On the first weekend trip Monica Bennett planned with her new Airstream trailer, she wrote out the entire weekend鈥檚 menu days in advance.
But then, 鈥淚 had this hell week at work, and I didn鈥檛 get time before we left to shop,鈥 says Bennett. So the Friday before, she, her husband, and her young son pulled out of their driveway with an empty fridge, figuring they鈥檇 stop somewhere along the way.听
It was the best thing that could have happened. Bennett pens , a cooking blog where all the recipes are prepped and tested in her 27-foot-long Airstream trailer. The blog is part recipe site, part travel memoir, and hugely popular with the RV set. But it may never have happened鈥攐r happened in its present form鈥攊f Bennett had fulfilled her grocery list that fateful day.

Here鈥檚 the story: On that trip, the Bennetts were headed to Washington鈥檚 . Upon arrival, the family decided to hike before hitting the store. And then, as they pulled out of their campsite to seek out a grocery store, Bennett was once again sidetracked鈥攖his time by a farm stand. Next, a tiny fish market caught her eye. 鈥淭hey had these tanks of Dungeness crabs that had been pulled from the bay, and oysters on the half shell,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淲e never made it to the grocery store, instead we picked up some clams and cooked them in a Dutch oven over a fire on the beach.鈥
From that moment on, Bennett realized that cooking on the road was best when enjoyed the same way a good road trip is鈥攚ith less planning and more spontaneity. She finds that in the RVing community, everyone loves to swap ideas, but that most people are doing a lot of crockpot and campfire cooking. 鈥淚 wanted to elevate that a little bit,鈥 she says.
Spend an hour on her blog and you鈥檒l be amazed at what Bennett can cook in a tiny space. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all about organization and cleaning as you go,鈥 she says, swearing that it鈥檚 not as difficult as it may seem.听
Cooking in a cramped mobile kitchen is tough, though. When Bennett first loaded up her Airstream鈥檚 kitchen, she brought basically one of everything from her home kitchen. 鈥淲hen you鈥檙e digging around for things you鈥檙e like, I don鈥檛 need all this stuff!鈥 Now she鈥檚 got it down to two cast iron skillets, a griddle that can function as a lid for the skillets, and an assortment of knives. Oh, she has a waffle iron too, which she swears she uses. 鈥淎ctually there probably are a few more things I could take out, but there is a surprising amount of storage.鈥
The one item she keeps taking out and putting back in though, is her pressure cooker. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so big, I have to store it under the sofa, which means I can鈥檛 store as many sheets and blankets, but it鈥檚 so convenient. You can make things like pulled pork in it in 40 minutes. That鈥檚 ideal for camper cooking.鈥澛
Bennett has even cooked her entire Thanksgiving meal in her Airstream, saying that she can fit an 18-pound turkey in the tiny oven鈥攋ust barely. 鈥淚 just scale down the sides, so we don鈥檛 have as many leftovers, but it鈥檚 doable.鈥
To Bennett, discovering a destination鈥檚 food is almost as much fun as discovering the best hiking spots or swimming holes. And unlike staying at a hotel, having a tiny mobile kitchen allows her to haul back produce from local markets and play with it. Everywhere she goes she asks for recipes too. Her bison burger, which is one of the most-shared recipes on her blog, actually came from a little old lady she saw stocking up on bison meat in Missoula. 鈥淚鈥檇 never had bison meat so I said, 鈥榳hat are you going to do with all of that?鈥 She showed me her recipe and it鈥檚 so, so good.鈥澛
If Bennett had to choose one thing that cooking in a pintsized, rolling kitchen has taught her, it would be: keep it simple.听
Oh, and one other lesson: 鈥淒on鈥檛 make anything that requires reducing a lot of liquid. We once did something that required boiling down an entire bottle of wine and the trailer turned into a total steam bath.鈥
Other than that, she says, there are no rules. Except to have fun, eat often and enjoy every mile. 聽