Campfire Bread on a Stick Recipe (2024)

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One of life's greatest simple pleasures... Fluffy, delicious bread baked over a campfire. This no knead bread on a stick is so fun to make, and even more to eat!

Campfire Bread on a Stick Recipe (1)

The Tradition of Bread on a Stick

Making bread over a campfire is one of the rites of passage that everyone should experience. Scouts and forest school children are often taught how to make stickbread. It's a great way to learn about outdoor skills, and a great reward to enjoy! In England bread cooked on a stick is known as damper. In Denmark Snobrød is associated with the concept of hygge - a feeling of coziness, contentment and everyday togetherness. It really is such a good feeling to enjoy fresh bread you have made yourself whilst enjoying the beauty and power of nature! And it's a great activity for everyone to enjoy together. Food for the soul!

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How to make the dough

The dough is a yeast based dough, so this recipe requires a little patience - but good things come to those that wait! You can make the dough first, and then start gathering wood for your campfire. By the time the you have a campfire with good embers to cook over, your dough will have risen.

The mix is really easy, just combine flour, yeast, sugar, water, oil and salt. There's no need to knead it, just mix until combined. Our recipe uses cups so it's easy for you to measure when you are out camping. No scales needed!

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Choosing your stickbread sticks

The best sticks for cooking over a campfire are long enough that you can hold them a comforatble distance from the fire. Around 1.5m is good. You can also prop them up using a rock for easier cooking.

Freshly cut greenwood is good because it's moister and won't burn so easily. Strip the bark using a sharp knife, pointed away from you. This is always a good task to give to a child keen to work on their whittling skills!

As the wood comes into contact with food, it's a good idea to choose a stick from a non poisonous tree species. Try fruit woods e.g. Apple, Pear, Plum, or Beech, Oak, Sycamore. "Dogwood, ash, maple and elm make good marshmallow sticks; safe but plain" Paul Hetzler on Choosing the Right Stick For Marshmallows.

We like to put our stick in the flame for a bit to sterilise it, and preheat it a little.

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Cooking your bread on a stick

Once you've got your sticks, dough and fire ready... Empty the dough from the bowl onto a well floured board. Using floured hands, knock the air out out of it, and bring it into a ball, and divide into the number of bread on a sticks that you want to make. 8 is a good number for this amount of dough.

Stretch out your divided pieces of dough, and then gently roll into long sausage shapes.

Twist around your the end of your sticks, and pinch the end together to secure the strip if necessary.

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The best part of the fire to cook over is hot embers. Flames are tempting, but often too hot and likely to burn. You want a nice even heat so your bread is light and fluffy on the inside, and browned and crusty on the outside. YUM!

Keep rotating the bread so you cook all sides evenly.

Campfire Bread on a Stick Recipe (6)
Campfire Bread on a Stick Recipe (7)

Quick, your stickbread is ready!

When your bread is browned on all sides, it's ready to enjoy. You can have a little competition over who found the best spot to bake their bread on a stick!

You can eat the bread straight off the stick.... Tear open, unravel and admire the beautifully fluffy inside!

Campfire Bread on a Stick Recipe (8)
Campfire Bread on a Stick Recipe (9)
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You can also slide the bread off the stick when it has cooled a little, And then fill up the hole with jam. We use our fave Apricot Jam. Oh yes!

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We hope you enjoy making your bread on a stick! More great fun vegan camping recipes here:

Campfire Brownie
Wild Blueberry Pancakes
Campfire Dessert Calzone

Happy baking!

Sophie and Paul

📖 Recipe

Campfire bread on a stick

by

5 from 35 votes

What's better than fluffy, fresh bread that you've cooked over a campfire in the great outdoors...

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Prep Time: 10 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 10 minutes minutes

Resting Time: 1 hour hour

Total Time: 1 hour hour 20 minutes minutes

Makes: 8 stickbreads

Course: Snack

Cuisine: Campfire

Ingredients

  • 1 tsp dried yeast
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • 2 ½ cups (300 g) flour
  • cup (200 ml) warm water
  • 2 tbsp (30 ml) olive oil
  • 1 tsp salt

Instructions

Dough

  • In a large bowl, mix all the ingredients into a moist dough. No need to knead!

