Damper is a traditional Australian bread cooked on a campfire. Created by Australian stockmen and swagmen who roamed remote areas for prolonged times, these stockmen survived on bare rations of flour, sugar, tea and whatever meat they could catch.
Why is it called damper?
I recently heard that damper is named such because it is more damper than bread. However, I found two alternative theories when I googled to see if this was true. According to historian James Bonwick, the name derives from how the fire is “dampened” by covering it with ashes. And the Australian Dictionary Centre claims the name came from a Lancashire expression meaning “something that damps the appetite.”
Whatever the truth may be, damper is delicious bushtucker that is a must when camping.
A traditional damper is made with plain flour and water and cooked in the ashes or coals of a campfire.
Nowadays, damper is more likely cooked in a camp oven and made with all sorts of ingredients, including sugar, milk, butter and beer, to name but a few. I love the yeasty taste of beer damper. I often make this simple, two-ingredient damper in our cast iron camp oven over the campfire.
Our Camp Kitchen
We cooked this yummy beer damper while camped at Mount Bundy Station near Adelaide River in the Northern Territory. It was a good campsite with many animals, such as wallabies, galahs and cockatoos, pigs, horses, buffalo etc.
Beer Damper
Ingredients
1 375ml can (or bottle) of beer
3 cups of self-raising flour (or plain flour)
Pinch of salt (optional)
Method
Place flour (and salt) in a bowl and make a well in the centre. Pour warm beer into the centre and mix using a butter knife. Add more flour or beer if needed.
Get your hands in the bowl and ensure the flour and beer are well combined but do not knead. Damper is not kneaded, just mixed and shaped.
Once the dough is shaped, line the base of the camp oven with baking paper and spray with oil, or alternatively, sprinkle flour on the bottom to stop the damper from sticking.
To cook the damper with hot coals
If you want to cook on coals from a campfire, you must burn large pieces of wood to create hot coals. It can take an hour or so for your campfire to make enough coals. Be sure to factor the process of producing the embers into your prep and cooking time.
Alternatively, if you have limited time or good wood, use heat beads as they heat up quickly and hold their heat well.
The easiest way to cook in a camp oven over hot coals is to lift the coals out of the fire with a long-handled shovel. Select a safe place next to the fire and put a small amount of *coals on the ground. Place the camp oven onto the coals. Get more coals from the fire to place on top of the oven.
Getting the right amount of coals is not always easy. Be aware of cooking the damper too hot and burning it. It will take some experimentation to get the temperature right. Therefore, check the damper after 10 minutes to make sure you are not cooking it too hot or not hot enough.
*you only need a small number of coals under the camp oven or none. Too many, and you will burn the bottom of the damper.
Many factors determine the heat of the coals, such as ambient temperature and wind. If you have wind, the coals will cook hotter. Make allowances for wind by reducing the number of coals used.
The time it takes to cook the damper is directly related to how hot you cook it. It should take approximately 30-40 minutes. You can tell when the damper is cooked by tapping on the top. If it sounds hollow, it is ready. Alternatively, stick a knife in it; if it comes out clean, it should be ready.
Serve with butter, maple syrup, jam, cream, or any other topping you desire.
More Campfire Recipes?
Beef Cheeks in Red Wine / Feta, Spinach & Bacon Quiche / Camp Oven Eggs in Purgatory / Slow Cooked Lamb Shanks / Camel Aussie Burger
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