These are the meals I actually pack, not a theoretical list. Each one follows the same core rule from my backpacking meal prep guide: cook fully first, dry components separately, and test rehydration at home before relying on it on the trail.
In This Article
Trail Chili
Cook a standard ground meat and bean chili fully at home, spread it in a thin, even layer on a solid liner sheet, and dehydrate at 135–145°F until fully dry and slightly crumbly — typically 8–10 hours depending on thickness. Break the dried chili into smaller pieces before packaging for faster, more even rehydration.
Drain excess fat from the meat before dehydrating. Fat doesn’t dry out the way lean protein does, and it shortens the meal’s shelf life significantly.
Rehydration: add boiling water directly to the bag, seal, and let sit 10–15 minutes.
Backcountry Rice Bowl
Cook rice fully, then dry on a standard tray at 125–135°F for 4–6 hours until hard and brittle. Dry pre-cooked, diced chicken or another lean protein separately on its own tray, since it dries at a different rate than rice. Combine rice and protein after both are fully dried, then add a dehydrated vegetable mix (see below) at packaging time.
Rehydration: add boiling water, seal, and let sit 12–15 minutes, stirring once halfway through.
Pasta with Meat Marinara
Use small pasta shapes (rather than long noodles) for easier rehydration. Cook pasta and sauce separately, dry the sauce as a thin layer on a solid liner sheet until leathery, and dry the pasta on a standard tray until hard, roughly 4–6 hours for both components. Break the dried sauce into flakes before packaging.
Skip heavy cream-based sauces for this recipe. Dairy fat doesn’t dehydrate safely for long-term trail storage and can turn rancid even when the rest of the meal looks fine.
Rehydration: add boiling water, seal, and let sit 15 minutes.
Vegetable Lentil Soup
Cook lentils and diced vegetables fully in a light broth, drain most of the liquid, and dry the solids on a standard tray at 125–135°F for 6–8 hours. This one holds up particularly well to dehydrating since lentils rehydrate reliably and vegetables retain reasonable texture.
Rehydration: add boiling water, seal, and let sit 15–20 minutes.
Frequently Asked Questions
It varies by recipe, but roughly 1 to 1.5 cups of boiling water per serving is a common starting point. Test your specific meal at home to nail down the exact ratio before relying on it in the field.
Yes — the rice bowl and pasta recipes both work well with beans, lentils, or a plant-based protein substituted for meat, following the same cook-first, dry-separately process.
Properly dried and vacuum-sealed, most of these meals keep for several months to about a year in cool, dry storage. Leaner recipes (like the rice bowl) generally last longer than fattier ones.
Bottom Line
All four recipes follow the same underlying process — cook fully, dry components separately, break into smaller pieces before packaging. Once you’ve made one successfully, adapting your own favorite meals to the same method is straightforward.