Steaming Vegetables in the Pressure Cooker – a Simple Why & How
Steaming vegetables in a pressure cooker is the easiest thing to do with a delicious result. Here are our examples.
Steaming vegetables in a pressure cooker is the easiest thing to do with a delicious result. Here are our examples.
The pressure cooker is one of our favorite overland food tools, not in the least to cook soup. Here’s our simple pressure-cooker soup recipe.
Why use a pressure cooker on your overland journey? Simply, it saves time, fuel, and water so cooking with a pressure cooker is our default.
The quickest and easiest meal when overlanding: rice with vegetables in de pressure cooker. Here are ideas how to prepare this dish.
Pressure Cooker 101 covers the basics of using a pressure cooker, specifically a Hawkins Futura. Water quantities & time tables, and PDFs.
A jar of chickpeas works but dried chickpeas in a pressure cooker is cheaper. Use a fork or blender? Tips to make our homemade hummus.
Pressure cooking; fast, cheap, easy, and super healthy! Here’s our latest pressure cooker recipe: leek and sweet potato soup.
A favorite soup of Landcruising Adventure and easy to make in the pressure cooker: pumpkin soup with an extra bite of mushrooms and lentils.
An Indian pressure-cooker dish, gobi masala. A spicy cauliflower dish easy to make, and never enough because it’s so delicious.
Finding chestnuts on the trail, or your overland camp. What a treat, but how to cook the chestnuts? Let me share our pressure cooker trick!
Sometimes you are parked in a perfect spot with just enough shade to sit outside and the sun turning to the right side of the car so you can cook … Read more
Of the 400 articles on our Landcruising Adventure website, which are best read? What have been your most popular blog posts on our website?
17+ years on the road and we’ve never shared much about what kitchen tools we use in our overland kitchen, apart from the Coleman Stove, Coleman Camp Oven and the … Read more
Mung beans are among my favorite legumes. They belong to the family of beans and lentils. And I discovered that mung-beans do very well in courgette soup (among other things). … Read more
Over the years we have become ambassadors of a couple of things in the food department. As such, the purchase of a pressure cooker and baking your own bread has … Read more
Why Buy a Coleman Camp Oven? Is it worth the investment, the space it takes in the car? After 10 years we bought one, and here’s why.
There are times we live on salads, or on soups, or on pressure cooker dishes. And, sometimes, we live on stir fry vegetables. This change of types of food may … Read more
“Life is what happens to us while we are making other plans.” ~Allen Saunders One day we were hiking in the Negev Desert, in Israel, and 48 hours later we … Read more
Living together 24/7, working and overlanding the world together… How do we create space, deal with arguments, and appreciate each other?
When you’re going to travel overland, one of the equipment questions is whether to buy an overland fridge or not. Here are pros and cons.
Check out this vegan brownie recipe, made with a surprising ingredient: black beans.
Why we chose a Coleman stove: the major advantage of cooking on gasoline and other issues with regard to this stove.
Here’s your Overland Travel Guide for Venezuela: border crossing, money matters, road conditions, roadmaps & gas stations and much more travel information.
We crossed Los Llanos in Colombia, a spectacular 6-day road trip across vast plains with cattle, wildlife and oil business.
Road Travel in Peru continues with photos on and along the road from Arequipa to Lima via Paracas, plus the Cordillera Blanca and Cajamarca region.
Flexcooking in Peru: new equipment, cooking at different altitudes and experimenting with Peruvian food.
Fun to know: What is the best thing overlanders brought on your journey? The stupid thing? And what should they have brought instead?
Europe in South America: French Guiana. It has the euro and lots of good wine and cheese. It’s also on a major drug trafficking route – how safe is it?