Eric1 wrote:But my favorite is cooking over a campfire.
I miss cooking over a campfire; it always reminds me of Boy Scouts. Our moms would pack us chunks of steak and some squares of onion and pepper to make shish kebabs for our first night out. To accompany that would be a nice, big can of beans. Here was the standard procedure upon arrival in camp: First, start a fire and remind each other that you had to build up a good bed of coals to cook over so everyone should gather wood and keep the fire stoked. Those good intentions would last about 37 seconds until we all scattered to chase each other through the woods. When we got hungry we would return to find the fire out. Hmmm, no coals. Ok, time to start a roaring fire and wait for it to burn down to coals. Of course, someone was always so hungry that they decided not to wait for coals and said they would cook over the open flames. Not long after we would all follow suit.
Now, find a green stick and whittle a point so you can thread the meat onto it. Throw the onions and peppers into the fire (why does mom keep packing those?) Open the can of beans and put it into the fire. Now try and cook the meat without burning your hands while holding it over the fire. A short time later (very short) and it's time to enjoy the perfect meal: meat that is black on the outside but raw on the inside and beans that are burned on the bottom of the can and cold in the middle. Delicious!
Ahh the good old days. But, the question was about stoves. I recently retired an old Camping Gaz propane stove that I had used since 1978 and replaced it with a Jet Boil. I have yet to fall in love with it. It's efficient and all that, but I'm still not sold on it for some reason. I bought the bigger pot sold separately for family camping trips (one or two quarts, I think), but that's kind of big and heavy. I am tempted to go to a smaller and lighter stove and just carry my titanium cook kit, but with so many other things on my REI wishlist, a new stove is not even in the top five.