Road Trip with Vehicle Equipped for Cooking/Freezing

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Gloria
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Road Trip with Vehicle Equipped for Cooking/Freezing

Post by Gloria »

DH and I finally took a week-long road trip to Iowa and Missouri last week to test how well our vehicle set-up would work. We also wanted to visit some church history sites and I did some genealogy research.

For those new to the board, we bought a Toyota Sienna last year and had an inverter, isolator, and second battery installed in it so that I could run a microwave and a portable chest freezer. See this thread for more information on the setup: http://www.perskyfarms.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=13272

EATING/FOOD PREPARATION
The last road trip we took ( http://www.perskyfarms.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=10275 )was different because I was still able to eat chicken, beef, rice and potatoes. We ate dinner out every evening at Outback Steakhouse, P.F. Chang's, Arby's, and Olive Garden. Those restaurants are off-limits for me now.

Breakfast on this trip was never a problem because we stayed in motels which offered free continental breakfast for DH. I ate Corn Chex, waffles or pancakes with turkey sausage, and corn polenta with pork sausage, all in the hotel/motel room. We always made sure the room had a refrigerator and microwave. My waffles and pancakes stayed frozen in the car freezer, so I only needed to heat them.

I had made a list of everything that needed to be packed in the freezer and in the cooler. I packed the unrefrigerated food and cooking equipment and DH packed the frozen and refrigerated foods. Our first problem arose when I realized that DH didn't pack my turkey and pork sausages. We couldn't find the brand I've found to be safe (Jones) in grocery stores, so we bought frozen GF-labeled pork sausage and a frozen Jimmy Dean turkey sausage package. I don't know if they were a problem or not.

For lunch, I was able to easily reheat my meat and corn tortillas in the microwave at a rest stop. Cutting and mashing the avocado was also pretty easy. I zapped the frozen mango chunks and ate them for dessert. Making the turkey soup required more preparation and cooking. Of course, DH was done eating his sandwich before I even began, but he is a very patient man and didn't complain.

We arrived at the motel at dinnertime and we were both hungry. This was always our biggest dilemma. We ended up trying four different solutions:

1. We both ate out.
This always poses a risk for me. The first night we ate at a German restaurant after reading their menu online. I ordered smoked pork chops with an oven-baked potato. They no longer offered the Roulada Beef that DH wanted, so he ordered a burger. I noticed that my pork chops had the same grill markings that his burger had. Sigh. The potato was skinned and baked. The second time we ate out was at a BBQ steakhouse. I called first to verify that they had turkey and could order it w/o any sauce. I also ordered steamed cauliflower (also came with carrots and broccoli) with nothing on it. My order arrived with two slices of bread atop the turkey. I removed them and ate the turkey that was away from the bread.

2. DH ordered a take-out dinner and I heated/cooked my dinner in the motel.
This worked OK, but motels don't usually have a large eating area. DH ate his take-out at the desk while I cooked my meal, then we switched. I brought a single burner and used it for cooking. I was afraid to use the burner and the in-room microwave at the same time, so my meals took a little longer to make than usual. I cooked my vegetable in the microwave.

3. We both cooked and ate our dinners in the motel.
With one burner and microwave, we cooked in shifts. Since DH is diabetic, I let him cook first. I'm fairly used to being hungry, so it didn't bother me. Once again, we shared the desk when we ate.

4. DH went in a restaurant to order his meal while I cooked mine in the car. I then brought it in the restaurant to eat.
DH said that the restaurant patrons had some nice entertainment watching me prepare my meal at our car while they ate. I was in the back of the car, preparing the cauliflower, getting the cooking pot, opening the freezer (I had to climb in through the open back), etc. By the time I cooked my meal and brought it into the restaurant, DH was done eating. I noticed that patrons watched me as I walked through with my plate.

None of the above solutions seemed totally satisfactory, though they were all doable. We didn't have any rain, however. I'm sure that cooking out of the back of the vehicle would have presented a whole new set of problems with rainy/bad weather.

EQUIPMENT

1. Freezer
The freezer worked well, except when the auxiliary battery ran low. Then the temperature raised to about 37 degrees. My meats stayed frozen, but the softer foods (DH's bread, mango pieces, sorbet) didn't. We kept the freezer in the car at all times because it was so heavy to move. On our tests at home, it would run for two days before the battery ran low. I figured out that it ran low the days that I cooked my meal in the car microwave and we didn't drive the car long enough afterward to recharge the battery.

2. Microwave
We unplugged the microwave each time after using it. This necessitated resetting the clock each time I had to cook. When the auxiliary battery ran low, we had to run the car while I heated my foods. It took a while to figure out that solution. I was standing in the back where the exhaust was, but it pointed to the side, so it didn't bother me. I would walk away until it was done.

