29PM
billconner: "I've been trying to figure out why this thread seems so odd to me - but we have never had bread or english muffins or anything you'd toast on a canoe or camping trip.
I'd go with the butter and griddle were I to have a toastable."
Thanks all..it's really nice to have so many options & I appreciate all the input. I might experiment with my little backpacking grill over coals.
It's me Bill, I'm a bit odd. I waitressed thru high school in a tiny diner & toasted many a cut muffin on the flattop smothered with butter...but the English muffin & toasted bread stumped me somehow.
It does not matter how slowly you go, as long as you do not stop. -Confucius
09/01/2018 03:16PM
Irvingdog: "Hardware cloth is usually galvanized, which means heating it will off gas poison.
Don't do that"
Okay, no poison, Good tip. Omg, thanks. Learn something new every day..
So far I have not tested any of these ideas, car camping was a blast. Eat, paddle, eat, camp chores, eat, nap, repeat. Lean-to camping happening next, I could toast then..
It does not matter how slowly you go, as long as you do not stop. -Confucius
Subscribe to Thread
Become a member of the bwca.com community to subscribe to thread and get email updates when new posts are added. Sign up Here