Contributor post by Emily + Erick of Hello Home Shoppe
As summer winds down and our
thoughts turn to fall, we can't seem to let go of the idea of cooking
over an open flame. Even when our grille is safely packed away in the
coming months, we'll still trudge outside with a thermos full of hot
coffee and settle in for a night of fireside cooking. The only problem
is that without a proper campfire cooking set up, you're pretty limited
in your culinary options beyond marshmallows and hotdogs on sticks.
Lately, we've been dreaming of cooking cowboy style: baking bread in a
Dutch oven or simmering a pot of hearty stew over an open flame. Cue
this DIY Campfire Cooking Station. We love this DIY because it's totally
customizable for whatever you're cooking--as long as it has handles,
you can hang it from the s-hooks. Dinner just got more fun!
Things You'll Need
-Three Pieces of 4' Rebar
-11' of Thin Chain
-Small U-Bolt Clamp
-Two S-Hooks
Directions
1.)
Position the tops of the poles so that they are splayed out with the
tops touching as if forming a tripod. Position over an unlit fire.
2.)
Unscrew the u-bar clamp and place the clamp over the top of the three
pieces of rebar. Secure them in place by tightening the screw.
3.) Take one end of the chain and loop the first link with the s-hook.
4.)
Loop the other end of the s-hook through the handle of the pot so that
the s-hook is linking the chain and the pot. To do this, chain must be
held very taught.
5.) Repeat on the other side
so that both handles of the pot are connected to an s-hook.Gather up
the slack in the middle and position the pot in the middle of the poles
6.) Wrap the excess chain around the top of the pole "tripod."
7.) Light fire and enjoy!
Emily Hirsch and Erick Steinberg are blogging duo behind Hello Home Shoppe,
a lifestyle blog with a focus on DIY projects, recipes, and travel.
When they're not blogging or working as 2/4 of the creative agency Jolly
Bureau, they moonlight as locally sourced sandwich vendors in
Philadelphia, PA.
3 comments:
this is the terrific .
I did something similar ... I wanted a hanging grill rack for a tripod my husband forged, but was unable to find any. So I made one out of 255 lb. chain, 3 chain quick links, 1 carabiner & a round grill rack, all heavy-duty. https://www.flickr.com/photos/heathashli/9220543994/
I HIGHLY recommend ANYBODY buy this book by German author Susanne Fischer "Cook Wild". Her book just got translated in 2012 to english. You have no idea how GORGEOUS and enriching cooking outdoors can be! With your kids, solo, or with groups. Fall in love with nature and celebrate its fruits!
http://www.susanne-fischer-rizzi.de/e/books/vorderseite.jpg
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