Cast Iron Skillet Bacon Cheeseburger

Make the whole campground hungry for this cast iron skillet bacon cheeseburger campfire cooking lunch recipe with hand made beef patties on a brioche bun.
They say everything goes better with bacon. Bacon is amazing but so are many other pork additions to your breakfast, lunch, and dinner dishes. Savor our ham, bacon, prosciutto, and other pork campfire cooking recipes. Breakfast, lunch, and dinner meals tested to pair well with your latest outdoor adventure.
Make the whole campground hungry for this cast iron skillet bacon cheeseburger campfire cooking lunch recipe with hand made beef patties on a brioche bun.
Yeah, you read that right. When we stopped off at OstrichLand USA, we picked up an emu egg as a gift for our next host. The morning after we arrive in Palm Springs, I am ready with a treat for…
Shrimp and grits originated as a hearty breakfast for southern fishermen. Over time, there has been many varying interpretations on the dish, but I've started with a pretty common recipe including cheddar cheese and bacon. My own contributions are little tweaks to better accommodate our nomadic limitations.
Traveling on the road, even when it's the two of us, can get kinda lonesome. I have a brilliant, kind, rational, hard-working, funny, and adventurous travel companion. But sometimes, we want to also have friends. Traveling does allow us to visit friends who have scattered all over the place, but there are also long friend gaps, were it's just us. So, when I can convince a friend to join us for a few days, I get really excited. And I express this excitement with cooking. (That and, I want them to have so much fun eating and exploring with us that they will join us again.) So, once I had the confirmation that some friends would be visiting for a long weekend, I started launched into overdrive to come up with some memorable recipes. Of course, I made the Campfire Bacon And Eggs Hash. But for this special occasion, I also concocted the Dutch Oven Breakfast Ring.
My driver is a huge fan of bacon. I like it but try to approach it with moderation. All the same, we tend to find ourselves sneaking bacon into all sorts of dishes. Bacon is no longer just a breakfast food. It can be ground into sauces or garnish drinks. But sometimes, we like to return to the classics. Such is the case with the Camper's Club Sandwich.
Sometimes, it is uncertain if two desperate groups can cohabitant. We look on with hope and fear. Savory can be so dominating, can it really allow room for Sweet? Sweet is very particular, could it derail Savory? But we all breath a sigh of relief when we take our first bite of the Glamper's Bacon Brie Apricot Toasted Sandwich and know that finally, these two opposing forces have come together in harmony.
When I want the luxury of fine ingredients in a simple recipe, I bring together two of my best friends: prosciutto and mozzarella. I call this pairing the Class in the Campground Prosciutto Mozzarella Sandwich.
So, back in the Tetons, I learned that I am not good at cooking fried eggs over the fire. Honestly, I'm just not good at frying eggs. It comes down to a matter of getting the heat and temperature right so that the egg whites are cooked through but the egg yolk hasn't congealed into some chalky mess. So, I am continually searching for breakfast recipes that introduce some buffer between eggs and pan.
Campfire Bacon And Eggs Hash is the perfect recipe. It combines all the necessities for a hearty breakfast: bacon, eggs, and cheese. Plus, it adds some nice extras like onions and hash browns to form a padding between the eggs and the hot pan bottom.
Some people think that bacon makes everything better. I maintain that prosciutto makes everything better. Tonight, I wrapped chicken thighs in prosciutto to cook in the cask iron skillet. Having learned from my time consuming first experience of cooking chicken over a campfire, I bought boneless chicken. It was skinless—the prosciutto would make a more flavorful replacement. While I did add some salt and pepper, truly, the prosciutto was what defined the meal.