  • Cover the bowl and let the dough rise in a warm place until it has doubled in size - about 1 hour.

  • With floured hands, briefly 'knock back' the dough by making it into a ball.

  • Tip the dough out onto a floured surface and divide into 8 pieces.

Shaping your stickbreads

  • Start by stretching the dough into a strip and then roll it into a long sausage shape.

  • Twist a strip around the end of your sticks. Pinch the dough together to secure the end if necessary.

Cooking over a campfire

  • Either hold or prop up your stick over the fire.

  • Choose a spot over hot embers for best results.

  • Keep rotating until all sides are browned.

  • Enjoy your freshly baked bread!

Nutrition

Calories: 148kcal | Carbohydrates: 25g | Protein: 3g | Fat: 4g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Sodium: 292mg | Potassium: 38mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 1g | Calcium: 5mg | Iron: 1mg

This information is calculated per serving and is an estimate only.

Did you make this recipe?Leave a comment to let us know! Share a photo and tag @veganonboard - we love to see what you make!

Campfire Bread on a Stick Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the name of the bread on a stick? ›

This bread has various names – damper bread, stickbread and bannock on a stick are a few. Essentially though it is a scone mix (that can be mixed in a bag or before hand for hygiene) that is slow cooked over a glowing fire.

What is the meaning of Snobrod? ›

In Denmark pinnebrød is equally popular, but it is called snobrød, “sno” means to twist, so it translates to twisted bread. Whether Norwegian or Danish, this bread becomes crispy on the outside and soft on the inside with a delicious grilled flavor.

Can you make bread on an open fire? ›

Except for baking bread directly in the embers or on a stick, you are going to need a pot to bake your bread. Options include a Dutch oven or some combination of pots and pans to improvise an oven. The benefit of a Dutch oven, it being made of cast iron, is that it is good at distributing heat evenly around the pot.

What is the origin of the bread on a stick? ›

Tradition states, however, that it originated in the region of Piedmont in the 17th century, invented by a baker called Antonio Brunero, from Turin. It was a food that was intended to be easier to digest for the Duke Victor Amadeus II of Savoy, who had digestive problems in his childhood.

Where did campfire bread come from? ›

Bannock bread - originates from Scotland/Ireland and northern England. Traditionally made with oatmeal dough and cooked on a bannock stone (flat piece of sandstone) that was placed in the fire. Damper bread - traditionally eaten in Australia by stockmen/travellers and cooked in the ashes of the fire or in a camp oven.

Can you cook brats over a campfire on a stick? ›

Want to cook something savory? Roasting skewers are great for cooking hot dogs or brats over the fire. Need to satisfy your sweet tooth?

What is food cooked on a stick called? ›

In English, kebab, or in North America also kabob, often occurring as shish kebab, is now a culinary term for small pieces of meat cooked on a skewer.

What is cowboy bread made of? ›

Cowboy Bread, which is made with sugar and other sweet ingredients including light brown sugar, nutmeg, and cinnamon is actually more like a cake even though it is called bread.

What can you toast on a fire other than marshmallows? ›

13 Foods to Roast Over a Fire Besides S'mores
  • Campfire cones.
  • Baked apples.
  • Campfire pizza.
  • Campfire brownies in an orange peel.
  • Elote (Mexican street corn)
  • Spider dogs.
  • Boozy campfire cheese.
Apr 24, 2021

How do you make wilderness bread? ›

To bake a bread, usually requires an oven. But what do you do when you're in the wilderness and don't have an oven? You are using a frying pan, turning the dough around a stick or using your axe as a frying pan. Our ancestors did that too.

What is a crunchy French bread stick called? ›

French Baguettes are homemade stick loaves of French bread with a crispy crust and soft, chewy texture baked to a golden brown.

What is a baton loaf? ›

traditional French bread, slightly smaller than a baguette.

What is a French bread stick? ›

French stick, or more vaguely French loaf, is an English term for a long thin loaf of French bread, particularly the type known in French (and increasingly in English) as a baguette.

What is the elf bread called? ›

Lembas bread, the magical Elven food, sustains the Fellowship on their arduous journey. Here's what Tolkien tells us about lembas: "the food was mostly in the form of very thin cakes, made of meal that was baked a light brown on the outside, and inside was the colour of cream."

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