GSI Outdoors Stainless Dualist Cooking Kit
From GSI: The strength of steel in a backcountry set weighing in a just 13 ounces per person – but fully loaded with all the things you need for cooking and eating. It starts with the durable, efficient 1.8L stainless steel pot. Rust proof and bust proof, it heats efficiently and evenly, cleans up fast, and its cleverly designed lid doubles as a strainer. You also get two 20oz wide-mouth mugs with insulated sleeves and Sip-It lids, two 20oz bowls, a couple of Foons – that’s our folding spork – and a carry bag that doubles as a sink. And it all nests together so perfectly inside the pot that there’s even room for your fuel canister.
From Nick: I’ve tried many backpacking camp cooking kits, and this one is hands down my favorite. The pot can boil enough water to reheat three dehydrated meals, the bowls’ insulation make them perfect for morning oatmeal or coffee, and in a pinch you can separate the bowls to make four separate containers (ideal for morning breakfast/coffee combinations). Best of all, everything - the pot, the two bowls, a fuel canister, and a stove - all nest within each other for great packability and organization. And while it doesn’t have the efficiency of a Jetboil, having a stainless steel pot gives me a great deal of comfort knowing I can toss it in a fire to boil water if I run out of fuel.
The one weakness of this system are the “Foons” - and I’ve replaced mine with titanium long spoons that are sturdier and perfect for reaching down into dehydrated meals. Each rental of this kit comes with two of these titanium spoons as well.
From GSI: The strength of steel in a backcountry set weighing in a just 13 ounces per person – but fully loaded with all the things you need for cooking and eating. It starts with the durable, efficient 1.8L stainless steel pot. Rust proof and bust proof, it heats efficiently and evenly, cleans up fast, and its cleverly designed lid doubles as a strainer. You also get two 20oz wide-mouth mugs with insulated sleeves and Sip-It lids, two 20oz bowls, a couple of Foons – that’s our folding spork – and a carry bag that doubles as a sink. And it all nests together so perfectly inside the pot that there’s even room for your fuel canister.
From Nick: I’ve tried many backpacking camp cooking kits, and this one is hands down my favorite. The pot can boil enough water to reheat three dehydrated meals, the bowls’ insulation make them perfect for morning oatmeal or coffee, and in a pinch you can separate the bowls to make four separate containers (ideal for morning breakfast/coffee combinations). Best of all, everything - the pot, the two bowls, a fuel canister, and a stove - all nest within each other for great packability and organization. And while it doesn’t have the efficiency of a Jetboil, having a stainless steel pot gives me a great deal of comfort knowing I can toss it in a fire to boil water if I run out of fuel.
The one weakness of this system are the “Foons” - and I’ve replaced mine with titanium long spoons that are sturdier and perfect for reaching down into dehydrated meals. Each rental of this kit comes with two of these titanium spoons as well.
From GSI: The strength of steel in a backcountry set weighing in a just 13 ounces per person – but fully loaded with all the things you need for cooking and eating. It starts with the durable, efficient 1.8L stainless steel pot. Rust proof and bust proof, it heats efficiently and evenly, cleans up fast, and its cleverly designed lid doubles as a strainer. You also get two 20oz wide-mouth mugs with insulated sleeves and Sip-It lids, two 20oz bowls, a couple of Foons – that’s our folding spork – and a carry bag that doubles as a sink. And it all nests together so perfectly inside the pot that there’s even room for your fuel canister.
From Nick: I’ve tried many backpacking camp cooking kits, and this one is hands down my favorite. The pot can boil enough water to reheat three dehydrated meals, the bowls’ insulation make them perfect for morning oatmeal or coffee, and in a pinch you can separate the bowls to make four separate containers (ideal for morning breakfast/coffee combinations). Best of all, everything - the pot, the two bowls, a fuel canister, and a stove - all nest within each other for great packability and organization. And while it doesn’t have the efficiency of a Jetboil, having a stainless steel pot gives me a great deal of comfort knowing I can toss it in a fire to boil water if I run out of fuel.
The one weakness of this system are the “Foons” - and I’ve replaced mine with titanium long spoons that are sturdier and perfect for reaching down into dehydrated meals. Each rental of this kit comes with two of these titanium spoons as well.