Showing posts with label review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label review. Show all posts

Thursday, September 27, 2012

The Land of Pots and Pans

(copyright Cascade Designs)






In the beginning, there was fire.

Then man boiled water.  And for a time, it was good.

Then man decided he wanted to make food, beyond boiling water for powdered mashed potatoes and freeze dried coffee, and he looked around him at all the choices...titanium, hard anodized aluminum, non-stick...and it was...confusing

I am this man.  I decided that if I were to do any hikes that were longer than a couple days, I would probably starve -- or just go simply crazy because food choices.  I looked at my food that I had taken backpacking in the past and realized just how malnourished I must have been.  It seems that I have matured food-wise in the last couple of years; I realized that in order to keep muscle on, and fat off, my body, I needed to take in a high-protein diet.  I also realized that I'm slightly gluten-intolerant.  Yep, that sucks, but at least I know why I get that nauseous/hyper-salivating feeling after eating bread.  Fun. 

Anyways, I realized that if I were to do some longer distance backpacking, I would need some quality meals in me.  So I set out to find something other than my stainless steel 15-ounce cup, that was light, but didn't give me a whole lot of options when it came to cooking.  My goal was to be able to cook brown rice.  It provides high quality carbs (which is important for those long hiking days, along with those protein and fats), and would be a good basis for a meal whether I wanted to add broth and make a soup, or add beans and foil packages of tuna or salmon for a complete meal.  It is also light, uses a little water (unlike pasta which just boils in water), and those kids on "Survivor" seem able to survive on that stuff for a whole month.  

Size: So I had to figure out what size pot I was looking for.  Turns out, nobody seems able to figure out what size is good for backpacking, probably because people have different cooking needs.  One or two people?  Dehydrated meals or cooking?  Are you just making a cup of hot coffee?  Are you cooking a three course meal?  Do you want to bake a pizza in the middle of nowhere?  The answers for me are one, cooking, no, no, absolutely not. But that still leaves a lot to of size choices, somewhere in the 600 ml to 1.3 liter range.  

600 milliliters in US terms is about 20 ounces.  That is deceptively large.  Go and fill up a measuring cup that much, you'll be amazed at how big it is.  But it won't make you a backcountry wolfgang puck, it will pretty much allow you to boil two cups of water with some added space. 

700 milliliters is about 23 ounces.  Only 3 ounces more, but 3 ounces it is. 

900 milliliters is about 30 ounces.  Now we're talking.

1100 milliliters (or 1.1 liter) is 37 ounces.  That's a lot of water. 

1300 milliliters (or 1.3 liter) is 43 ounces.  Wow, that's a fair amount of space. 

Shape: Nobody's really decided what kind of pot shape is best for backpacking purposes.  There are the deep pots that make the pot look like a really big cup, but some people complain about the shape inhibiting heating times.  Then there are more traditional style pots, which look like mini versions of the pots you use at home.  This gives you more surface area for heating the bottom, and more space to add food on the top, but it also give you more of an open area for bugs and dirt to get in, and it's also a little more oblong when packed.  

Material: Titanium, Titanium with non stick, hard-anodized aluminum, aluminum with non stick, stainless stee-- oh wait, nobody uses stainless steel.  It's too heavy.  Titanium is the king in backpacking cookware.  It's a light, dull-metal that makes for a beautifully ultralight pot, and is said to have some "non-stick properties," though I'm not really sure what that means.  Hard anodized aluminum is generally the runner-up, with its electro-chemically treated aluminum that results in scratch resistant aluminum that is also non-stick.  Interesting. 

Price: Twelve dollars to $65.  Yep.  You can get a pot for whatever your credit limit is.  

Weight: 3.3 oz all the way up to 10.8 for the ones I was looking at. 

Other considerations: I want to be able to not only eat out of the pot, but to also drink out of it.  If I physically can't drink out of the pot, I have a tiny 6-ounce aluminum cup (0.9 oz) that I could pack along, but would otherwise add to the weight of the pot set, and be one more piece of cookware.  There is a nice option to add the Snow Peak HotLips ($7, 0.3 oz each), which is a piece of lip-sized silicone to the rim of the pot to make for easy drinking from a hot pot.  

