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The essential ingredients of the Southwest egg burrito are dehydrated eggs and a tortilla, but it benefits from beans and either fresh or powdered cheese.
Occasionally, I appreciate a blueberry pancake or a bowl of Cap’n Crunch. But my standard breakfast is eggs, cheese, and hot sauce or salsa, with toast or a tortilla. This year I delegated the meal preparation for my guided backpacking trips to a Boulder, Colorado, ultrarunner who has worked at some of the city’s best restaurants, and I asked him to develop a recipe along these lines.
He came back with the Southwest egg burrito. It’s fussier than other meals on our menu but my personal favorite.
This breakfast could be made with as few as two ingredients: dehydrated eggs and a tortilla. But it’d be tasteless, so I encourage you to at least add cheese and salt. The other ingredients are optional, but they take the meal to another level.
The 4.6-ounce serving size has been field tested and deemed appropriate for most backpacker appetites. If you’d like to add calories (and flavor), you might consider crumbled bacon.
For those with a milk or lactose sensitivity, Augason Farms and other vendors offer whole dried eggs (sans milk).
Conveniently, the dried beans are the cornerstone of another recipe, my world-famous beans and rice with Fritos and cheese.
The powdered cheese is more user-friendly than fresh cheese, since it can be prepared beforehand and isn’t temperature sensitive. However, fresh cheese is an acceptable substitute; I recommend sharp cheddar.
Our ten- and 12-person groups will easily consume a four-ounce can of green chilies. But for smaller groups and soloists, dried green chilies or hot sauce may be a better option.
Combine all of the dry ingredients for a single serving, and pack them in a plastic snack bag. Do not combine ingredients for multiple days and multiple individuals with the expectation of dividing it in the field—you will probably not divide it equally, and the recipe needs an exact amount of water.
On group trips, we keep the green chilies and tortillas together and distribute them in the field at mealtime.
For most of my meals, the instructions are simple: boil water and add the ingredients. This meal is an exception. Follow these instructions closely:
I need to emphasize three points, because this meal can be easily ruined by user error: