1 cup starter
2 cups water
3 cups flour
1 tbsp. salt
I believe that sourdough bread making might also be good for camping except for the 4.5 quart cast iron Dutch oven. Maybe a cast iron skillet with another cooking pot as a cover. Would like to hear suggestions and solutions you may have already tried. Best wishes, Dave.
This will be time, person & place specific. As an example, it is very unlikely Frontiersmen in the East or Mountain Men in the West would have baked bread in camp though baking was possible in towns, forts and other settlements. The availability of wheat flour is also a consideration - common people had corn (primarily) and corn flour doesn't work for a yeast bread since it doesn't contain gluten and doesn't rise.
In other words, you are doing something that in all likelihood WOULD NOT have been done in camp.
Now, if you were demonstrating cooking in a Dutch oven (another item unlikely to be dragged to camp), you'd be good. But if you are trying to demonstrate what would have been done while out in the field between 1700 and 1850, you'd be probably would be in left field.
It all depends on what you are trying to achieve...
The Lewis & Clark expedition cherished their dutch ovens. They were likely baking bread.
I will defer to those with more background information on the Lewis & Clark Expedition, but as a former chef and baker, I can tell you that several hundred pounds of coarse milled, early 19th Century, whole wheat flour won't go very far in making the robust, 2-3 pound loaves that were common in those days, for feeding a 45-man party.
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