Also, I didn't want to consider hyperlight options such as the Caldera Keg ($10, 1.1 oz), or the infamous Grease Pot ($10, 2.5 oz).  These aren't really pots for cooking things in, and I didn't want to have to worry about raw aluminum rusting or sticking.   

The choices

So I spent about two weeks researching the crap out of pots.  I went into REI and other sporting goods stores and opened up boxes and pantomimed using each of the pots on my stove, getting a feel for their size.  Yep, I'm a freak. 

Here is a sample of the best titanium and aluminum cookware that I spotted on my search. This is by no means a complete list, but it gives you an idea of all the choices and pros and cons of the selection out there.  

Capacity: 850 ml
Weight: 5.5 oz (including cup and stuff sack)
Material: Titanium
Price: $59.95

Snow Peak is THE brand of titanium cookware.  They also tend to be on the pricey side, much like the Evernew line.  I own one of their stoves, and love it, and got to handle a few pieces of snow peak's cookware in a local REI.  I found the Mini Solo to be a little too tall for it's width, but it's nice that it comes with a cup.  Beyond the Mini Solo set though, I compared all of the other Snow Peak offerings, but found them to be off from what I was looking for.  The 3-piece Ti Cookset seemed nice, but everything was a bit small, which was surprising given the shape of the pans, and left no real options for drinking.  Plus, I'd probably only need the big pot and maybe the fry pan.  Then there's the Hybrid Trail Cookset, and the Hybrid Summit Cookset, which are interesting options, but the silicone cups that they come with are close to useless -- after hearing reviews of their flimsiness, I checked them out at the store, and they were in fact very flimsy.  As in, you might want to hold that cup of hot joe with two hands in case it flips inside out.  (If you want to see this silicone cup concept done right, check out the Sea To Summit X-Cup ($10, 1.7 oz)


Capacity: 700 ml
Weight: 3.99 oz (including mesh sack)
Material: Titanium
Price: $19.50

An excellent deal for titanium cookware, the Stoic brand is actually made by the Backcountry.com retailer, and they have some killer deals on high end gear, similar to the REI brand.



Capacity: 850 ml
Weight: 3.03 oz
Material: Titanium
Price: $46.00

A big jump up in price from the Stoic, but you add 150 ml of capacity and lose a mesh sack (maybe that was the ounce difference?).  The lightest pot I could find for the capacity, but that most likely comes by sacrificing thickness.  Not necessarily a bad thing, it will equal faster boil times, but also faster cooling, which makes it less ideal on a cold night.  

Capacity: 710 ml
Weight: 3.8 oz (6.0 oz for set with cozy and gripper)
Material: Aluminum with Non-stick
Price: $12.00 ($20.00 for set)

Great price, probably because it's not titanium.  On the downside, it doesn't have a handle, unless you carry along the gripper.  I have read of people using these and just drilling tiny holes on each side to make a bail-style handle.


Capacity: 900 ml 
Weight: 5.8 oz
Material: Titanium with Non-stick
Price: $53.70

For all the talk of Evernew pots in the ultralight community, these are hard to find.  I like the deep pot style, and it has non-stick coating to boot.  It also comes with the fry-pan/lid, which I think is either ingenious or retarded.  It depends on what mood you catch me in.  They have a ton of other pot styles, but they are similarly hard to find for as many products as they have.   Variations include the Uncoated Deep Pot ($64, 4.4 oz) which loses the non-stick coating and 1.4 ounces, Uncoated Ultralight ($50, 4.2 oz) which loses 1.6 ounces, the non-stick coating, the fry-pan lid, and sports a wider, pot-like base.  There's also a 1000 ml Pasta Pot (~$50, 4.1 oz) which boasts a strainer in the lid and coated handles.


Capacity: 900 ml
Weight: 6.7 oz (including stuff sack)
Material: Titanium
Price: $44.95

While it doesn't beat the Evernew selection in weight, it's still an attractive pot set, and another company that's taking a stab at the ultralight cookware department.



