Camping cooking equipment>
Good food changes how a trip feels. With the right camping cooking equipment, you can boil water quickly on a breezy evening, cook a proper one-pot meal for the family, and still keep pack size under control.
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Moss 2 Cook Set
Moss 4 Cook Set
Moss Tour Cook Set
Adventure Mug
Compact Kettle
Campfire Grill Trivet
Campfire Grill Fork
Campfire Pot 4L
Campfire Aluminium Tripod
Campfire Fire Steel
Adventure Burner
Venture Burner
Storm Cooker
Storm Cooker & Stove set
Which camping cooking equipment do you actually need to get started?
If you are building your first camp kitchen, start with three essentials: heat, cookware, and a safe way to eat. For heat, a compact gas burner gives you quick control for pasta, porridge, and simple sauces. For cookware, think in “real meals” rather than individual items: one pot for boiling, one pan for frying, and lids that help you simmer when the wind picks up. For many campers, the simplest route is a matched set that nests down small and keeps everything together in one bag. If you want a grab-and-go solution for weekend trips, an all-in-one cook set for camp cooking keeps the basics organised from the first brew to the last wash-up.
At easy camp, we focus on simple gear for real adventures: user-friendly designs, reliable materials, and features that make set-up and wash-up less of a chore. Whether you are cooking next to your tent, stopping for lunch on a day hike, or travelling with a vehicle and making dinner at the pitch, a solid camp kitchen lets you spend more time outdoors and less time searching for missing bits.
Do you want fast gas cooking, or slower campfire cooking with camping cooking equipment?
Gas stoves are all about speed and control. A compact screw-on burner is a great fit when you want lightweight camping cooking gear that still delivers serious heat. For example, a high-output burner can bring a litre of water to the boil in minutes, while a model with a sturdier grate feels more stable when you are cooking in bigger pots for two or more people. If you prefer an all-in-one approach, a storm-cooker-style setup combines burner and pots, so your kit stays streamlined.
Campfire cooking is different: it is slower, but it suits relaxed evenings. A tripod with an adjustable chain lets you raise or lower a pot over the embers, and a foldable grill trivet works as both a grill and a pot support. Pack a reliable fire steel as a backup ignition option, especially when conditions are damp.
How do kettles and water carriers improve cooking equipment for camping?
Hot drinks, quick soups, and instant breakfasts are often what you make most, so a kettle earns its space. A compact kettle with a removable lid and handle is easy to pack, and it is convenient when you are pouring carefully in low light. If coffee is part of your routine, a percolator-style coffee pot can be used over the fire, turning a simple breakfast into something you look forward to.
Water is the other half of cooking. A folding water carrier is ideal when you want a small pack size, while a larger jerry can makes sense for families who cook, wash up, and refill bottles without constant trips to the tap. Look for a tap you can control easily so you can fill a kettle, rinse vegetables, or set up a basic wash station at your pitch.
What makes grills and food storage part of cooking camping equipment?
Grilling is not only for big meals; it is also the quickest way to make easy favourites with minimal washing up. A foldable grill trivet can sit above embers, giving you a simple surface for sausages, skewers, or toasted flatbreads. It also doubles as a stable base for a pot, which is handy when you want to keep a pan level over the heat. For the fun extras, a telescopic grill fork is compact and keeps hands further from the fire when you are toasting or heating snacks.
Good storage is what makes meals feel planned rather than improvised. On warmer trips or longer weekends, keep ingredients fresh with a cooler so you can bring yoghurt, salad ingredients, and meat or plant-based options with more confidence. Picnic boxes are also useful for prepped lunches and leftovers.
Which small items of camping cooking gear are easy to forget?
The little pieces often decide whether cooking feels smooth or fiddly. Bring a compact opener for tins and bottles, and consider a small knife sharpener if you cook with fresh ingredients. It takes only a few minutes to touch up a blade, and it can make meal prep safer and faster. If you are cooking on uneven ground, a compact table gives you a stable platform for a stove and keeps your kitchen off damp grass.
Think about clean-up before you start cooking. Use lids to prevent boil-overs, wipe pans while they are still warm (but not hot), and keep a dedicated box for washing-up items so they do not mix with food. This is also where stackable dining sets help: they keep plates and bowls together and reduce rattling in your bag.
Ready to choose camping cooking equipment that suits your trips?
Pick your kit to match how you really travel: quick boils and simple meals call for a compact burner and nesting cookware, while longer stays suit larger pots, a proper water carrier, and campfire options for slower evenings. Once dinner is ready, make eating just as straightforward with lightweight cutlery for easy campsite meals that packs neatly and cleans up without fuss.
Browse the cooking range on our shop and build a setup that fits your space, your menu, and your style of camping. If you want help choosing stoves, cook sets, or campfire essentials, contact easy camp customer service and we will guide you towards reliable gear with value for money.