3. Cooler
We have a thermoelectric cooler which plugs into the 12v connection. It worked well without any issues.

4. Crockpots
We have a 12v and a 110v crockpot. I didn't use either on the trip. The microwave was more convenient. Given the battery issues the microwave caused, I probably should use the crockpots more often. The battery amount required for them is much less.

CLEANUP
We placed our dirty dishes in a plastic bag and washed them each day in the motel. We bought a Coleman dish pan/drainer setup which worked quite well. It has a battery-operated rinse hose attached to a lid. One pan went in the sink, one pan held the drainer, and the third pan held the rinse water. The rinse hose hooked into the top and sprayed at a diagonal on the dishes. To rinse, we pressed a button and the water sprayed. It was very convenient.

My overall assessment of the setup: we still have some tweaking to do. I need to use the crock pots for my dinner meals. That would save a lot of preparation time at dinnner, plus the battery would be fully charged to keep the freezer running overnight. It would also allow me to eat in restaurants with DH. I think we both were trying to accomodate each other's desire for eating. Unfortunately, I'm having a flare and have gone back on 3 Entocort a day for the time being. It may be that the mango smoothie I had on our last day caused the problem, though I began deteriorating prior to eating the smoothie. I specified that I only wanted mango and ice, but you never know what you're actually going to get in a restaurant.

I am :xfingers: that this flare is temporary and I can get back to having Normans again.

We did enjoy the historic sites and I found some new genealogy information. I'm fortunate that DH entertains himself while I research. He visited museums two days and read the other two. Our plan for retirement has always been to travel and do genealogy research along the way. One day we hope to go to Germany where DH was born so he can do his research.

If anyone is interested in my packing list, let me know and I can try to post it.

Gloria
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Post by wonderwoman »

What a journey Gloria. I admire you for your persistence with this disease and yet you keep having setbacks. My DH would not have the patience your husband has. His thinking is, Just pop another pill.
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Post by tex »

Every trip is a unique adventure. Eating out always makes me very nervous, because we have no way of knowing when someone might forget and throw a slice of bread on our plate and then realize their mistake and remove it. The contamination is there, but we can't see it. Grilling food is risky too, as you noted, and even cooking breakfast on a griddle is risky, because even though you ask them to scrape the griddle before placing your food on it, if they don't carefully clean that spatula, or use a fresh one, it will contaminate the food. Also, a griddle in a busy place will always have other foods on it, and if the cook forgets and reaches over and flips a couple of buns or slices of toast, while cooking your eggs, hash browns, or whatever, the damage is done.

I realize some people don't care for them, but as far as I'm concerned, paper plates and bowls, and plastic cups, forks, spoons and knives are the handiest thing since sliced bread when camping out. They cut the dish washing chores down to size in a hurry. For someone as lazy as I, they've virtually indispensable. :lol:

Thanks for the detailed review, and I sure hope the flare settles down soon.

Tex
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Post by Gabes-Apg »

Gloria
thanks for sharing the set up and the events of your trip.

Sorry you are having symptoms. for those of us that are a bit more sensitive than others, i wonder if we react to different water source ?

every 4-6 weeks i stay with friends in Brisbane, i take all my preprepared meals, try to eat at the same time as i do at home. The only thing that is not the same as home is the water. I always have some slight reations for 12 - 24 hours after leaving.

all in all, to have the trip, test out the set up of the vehicle and get some new genology information is very exciting! (i dabble in family history as well)

hope you are feeling better and norman has returned
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Gloria
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Post by Gloria »

Thanks, Gabes. I am doing better. Not completely back to Normans, but getting there.

Gloria
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Post by JLH »

Would love to see that list Gloria and a photo of the car set up, if possible.

Going to see my Mom to celebrate her 96th birthday.Two overnights on the road and four days in a rented house (she's in assisted living).

I don't know why the whole trip is so daunting to me but it just is.

Glad you are better. i am doing better than I was a few weeks ago but still very limited foods after four loooooong years. :sad:
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Gloria
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Post by Gloria »

I don't have a photo of my car setup yet, but here is a list of the items I packed (and used).

Cooler
Salad dressing
Mustard packets
Catsup packets
Ghee
Soft Margarine
Cherry & mango jelly
Pre-cooked bacon
asparagus, cauliflower
Chocolate
Almond milk in flexible bottles
Cans pop
Eggs
Almond butter packets
Syrup
Avocados
tortillas
Ham & cheese
Polenta

Freezer
Hamburger patties
Hamburger buns
Almond milk in flexible bottle
Waffles
Pancakes
Corn muffins, Maple muffins, almond muffins
Rye bread
Pork (cooked and sliced) & gravy
Lamb & gravy
Turkey & gravy
Ice cream & mango sorbet (both melted)
Pork & turkey sausage

Suitcase
Energy Bars, Lara bars
Turkey broth
Potato chips
Fruit cups
Sugar
Corn noodles
cookies
Cooking oil
Silk Almond milk (shelf stable)
container of milk
Corn grits
Canned mango
Salt & pepper shaker
Wet ones
Corn Chex and Honey Chex
Dried mango slices
Corn Poppers
Sesame candy pieces

