Vancouver Magazine
Protected: Get a Slice of This! 3 Tips for Hosting the Best Family Pizza Night
Best Thing I Ate This Week: Crispy Vietnamese Crepe Cake at Hai Chi Em
December’s Best Food Events in Vancouver—Where to Dine This Month
5 Winemaker Holiday Hacks Direct from Nk’Mip Cellars
The Best (Actually Thoughtful) Bottles of Wine to Gift This Year
Breaking: Vancouver Cocktail Week Will Return for a Fifth Year in March
Vancouver International Black Film Festival Returns for a 5th Year
Your Guide to Vancouver’s 2025 Craft and Holiday Markets
You’re Invited to the 2026 Power 50 Awards!
Snowmobiles and Fondue Might Just Be the Perfect Whistler Night Out
I Tried It: Bioluminescent Kayaking on the Sunshine Coast
Why Osoyoos Is a Must-Visit in the Fall
Vancouver Designer Allison Dunne Weaves Art, Philosophy and Humour Into Dunne Cliff Knitwear
The Haul: Photographer Donnel Garcia Stocks Up on Oversized Sweaters and Tibetan Incense
The Vanmag Wish Book: What 14 Interesting Vancouverites Want for Christmas
Chambar's "Into the Wild" prepared meals are going to fancy up your campfire.
I’m about to embark on a multi-day camping trip that’s certainly softer than what a lot of my friends regularly do. Yes, it’s car camping—you park about 200 metres from your camp site and use a wheelbarrow to haul in your gear—but there’s no form of plumbing (showers, toilets) so I’m basically roughing it for almost four days. No photos, please.
But showering and questionable outhouses aside, my biggest paralysis around said trip is what the cook for those days. I haven’t camped in over 10 years, and my tastes have evolved since the last trip with an ex-boyfriend who’d promised to plan the meals, didn’t, and we ate peanut butter on white bread for the entire weekend.
So all the thank yous go to Chambar Restaurant, which has been (most importantly) doing great things in social support issues during the pandemic (see their incredible Food Coalition, providing over 20,000 meals to vulnerable folks), and has now also made it possible for fans of their restaurant (me) to bring their food into the great outdoors.
Frozen packages of main dishes like lamb tagine, Moroccan meatballs, braised short ribs and miso and parsnip risotto also double as a freezer pack in in your cooler, and can be eaten as-is or supplemented with other ingredients like prawns. (I’ll be relying on a camp-mate to fish me up some of those.) I’m already fantasizing about the glamorously gourmet deluxe fireside meals I’ll be dining on, so much so that you can expect a (suck-it, peanut-butter-eating ex-boyfriend) photo or two on my Instagram.
They’re available at the restaurant, as well as local grocery delivery services like Legends Haul, Spud; and grocery stores Stong’s and soon, Choices.
From $12, chambar.com
Get the latest headlines delivered to your inbox 3 times a week, and you’ll be entered to win a pair of Kanto’s newest compact desktop speakers—Uki in the colour “Chalk,” as well as a pair of SU2 stands. Prize value is $330 CAD. Each newsletter subscription = 1 entry. Giveaway closes December 12. The winner will be contacted by an @canadawide.com email. Contest is only open to Canadian residents, excluding Quebec.