by azbackpackr » Apr 25 2012 8:16 pm
I'm too sleepy to get whether or not HPP is kidding...
I learned some from watching some Scouters (Scout leaders), but mostly from reading a DO cookbook which will tell you exactly how many charcoals you need to put underneath the pot and on its lid, how long to leave it cooking, etc. I suppose there is a fine art to not burning bread, but other dishes were not too hard, I didn't think, as long as you follow the directions. The best thing we ever made, my son made the sauce, was a ham with cloves stuck in it and with a sauce of kiwi fruit, honey and lemon, not sure what else. It was at New Years and we were camped way out in the desert near Babo.
As for using it on a "fire" I have never seen that done with any success. You use manufactured charcoals, so that you can control the heat. You make your charcoal fire, maybe you are grilling steaks, and you take a specific number of those charcoals and put them on the ground separately, and set the pan on them. Then you put a specific number of charcoals on top of the lid. If you are not doing that, it's not really DO cooking. I suppose you could use natural coals from a wood fire, but then you would not have as good control over the heat. So therefore I think you would want to use a "fire" only after lot of practice, (and burning a lot of meals) whereas by using manufactured charcoals and following the directions in one of the DO cookbooks, you can pretty much control the heat by using a specific number of charcoals, top and bottom. True, it may not be what the cowboys did, but I'd recommend it for a beginner. The DO is an oven. You are not supposed to open it all the time and look in while you are baking something. It's not a cook pot in the sense that you open it up all the time and stir.
There is a point of no return unremarked at the time in most lives. Graham Greene The Comedians
Steal your face right off your head!