Want to rustle up some tasty grub during your hiking expedition? We set out to find the best backpacking cookware sets to make trailside cooking easy.
Published Oct. 27, 2021.
After testing a variety of backpacking cookware sets, we picked the GSI Outdoors Pinnacle Backpacker Cookset as our top choice because of its supereasy-to-clean nonstick surfaces, stability, and versatility. These qualities were essential when cooking a variety of lightweight backpacking fare.
Unlike the Lord of the Rings character Samwise Gamgee, who hauled cast-iron cookware across Middle-earth on his trip to Mount Doom, most backpackers prefer to travel a little more lightly. Enter backpacking cookware sets, which are lighter and more compact: Handles fold in or detach completely, and the cookware can be nested together for ultimate portability. In some sets, skillets double as pot lids to really keep extras to a minimum. This minimalist style of cookware is ideal for using with backpacking stoves, which aren’t sturdy enough to support the weight of standard kitchen pots and pans. In contrast, car camping stoves can be used with heavier cookware and are often used to cook more complex meals.
For this testing, we focused on backpacking cookware sets that included at least one pot and one skillet and that weighed less than 3 pounds. Sets that weigh more than 3 pounds are too heavy to carry on long treks.
The cookware sets we tested came in all shapes and sizes, with the lightest weighing a mere 10.4 ounces. They were also made from various materials, including titanium, hard-anodized aluminium, and stainless steel; one set featured a pot and kettle with collapsible silicone sides that were supported by aluminum bases. Three sets claimed to have some sort of nonstick capability, but only one lived up to that claim.
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