The art of eating & fly fishing

As a longtime friend of Fredrik – the creative genius, drummer and flyfisherman of J&FF – I know that the subject of food is of utter importance. Whereas most people have probably been through the following stages, I will use Fredrik as an example, partly because he’s a nice guy that loves eating, and also because I have some photos for illustration.

1. Bring it to the max!

Before a long hike you should eat well to keep the body going for hours with a heavy back pack and a demanding terrain. Family pizza for instance. There’s no need to save on weight, fat or carbohydrates (but Fredrik is always whining about the price of the Norwegian food).

One man, one pizza

 

2. In-field cooking

Now this is a form of art. On a long trip the meals have to be planned so that there’s: a) enough food, b) not too much food to carry and c) tasty and varied food that is possible to prepare with very simple equipment (this is the most difficult one). Fredrik is a true master of making in-field gourmet dinners. We’ve had some of our lives’ best three-course meals in a tent in the middle of the Scandinavian tundra, prepared by Freddy the master chef. However, planning the amount of food can go wrong. Too much food and you end up competing who can make the longes “squeeze” out of a tube of soft cheese by jumping on it. Too little food and you realize it’s two slices of bread a day for the rest of the trip. Believe me, both have happened us.

You can never get enough coffee on rainy days

Preparing dessert

Pancakes!

 

It doesn't get better than this!

 

3. Emergency situations

These photos illustrate some of Fredrik’s methods for surviving the extreme situations that may occur when you fish too much and eat too little. The recipes are in the photo titles.

Wheat flour

 

Butter with flour and cinnamon

 

Noodles, raw

Time for lunch now, stay tuned!

9 Comments

Håvard / Jazz & Fly Fishing

The flour eating was unbelieably funny. That is actually the hungriest man I have ever seen.

Fredrik is an excellent chef!

Reply
Unikis

I think, that more food is better than less.

It is easy to plan meals for yourself, but to plan meels for all group could be mission impossible 😉

Reply
Graham

Haha I think we have all been there..one too many beers..not enough money for a take away..only a bag of rice in the cupboard..to hungry to wait for it to cook…why does my stomach hurt so much?

P.s have you guys ever used a Kelly Kettle? They are the ultimate bit of camping equipment!

Reply
Joona / Jazz & Fly Fishing

Graham: No, I’ve never seen the Kelly Kettle before. I watched the video on their website and it seems really good! The only problem might be the size of it. You know – fishing equipment with waders, camera gear, clothes, tents, sleeping bags, food for a week & cooking equipment in one back pack…
But the KK would be perfect for a shorter trip for sure!

Reply
Phil Lowry

a friend, who shall remain nameless after spending toooo many nights on the famous Conningbrook lake, decided on a cold and windy evening under canvas… that, wait for it, Curry flavoured Porridge would be a tasty meal. I can suggest, from the look of puppy poo, it wasn’t that appetizing. How do I know this? well, the ejection of the “porridge” was placed at a vantage point for birds and wildlife. for 2 years after this occasion, it was still staining the place where it landed.

another occasion, I ate 1lb of turkey meat, just fried, with a jar of pickles poured on top – again on a trip, far to long for good mental health. I think my colon thanked me for returning to civilisation.

This blog has been a revelation, keep up the great work, if you can call it work :-p

Reply
Graham

Curried porridge!?!! Wow that beats my mate Supernoodle sandwiches hands down haha

Your right Joona the Kelly’s biggest flaw is that they are pretty bulky. But on a long day out they beat a flask of stale tea any day of the week 😀

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