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EntertainmentHow to Survive in the Wilderness

How to Cook Fish over a Campfire

Transcript

There are many ways to cook our fish. We could just lay it in the coals. We can take a couple sticks, lay them over the coals, and put our fish right over, so that it’s not totally burning on the fire, but it’s getting enough heat to cook it. That should cook pretty well, just like that. So we’ve got a lot of heat rising into it. That’ll cook our fish. We’ll give it a few minutes and it should be done and delicious. And our eggs have cooled off. We have one baked egg, one hard-boiled egg, so we have a couple eggs and a nice piece of fish, blue gill. Protein-rich breakfast. To complement it, we’ll probably go out and find some wild edibles, nuts and things like that, we’ll look for in a little bit.

All right. Our fish is just really perfectly done right now, our eggs are perfectly done. One of the things that I like to have with me in the back country, and this is kind of an ancient cooking secret, this is a piece of rawhide sewn with sinew, leg tendon, with a cork in top. It contains a magic ingredient, known as salt. It works great on your fish, works great on your eggs. Salt is a great things to have with you in the back country. You can make it if you’re at the ocean, or if you’re in Utah at the Great Salt Lake. It makes everything taste a lot better. Delicious.

Hard-boiling your eggs is a great way to carry them around with you if you find a bunch of eggs. By the way, eggs are among the easiest animals to hunt, because they don’t run very fast and they don’t hurt you and they’re all edible. If you’re hunting, eggs are easy prey to take.

Delicious. Our fish has cooked to a perfect consistency and deliciousness. You can pick the bones out, eat the meat off the bones, or just pull them off with your fingers. You can also save the bones, grind them up into bone meal, and eat the bones too. Again, great calcium. But this fish is cooked to perfection. I’m a fish snob, and there’s nothing like fish that just came out of the water and you’re eating right away. There’s no comparison to eating fish from a seafood market or a restaurant.


Lessons in this Guide

First Aid Basics for Wilderness Survival

How to Tell Direction in the Wilderness Using a Watch

How to Make Wood Tongs for Rock Cooking

How to Build a Bed for an Outdoor Shelter

How to Purify Water for Rock Boiling

How to Deal with a Dangerous Animal

How to Adjust a Fish Snare

How to Send an Emergency Signal in the Wilderness

How to Survive in the Wilderness with Marko Yurachek

How to Send an Emergency Signal using a Reflective Surface

How to Find Worms for Your Fish Hook

How to Find a Ready-Made Shelter in the Wilderness

How to Attach a Fish Snare Trigger to a Tree

How to Make a Stone Tool

How to Forecast Weather in the Wilderness

How to Rock Boil Water Safely

How to Set Up a Cooking Fire in the Wilderness

How to Cook Using Rock-Boiled Water

What to Have in a Survival Kit

Hygiene Skills for the Outdoors

How to Cook Fish over a Campfire

How to Make a Hook for a Fish Snare

Survival Kit Essentials

How to Find a Good Spot for an Outdoor Shelter

How to Make a Fireplace for an Outdoor Shelter

How to Make Cordage (Rope) in the Wilderness

How to Make a Trigger for a Fish Snare

How to Gut a Fish with a Stone Tool

How to Build a Roof for an Outdoor Shelter

How to Build the Framework for an Outdoor Shelter

How to Make a Burn Bowl

How to Tell Direction in the Wilderness using Stick Shadows

How to Store Water in the Wilderness

How to Forage for Food in the Autumn

Where to Find Clean Water in the Wilderness

How to Store Food Outdoors in the Wilderness

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