Dave in AZ
Well-known member
For overland truck food prep, maximizing the efficiency of our electric energy use for cooking a meal can be important. This is a method I've been experimenting with to efficiently boil water, then use it for hot drinks, heating precooked vacuum sealed meals "sous vide" style in a 1 gallon cooler, then using the insulated hot water later for dish cleanup and hygiene. I noticed that for camp meals, I ALWAYS want some hot drink, I always want some hot food, and I almost always heat some water later for cleanup--I realized all these can be combined to one efficient process using sous vide and a small cooler.
Many folks are wanting to use batteries to power their cooking now, but ot can be a huge watt-hour drain if not done efficiently. Even if you are using a propane burner or Coleman gas burner, it's good to save fuel. This works just as well boiling water with fuels.
Here is an example, testing some meals tonight. I have salmon with green beans; sliced roast pork with carrots and green beans in butter; and chucken bulgogi. I make these and vacpak individual meals.
Now, boil 1.5L in my electric kettle, 120watt hrs, wh. This is the #1 most efficient way to heat water with electricity, 100% of energy goes into water heat.
What do I get for 120 wh?
1.Made 400ml tea
2. poured 1100ml or grams over pouches in thermos. Salmon was packed raw, cooked in 2 min visibly, others were cooked so just reheating.
3. Water stabilized at 140f with meals, stayed > 130f an hour later for cleaning.
4. Very easy to eat out of bag cut open, so no cleanup was required, but bowls or plates would have been easy.
The energy numbers: 2 meals were 675 g, frozen but thawing in fridge, so just like you'd have in fridge camping, say 32f. Hot to eat in 10 min.
Calcs though:
1100g h2o at 212f = 233,200
675g food at 32f = 21,600
254,800÷ 1775g total = 144f
So all equalize at 144f, plenty hot and cooked.
P.s. USFDA meat pathogen lethality tables, 144f for 5 min is all that is required for complete pathogen lethality and cooking of meat. So this would work easy for raw meat sliced thin. In this case, I poured boiling water over raw bagged salmon first, easily cooking it, then added the 2nd precooked meal to warm. I just wanted to test the sous vide cooking ability, and 1100g or ml boiling water can work for 2 meals. In future, I will have all meal content precooked.
Many folks are wanting to use batteries to power their cooking now, but ot can be a huge watt-hour drain if not done efficiently. Even if you are using a propane burner or Coleman gas burner, it's good to save fuel. This works just as well boiling water with fuels.
Here is an example, testing some meals tonight. I have salmon with green beans; sliced roast pork with carrots and green beans in butter; and chucken bulgogi. I make these and vacpak individual meals.
Now, boil 1.5L in my electric kettle, 120watt hrs, wh. This is the #1 most efficient way to heat water with electricity, 100% of energy goes into water heat.
What do I get for 120 wh?
1.Made 400ml tea
2. poured 1100ml or grams over pouches in thermos. Salmon was packed raw, cooked in 2 min visibly, others were cooked so just reheating.
3. Water stabilized at 140f with meals, stayed > 130f an hour later for cleaning.
4. Very easy to eat out of bag cut open, so no cleanup was required, but bowls or plates would have been easy.
The energy numbers: 2 meals were 675 g, frozen but thawing in fridge, so just like you'd have in fridge camping, say 32f. Hot to eat in 10 min.
Calcs though:
1100g h2o at 212f = 233,200
675g food at 32f = 21,600
254,800÷ 1775g total = 144f
So all equalize at 144f, plenty hot and cooked.
P.s. USFDA meat pathogen lethality tables, 144f for 5 min is all that is required for complete pathogen lethality and cooking of meat. So this would work easy for raw meat sliced thin. In this case, I poured boiling water over raw bagged salmon first, easily cooking it, then added the 2nd precooked meal to warm. I just wanted to test the sous vide cooking ability, and 1100g or ml boiling water can work for 2 meals. In future, I will have all meal content precooked.