2004 Expo Recipes
The following recipes, based on some older Expo
dishes devised by Olly
Betts, have been kindly provided by Earl Merson, and were used in the
preparation of 2004's top camp food, which was widely regarded as the best for
many years. They are reproduced here in the hope that future generations of
cavers can enjoy the true delight that can only be attained by emerging after a
hard trip to the tantalising smell and taste of Cheesy Mushroom Noodles.
Daal for 2 people
Carbohydrate:
Veg:
- 16g dried onion
- 84g dried red lentils
- 24g dried mixed vegetables
Sauce:
- 120ml dry curry sauce powder (Bachelors?)
Chilli for 2 people
Carbohydrate:
Veg:
- 12g dried onion
- 12g dried red lentils
- 20g dried TVP mince
- 5g dried mixed vegetables
Sauce: (can be mixed together and divided if making many portions)
- 15ml Maggi mushroom soup mix
- 12g cornflour
- 13g Bachelors bolognaise mix
- 2.5ml salt (1/2 tsp)
- 0.125ml new chilli powder (1/40th tsp) (depends on the strength of
the chilli: Olly used ~2ml for 2 people with old chilli)
Bolognaise for 2 people
Carbohydrate:
Veg:
- 20g dried onion
- 12g dried red lentils
- 50g dried TVP mince
- 12g dried mixed vegetables
Sauce:
- 24g Bachelors bolognaise mix (about 3tbsp)
Curry for 2 people
Carbohydrate:
Veg:
- 20g dried onion
- 12g dried red lentils
- 40g dried TVP mince
- 12g dried mixed vegetables
Sauce:
- 70ml dry curry sauce powder (Bachelors?)
Cheesy Veggie TVP thing (misnamed Risotto...) for 2 people
Carbohydrate:
Veg:
- 20g dried onion
- 12g dried red lentils
- 40g dried TVP mince
- 12g dried mixed vegetables
Sauce:
- 60ml cheese sauce powder
- 60ml thick vegetable soup powder
Macaroni Cheese for 1 person
Carbohydrate:
Sauce:
- 50g cheese sauce powder
- 10g dried grated parmesan
- 1.5ml salt (1/10tbsp)
- 0.5ml coarse ground black pepper (1/20 tsp)
(I mixed the sauce in batches of 20 portions, then divided into 20 by
weight)
Cheesy Mushroom Noodles for 1 person
Carbohydrate:
Sauce:
- 32g cheese sauce powder
- 13.2g mushroom soup powder
- 1.25ml salt (1/4tsp)
- 0.1ml coarse ground black pepper (1/48 tsp)
- 0.05ml cayenne pepper (1/96 tsp)
(I mixed the sauce in batches of 24 portions, then divided into 24 by weight)
Tips
- Get a proper set of tsp, tbsp & cup measures and electronic scales.
- First weigh your mixing bowl while it is empty, so you can work out how much
is in it.
- Most stuff is meaured by weight directly into bags, except the powders which
are largely by volume. Don't be tempted to mix piles of mince with lentils
and/or powders, as the smaller things settle to the bottom. Onion & mixed
veg can be mixed & weighed together, as they don't seem to separate
significantly.
- Try your first meals in case you have particularly strong, bland, salty,
etc. ingredients.
- Bag the sauce, veg & carbohydrate in ther own respective bags. Nest the
sauce bag in the veg bag in the carbohydrate bag.
- Don't use wire ties (they puncture the bags): just knot the bags. Make sure
the whole rim of the bag is outside the knot.
- Supply a big jar of dried mushrooms, some small pots of coarse ground black
pepper and plastic salt pots for people to season their food: most of the
meals are mild, and those with stronger tastes can add extra.
Notes
- The Chilli seems a bit low on veg compared to the others, though I didn't
spot this causing a problem.
- Beware of non-linear scales: 1.2kg of probably mix won't weigh out as 20
lots of 60g (I measured 20 lots of 56g!)
- Salt is hygroscopic and will get damp and clog if open. You need a small
*plastic* pot with a *closeable spout* (a ring of small holes will just let
damp in and clog up). You may well need to search for such a product.
Flapjack
In order of melting & mixing:
- 500g Stork margarine
- 500g Billingtons dark brown molasses sugar
- 4 large swirled desert spoons Tate & Lyle golden syrup
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 250g Tesco value mixed dried fruit
- 1kg Tesco value oats
Pressed and smoothed into two A4 trays lined with baking parchment, and
baked at 150 degrees Centigrade in a fan oven (175 if no fan?) until
(approximately) just the edges and rasins turn darker (i.e. about the time
it takes to mix the next batch...)