The “No-Stress” 3-Day Camping Meal Plan
(Aus & NZ Edition)
Affiliate Disclosure: Hey Reader! This post contains affiliate links. When you buy through our links, Pack & Pitch may earn a small commission, at no extra cost to you. Learn more here
As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
“What are we having for dinner?”
If those words fill you with dread because you’ve just realized the nearest supermarket is 100km away and you forgot the cooking oil, you are not alone.
Food is often the biggest stressor for new campers. A lot of camping food advice online is American, they talk about “Graham Crackers,” “Coolers,” and complex Dutch Oven recipes that take four hours.
Here in Australia and New Zealand, we do things differently. We want a decent coffee in the morning, a fresh wrap for lunch, and a proper feed at dinner. But we also don’t want to spend our entire holiday washing dishes.
Stop surviving on 2-minute noodles! You deserve better.
I’ve put together a realistic, “No-Stress” 3-Day Meal Plan specifically for our local tastes. The best part? You can buy every single ingredient at a standard Coles, Woolworths, or Countdown.
The Rules of the “No-Stress” Kitchen
Before we get to the food, here are the three rules that save my sanity:
- Shop Once: We buy everything before we leave.
- Cook Smart: We prioritize “One-Pot” meals to minimise washing up (because washing dishes in a bucket in the dark is nobody’s fun time).
- Eat the Perishables First: We eat the raw meat and salad early, and save the preserved stuff (chorizo, pasta, tins) for the end.
Day 1: Arrival Night (The “Setup Sizzle”)
The Goal: Speed. You’ve just driven 4 hours, set up the tent, and everyone is “hangry.”
Dinner: Classic Aussie Snags & Slaw
Do not attempt a gourmet meal on night one. You want the classic: Sausages in bread.
- The Gear: A simple gas stove (like a Weber Baby Q) or a hotplate over the fire.
- The Meal: Beef or pork sausages sizzled on the plate with sliced onions. Serve on thick white bread with tomato sauce.
- The “Health” Kick: Open a bag of pre-made coleslaw (the ones with the dressing sachet included). No chopping required.
- Why this works: It takes 10 minutes to cook, minimal cleanup, and it feels like a holiday immediately.
Day 2: The Adventure Day
The Goal: Fuel for hiking/swimming, with a hearty dinner that creates leftovers.
Breakfast: One-Pan Brekkie Wraps
Forget plates. Wraps are the ultimate camping vessel.
- Method: Fry some bacon in your pan. Crack 4 eggs directly into the pan and scramble them in the bacon fat. Throw a handful of spinach on top to wilt.
- Serve: Spoon the mixture onto tortilla wraps, add BBQ sauce, roll up, and eat with your hands.
- Cleanup: One pan, zero plates.
Lunch: The Ploughman’s Platter
No cooking allowed.
- The Meal: A “grazing board” style lunch. Shaved ham, a block of tasty cheese (cubed), Jatz or Savoy crackers, pickles, and sliced apple.
- Pro Tip: Keep your meat and cheese fresh. If you are struggling to keep food cold, check out our guide to the Best Camping Fridges in Australia for our top 12V recommendations.
Dinner: One-Pot Pesto & Chorizo Pasta
This is my secret weapon meal. It tastes gourmet but uses shelf-stable ingredients.
- Ingredients: Penne pasta, a jar of basil pesto, 2 chorizo sausages (sliced), a punnet of cherry tomatoes.
- Method:
- Fry the chorizo in a pot until the oil comes out. Remove chorizo.
- Add water to the same pot and boil the pasta.
- Drain the water (leave a tiny bit in).
- Stir the chorizo, pesto, and halved tomatoes back into the hot pasta. The heat warms the sauce.
- Serve: Straight out of the pot.
Day 3: Pack-Up Day (The “Clear Out”)
The Goal: Use up the odds and ends so you don’t have to take half-empty packets home.
Breakfast: The “Whatever is Left” Jaffle
If you don’t have a Jaffle Iron, go buy one. It is the single best piece of camping cooking gear you will own.