Capacity: 850 ml
Weight: 4.2 oz
Material: Titanium
Price $50

I remember this titanium pot being one of the first on the market.  Which is why it's surprising that they haven't worked out the kinks yet.  I read quite a few reviews stating that the lid is nice and tight, but unfortunately creates a bit of a seal when it's flush on top and water is boiling inside.  The multiple reports of this (with one reviewer stating how it caused him to spill the pot's contents he pulled so hard) led me to cross this off the "considered" list.

Capacity: 1300 ml
Weight: 5.5 oz (with the 1.3L pot, lid, and stuff sack)
Material: Titanium with Non-stick
Price: $55

This offering from Stoic is so different from the above that I decided to list it separately.  Obviously I would split this cookset up, leaving the 1600 ml pot at home and taking the rest, resulting in a quite light 5.5 oz for such a big pot, especially if you count the non-stick. However, 1.3 L is starting to get on the large side. 

Capacity: 600 ml
Weight: 6.3 oz (with gripper, neoprene sleeve, spork)
Material: Hard-anodized aluminum
Price: $28

On the lower end of the price scale, but also on the lower end of sizes.  However, it excels in the addition of the "ingenious" (as many reviewers called it) silicone two-finger pot gripper, insulating neoprene sleeve to keep drinks warm and to allow you to grab the pot with your hands, and a proprietary "Sip-It" lid, which becomes a lipped lip (a la Starbucks cups) for the pot once it's cozily in its insulating sleeve.  The spork (or "foon" as they call it), is extremely light, and I've read reviews of how easily it can be snapped in half.

Capacity: 1100 ml
Weight: 10.9 oz (with stuff sack, insulated mug/bowl, spork)
Material: Hard anodized aluminum with non-stick
Price: $45

Definitely the heaviest set in the bunch, but also includes the most items.  The pot features a really nice, coated handle that you squeeze to slide into position from its locked position (where it holds the lid down and the contents inside).  The set also includes a very nice 14 oz mug/bowl, which attains a tight fit with the lid of the pot, and allows for a covered, insulated cup to sip from.  To round out the set, all of this gets housed in a coated stuff sack that is stiff enough to use as a mini sink.  I read in a review that the pot weighs around 7 oz by itself, without the added accoutrements that it offers.


Making the Decision
So, obviously there's lots to choose from.  I put them all in an Amazon Wish List and pored over details.  Do I sacrifice the weight for a bigger pot?  Do I sacrifice an ounce to save $30?  Is non-stick important for the backcountry? Do I need a fry-pan lid?  Could I use it as a plate? Do I want to be able to boil all the water I need in one sitting?

Let's cut to the chase.  I ordered the GSI Halulite Minimalist.  Why? I decided that it was the best balance between functionality, price, durability, features, and especially minimalism.  

I realized that the non-stick feature is really important to me.  On a backpacking trip last weekend, I cooked rice in an old, crappy aluminum pot and realized that since I don't have a full kitchen to clean up with, I wanted to be able to add some water to rinse, and wipe away the rest with my pack towel.  I love the thought that GSI put into their product; the silicone pot gripper has a mini-magnet inside so you can stick it to your fuel canister while you cook; the pot lid is incredible easy to grab when you're cooking, and when it's flipped over, it makes an awesome lid for sipping morning coffee brews, or night teas.  The spork will probably go in the trash, to be replaced by my equally light Light My Fire Spork.

It is THE smallest pot I listed.  It's almost more of a cup than a pot, but that's the beauty of it.  After taking a look at it at REI multiple times, I realized that the width of the cup was perfect -- I could grab it with one hand, but wouldn't have trouble scooping foil pack salmon into a hot cup of rice and beans.  Also, when it comes time to pack it away, I can put a 110 gram snow peak canister inside, the stove itself, the pot gripper, and then stick the suctioned lid on top to keep it all inside.  There's nothing more beautiful than a little self contained unit while packing, and I didn't want to worry about the lid banging around and coming loose on a titanium pot while I'm walking.

It also solved the cup problem for me, I don't often drink my hot drink with my meal, it's usually after.  So i could easily boil and cook, and then put enough water on to make a drink afterward, sit it in the coozy, and sip it through the suctioned lid while I pack up camp, without worrying about kicking dirt into an open cup, and with less worry about possible spillage. 

Nonetheless, I worry that it is too small, that I'll have regrets about the added weight -- about 2 ounces added to my already existing kit.  I'm always supposed to get lighter! But I think the ease of use and the beauty of the well thought out kit will be worth it's weight in ounces.  If not, I'll go back to the drawing board and rediscover what I really need. 

Happy Trails!


Monday, November 30, 2009

Jetboil...not a bad idea...

As someone who has tipped over a few too many pots, precariously balanced on the top of a ultralight stove (I'm so careful! I don't know how it happens...), I took a second look at the jetboil cooking system.

Jetboil Flash Cooking System

The jetboil system has been around for about 9 years, and I'd always overlooked it as a too expensive and heavy stove ($100 from REI, 15 oz), but considering the amount of gear you're getting in this package, it's actually not too expensive, nor incredibly heavy.

No doubt you could get stove, pot, and mug for cheaper and lighter, but you're paying for a beautifully designed all-in-one product. The entire unit screws onto a standard mixed-fuel canister. The stove is part of the 1L stainless steel pot, which becomes your bowl/mug with a sip through lid and insulated outside (perfect for those people who burn themselves on the often too short or non-existent handles on light cook pots). There's also a bunch of optional accessories available, such as a hanging kit, coffee press (for those lavish backpackers out there), and a canister stabilizer (three pronged tripod-type piece).

My current snow peak stove and stainless cup/pot configuration works pretty well and weighs in at a nice 8.7 ounces. I won't be picking up a jetboil anytime soon, but it's definitely a cook system to ponder if you like to keep your cookkits simple, compact and all-in-one.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Gear Review : Lightload towels


Forget to pack your first aid kit, and you might not notice unless you hurt yourself. Forget your packtowel, and you'll realize it on the trail at some point.

It's not an "essential" piece of gear, like a sleeping bag, that you can't leave home without, but it's just one of those things that you'll make a mental note not to forget it next time.

So when George from Lightload towels sent me a sample of his towels, I was eager to test them out so I could replace my beat-up brown washcloth with one.

The Lightload 12 in by 24 in towels come in a three-pack and sell for $5 - $6 (available on their website, REI, and many other retailers). Each one weighs 0.5 oz according to the manufacturer.

Once out of the plastic wrapping, you're holding a cicular disc that looks like a vacuum packed handful of kleenex. It's condensed incredibly tight. I assumed a disposable towel so light would rip easily, so I slowly negotiated it apart. But once it started to come apart, I realized it was actually much stronger than it appeared, and was actually quite soft and usuable. It is possible to rip these things by hand, but it's not easy.

The actual size is 11 in x 19 in about the size of a small kitchen towel, or about two giant washcloths stuck together. It's not quite long enough to tie around my neck on a hot day or around my head (is my head really that big?!).

It has a papery feel to it right out of the package, but it's tough and dries quickly. I got to test it out on a recent backpacking trip in Ojai, California where I put it through the not-so-tough paces of drying off my wet pot after cooking a meal and mopping up some spilled water on my groundcloth.

After arriving home, I threw the lightload towel in the washing machine and dryer with my other gear. I found the result was a much softer version of the towel...and we're talking feathery soft. There is minimal fraying, but nothing that would affect performance. It also results in a slightly larger size -- 12.5 in by 22 in.

After a washing

The only other product on the market that could compare to the Lightload towel is the MSR Nano Packtowel which weighs .4 oz., and costs $8 for one. The big difference is the semi-disposable nature of the Lightload towel. At under $2 a towel, if you often find yourself mopping up messy dinner spills, misplacing or needing multiple towels, the Lightload series is your answer. However, if you're looking for a more permanent solution, you might want to look at the MSR series.

The Lightload towel now has a spot in my backpack -- I'm definitely not going back to the grimy brown washcloth I used to use as a packtowel. At a half ounce, there's no reason not to carry one. If you want to get even lighter, you can always cut the towel in half, resulting in a .25 ounce towel (Lightload carries this size as well). Because I carry chlorine dioxide tablets for purification, the Lightload towel will act as a good silt filter when dipping into a lake. I can also see carrying an extra "just in case" towel for long-term hikes.

I also have a Lightload "beachtowel," which I plan to include in my travel kit and test out as a better substitute for hotel towels and beach towels while travel backpacking. Stay tuned!