What does one need for a road trip? After planning routes, itineraries, and hotels, all that’s left is figuring out what to take along.
Without further ado, here are my travel tips for road trips with family, culled from personal experience.
What does one need for a road trip? After planning routes, itineraries, and hotels, all that’s left is figuring out what to take along.
Breakfast: Waffles, pancakes (bring mix along with you), shakshuka, omelets. (You can bring tomato sauces from home. Transfer them to plastic containers, freeze them overnight, place in a ziplock, and pack them in a suitcase. Osem makes small plastic containers of shakshuka, which I freeze.)
Lunch: Frozen pizza, grilled cheese.
Dinner: (I freeze these in advance) Spaghetti and meatballs; pepper steak, ramen noodles, and broccoli; gnocchi with meat sauce; and even frozen breaded chicken cutlets. You can buy oil at Walmart and fry your chicken cutlets for fresh schnitzel!
Depending on where you’re going, the kosher food options will vary. We bring our Betty Crockers on any trip to a destination without a kosher restaurant. A few days in advance, I prepare some frozen meals that can easily be heated up. Before we leave, I wrap the food in foil, place it in a ziplock (so it doesn’t get messy if it defrosts slightly), and then place it in a freezer bag.
I love scouring the local supermarkets for items with a hechsher. You’d be surprised what you can find! While driving through Montana, we found a frozen pizza brand that’s also sold in Gourmet Glatt. I’ve also picked up frozen cinnamon bun dough and baked fresh rolls for breakfast in the Betty Crocker the next day. I often find items that I don’t see in my local supermarket in New York, which is so much fun. That’s how I learn about what the locals eat! I learned about poke in Hawaii and green chiles in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
The two things that are hard to get when traveling far from any Jewish community are cheeses and meats. Cheeses can be packed in a suitcase, even when flying by plane. The baggage compartment is very cold, and frozen food will stay frozen. I’ve taken frozen meats all over the country in suitcases.
Another option for meat is to find a website that delivers frozen kosher meat. I used Primenosh.com, for example, to have meat delivered to Savannah, Georgia, this past summer.
I’ve also started using Instacart. It’s a super convenient way to access food in the area you’ll be traveling to. It services Costco, CVS, Walmart, Walgreens, Shoprite, and so much more. You can avoid traveling around looking for a grocery store this way and just focus on your vacation.
When I first started traveling, I used to buy anything I saw with an OU, but I soon realized that I was spending unnecessarily. Now I just buy the basics, like eggs, fruits and veggies, chummus, and potato chips!
(Originally featured in Family Table, Issue 777)