- The Gear: We use a Cast Iron Single Jaffle Iron. Cast iron distributes heat better than the cheap aluminum ones.
- The Meal: Butter the outside of your bread. Fill it with whatever you have left: The last of the baked beans, the rest of the cheese, or leftover ham.
- Method: Clamp it shut and stick it in the coals of your morning fire (or on the gas burner) for 3 minutes each side.
Coffee: The Most Important Meal
Don’t ruin a good morning with instant coffee granules.
- The Gear: We swear by the AeroPress Coffee Maker. It’s plastic (so it won’t break in the car), cleans in 10 seconds, and makes cafe-quality coffee.
- The Milk: Use UHT (Long Life) milk. It doesn’t need refrigeration until opened, saving precious space in your Esky.
How to Pack the Food (The “Cold Chain”)
Nothing ruins a trip faster than warm meat.
- Freeze the Water: Freeze your 1L water bottles 2 days before you leave. They act as “super ice” blocks in your Esky and give you cold drinking water as they melt.
- Pre-Chill: Turn your 12V fridge on at home (plugged into the wall) 24 hours before you pack it. (Need power advice? Read our review on Portable Power Stations to see how we keep our fridges running off-grid).
Your Done-For-You Shopping List
I’ve broken this list down by supermarket aisle so you can get in and out of Coles or Woolies in 15 minutes flat.
- Produce: Bag of Spinach, Coleslaw Kit, Cherry Tomatoes, Apples, Brown Onions.
- Bakery: Thick White Bread, Tortilla Wraps.
- Meat & Deli: Sausages, Bacon, Chorizo, Shaved Ham, Tasty Cheese Block.
- Pantry: Penne Pasta, Pesto, Crackers, Baked Beans, Tomato Sauce, Oil, Salt/Pepper.
- Misc: UHT Milk, Coffee, Tim Tams (Essential).
Want this list on your phone?
Download the free PDF version below. It has the daily menu on one side and the shopping list on the other. Print it out, stick it to the fridge, and get packing!
Latest Posts
- The “Pay-to-Play” Cheat Sheet: Understanding National Park & Hut Fees (AU & NZ)
Transparency Note: Pack and Pitch is reader-supported. While this guide is purely informational, our site contains affiliate links to gear we love. If you click one and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. This keeps the lights on and the campfire burning. The Problem? It’s Not… - The Critter Defense Guide: Best Camping Insect Repellent & Tactics (2026)
There is a specific sound that haunts every Australian camper. It’s not the howl of a dingo. It’s the scritch-scratch of a possum trying to open your Esky at 2 AM. Or worse: it’s the silence of waking up, pouring a bowl of Nutri-Grain, and realizing the “raisins” are actually 500 meat ants swarming your… - Why I Finally Ditched the Supermarket First Aid Kit (And What I Bought Instead)
Don’t be a statistic. That sounds dramatic, I know. But if you’ve ever tried to find a pair of tweezers in a $20 supermarket first aid kit while your 6-year-old screams about a splinter, you know that panic is the enemy. Most of us treat first aid kits as a “tick box” item. We chuck… - Ultimate Sleeping Bag Guide: Down vs. Synthetic for Aussie & Kiwi Campers
There you are, staring at a wall of nylon sausages at your local camping store. Some are tiny, some are the size of a beer keg. Some claim they will keep you alive on Everest, while others look like they wouldn’t survive a sleepover in the lounge room. And the price tags? They make no… - 5 Best Camping Stoves for Families (That Actually Simmer)
The “Hangry” Prevention Guide We need to talk about the wind. If you test a $20 camping stove in your backyard on a sunny Sunday, it works perfectly. But the second you take that same stove to a coastal campsite with a stiff 15-knot breeze, it becomes a paperweight. I have stood over a cheap…
Free Checklist
Free Camping Checklist 🎁
Get our FREE Ultimate AU/NZ Camping Checklist + weekly tips!
Join 500+ campers! 🏕️
Recommended Gear
300×250 Ad
Google AdSense
(Coming soon)
