My Packit Gourmet has arrived and I’m ready for adventure!

My Packit Gourmet has arrived and I’m ready for adventure!

My shipment of dehydrated meals just arrived from Packit Gourmet. Pam LeBlanc photo


I just got a shipment of dehydrated meals, the first sign of my upcoming trip to the Texas Coast to follow the Arctic Cowboys (plus one) as they paddle from Boca Chica Beach to Sabine Pass.
I’m pretty psyched, since I’ve been at home since flying in from Canada on March 5. To celebrate, I got a brain-tickling nasal swab COVID-19 test at a drive-through station today, something all four members of the expedition – trip leader West Hansen, Jeff Wueste, Branndon Bargo and Jimmy Harvey – are also doing to make sure we don’t cross contaminate one another.
The food came from Packit Gourmet, an Austin-based company I discovered in 2016, when I wrote about them for the Austin American-Statesman. (Read the article at https://www.statesman.com/NEWS/20161208/Austin-based-Packit-Gourmet-makes-meals-fit-for-the-back-country?_ga=2.143733554.663474386.1589468570-1283764380.1333191630.)
Sarah Welton hatched the idea for the company, which makes lightweight camping meals that taste like real food, instead of heavily-salted cardboard, while she was earning a graduate business degree from the University of Colorado Boulder. She’d grown up paddle camping with her parents, self-described hippies who dehydrated their own ingredients to cook along the way.

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Welton’s mom, Debbie Mullins, developed some of the recipes, which Welton tried on her classmates. The company officially launched in 2008 with a few items including Austintacious tortilla soup. A popular backpacking blogger bought mentioned the meals on her blog and recommended them to Backpacker Magazine, which awarded Packit Gourmet an editor’s choice award.
I took an array of meals along when I backpacked the John Muir Trail four years ago, and loved the stuff. I poured boiling water into what looked like a bowl of confetti but bloomed into a piping hot bowl of chicken and dumplings. The Texas State Fair Chili got the highest marks from me. (I wasn’t so thrilled about the “hamburger,” which requires a tortilla for wrapping.) The breakfasts are the best – particularly the West Memphis Grits Souffle. And who doesn’t like banana pudding, especially while backpacking?
Today’s shipment includes a few I haven’t tried yet: Polenta with Pork Sausage and Pasta Beef Bolognese. Stay tuned for a full report on those.
In all, the company offers about 50 different meals, including vegetarian, vegan, gluten-free and dairy-free options, all easily prepared with hot or cold water. Top sellers include Big Easy gumbo, high-protein smoothies and something called Ramen Rescue, a pack of dried veggies designed to spice up your own noodles.

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Chili and chicken and dumplings top the menu for next week’s backpacking trip

Chili and chicken and dumplings top the menu for next week’s backpacking trip

Chris LeBlanc prepares oatmeal and dried strawberries while backpacking the John Muir Trail in 2016. Pam LeBlanc photo

I’ve been busy this week gathering food for my upcoming trip to Glacier National Park.

Yesterday, I received a shipment of dehydrated meals from Austin-based Packit Gourmet. On the menu? Dottie’s Chicken and Dumplings, Texas State Fair Chili, West Memphis Grits Souffle and Mom’s Banana Puddin’.

Yum.

Here’s my shipment of Packit Gourmet meals for next week’s trip to Glacier National Park. Pam LeBlanc photo

I’ve been a fan of the brand since I met company founders Sarah Welton and her mother Debbie Mullins about three years ago. They gave me some meals to take and test when I spent 15 days backpacking the John Muir Trail in California. (Until then, my go-to brand of dehydrated meals was Mountain House, and I still like their pasta primavera and lasagna.)

Here’s what I wrote after that trip:

“My verdict? The breakfasts — especially the West Memphis Grits Souffle — tasted like real (and really good) food. The desserts, especially the banana pudding, also sent my taste buds sizzling. The entrees were more hit and miss — I loved the chicken and dumplings, and Texas State Fair chili eased my craving for nachos. But the All-American Burger Wrap (provide your own tortilla) didn’t thrill me. And one complaint: Too much packaging, especially when you have to haul out all the waste.”

The Mullins family did a lot of canoe camping when Sarah was growing up. Debbie made all the meals. When Sarah grew up, she realized she didn’t like any of the freeze-dried meals on the market for backpackers, so the two got together and came up with their own.

Dottie’s Chicken and Dumplings looks like confetti until you add the hot water. Then it blooms into real – and real yummy – food. Pam LeBlanc photo

I visited the company’s humble headquarters out on Fitzhugh Road, where we brewed up a batch of Dottie’s Chicken and Dumplings, named after Welton’s grandmother, for lunch. I remember thinking it looked like a bowl of confetti that bloomed into a piping hot bowl of actual food when we poured hot water over it.

Packit Gourmet launched in 2008 with just a few items, including Austintacious Tortilla Soup. Backpacker Magazine awarded the company an editor’s choice award for the soup, and Packit was on its way.

Today the company offers about 50 different meals, including vegetarian, vegan, gluten-free and dairy-free options. There’s Tuscan beef stew, shepherd’s cottage pie, Meyer lemon cheesecake and even a powdered margarita mix to pour into water or alcohol. Unlike some freeze-dried meals, they don’t taste like salted cardboard!

And look – banana puddin’ for dessert! Pam LeBlanc photo

The packaging has changed in the last few years. There are fewer individually packaged items within each meal, and most come in their own “cook-in” bags. Just add hot water. Some need only cold water. A few require a skillet for preparation.

The biggest selection is available online, but select items are sold locally at Whole Earth Provision Company.

About Pam

I’m Pam LeBlanc. Follow my blog to keep up with the best in outdoor travel and adventure. Thanks for visiting my site.

Where is Pam?

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