Cooking Utensils
Camping pots (2), small pot and lid, frying pan (1)
Can opener
Cutting board
1 cooking burner, 750 watts
Spatulas, teflon & plastic spoons
Cutting knife
Potholders
Dishcloth
Dishtowel
Liquid milk or juice containers
Dish detergent
Timer
Tupperware bowl and lid
Dishpan & rack
dishcloths & dishtowels
Plastic mixing bowl
1 qt Crock pot – 12V
1½ qt. Crock pot - AC
Rubbermaid bowl with lid
Ziploc blue dishes, bowls & lids
Corningware grab-it pans & lids
Paper plates, napkins, cups
Plastic forks, knives, spoons
Wooden spoon
Tuffy pad
Soft scrub
Dish pan
Paper towels
Microwave oven

I hope this helps. I packed some food for DH, especially lunch items. It's most important to bring your food. It's not always available in rural areas.

Gloria
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Post by JLH »

Thank you very much, Gloria.

You can eat salad? Jealous.

Hitting the dusty trail today to celebrate my Mom's 96th birthday. Got cooler and toaster oven. Renting a house since Mom lives in assisted living now.

Packed a lot of chicken and applesauce. Frozen waffles and cereal.

:coach:
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Gloria
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Post by Gloria »

I haven't tried eating a salad for 4 years. I'm not quite sure what dressing I would put on it because I can't eat vinegar, lemon or olive oil. Plus, I can't eat tomatoes , cucumbers, olives or raw vegetables. I'm just thinking about it and what I could use for dressing if I did. A woman can dream, anyway.

Good luck on your trip. I brought a toaster oven on our trip, but I never used it. DH thought he would cook some frozen dinners in it. Never happened.

Gloria
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Post by Gabes-Apg »

Gloria
how is the digestion?

as i thought about trips i have done, it seems like the time that you are away, it takes the equivalent time to recouperate.

ie
1 week away, 1 week to recover
3 weeks away, 3 weeks to recover

thanks for sharing the list, pre MC when i did lots of camping, i had tubs set up with pretty much with most of the items on your list. it was much easier to have the items packed ready to go rather than taking things from the main kitchen. one tub was prep type items (chopping boards cooking utensils, salt pepper oil other staples) one tub was consuming (non breakable cups, plates, glasses and disposables to follow tex's idea of not washing up! clip lock bags for leftovers etc)

to pack the car to go away it would only take me about 20 mins, i just had to put the cold foods in the esky and i was ready to go!
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Gloria
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Post by Gloria »

Gabes wrote:how is the digestion?

as i thought about trips i have done, it seems like the time that you are away, it takes the equivalent time to recouperate.

ie
1 week away, 1 week to recover
3 weeks away, 3 weeks to recover
You must have a 6th sense, Gabes. Or else you detected a discouraged tone in my posts.

I was doing better, but now I'm not. I can't figure it out because I'm eating nothing new. I suspect that a batch of my white corn flour is contaminated with gluten. It cooked differently, and I just started using it this week. I'm remaking all my items with a different batch, or with yellow corn flour. If that resolves it, I'm probably going to buy whole kernels of dried white corn and grind it myself.

The only other thing it could be is the mango. I hope it's not, because I don't know what I'll do.

Gloria
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Post by Gabes-Apg »

not sure it was either gloria, :smile: ( i dont think i have esp powers)
more so, i know how much effort you had put into 'being able to travel' and was interested how things were going.

and also interesting what you say about your flour mix, i have been buying, non GMO organic yellow corn flour, it cooks differently but i dont react at all to it.

it is mighty frustrating that a minor change in an ingredient can cause us issues... I hope the inflammation settles down soon and you can start planning your next trip!

how far back have you gone with the genology?
Gabes Ryan

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Post by Gloria »

This is the first time I've suspected gluten-contaminated corn flour. I'm doing better today, so I'm even more suspicious of it.
Gabes wrote:how far back have you gone with the genology?
In most of my lines, back to early 1800's. My maiden name is Smith, and almost all other names I research are common, too. No royalty in my history! Crossing the Atlantic to Europe is the most difficult. There is an annual reunion for the Norwegians here in the U.S. and they've kept the history of the immigration to the US and the descendents. I'm the present historian of the group and have traced the family in Norway from the immigration back to the beginning of the church records in the 1500's.

Gloria
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Post by Gabes-Apg »

Wow - 1500's that is amazing

i am back to 1600's - definately no royalty i am mostly convicts and subsidised migrants.
although my claim to fame is that the 'Ryan's (my surname ie being my dads family) did pay their way to Australia in the 1850's


hope the digestion continues to improve, amazing how a small amount of contamination can cause so many issues.....
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