If you’re designated camp cook, then you know how hard it can be to feed hungry hikers after a day on the hills, especially if you’re short on pans. Enter the MSR Alpine 4 Pot Set. This group cooking set is perfect for those trips when you have more than two mouths to feed, or for times when you want to get really gourmet. This set includes three stainless-steel cooking pots of different capacities, plus three lids that double up as plates. And it all nests together as a neat, compact cook set. There’s no need to use a walking sock as a temporary tea towel to handle hot pans either, as this set comes with a nifty pot lifter so you can move pans without burning your fingers. This is the perfect cook set for anyone who needs super durable camping cookware that will stand the test of time, enabling you to serve up gourmet camp meals trip after trip
Pot lifter is compatible with all MSR cookware and can support up to 4.5 kg
Rounded corners to help with cooking efficiency
Efficient nesting design to save valuable pack room
Weight: 1.40 kg
Width: 24.4 cm
Height: 11.9 cm
Includes
1 x 1L pot
1 x 2L pot
1 x 3L pot
3 x lids/plates
1 x PanHandler™ pot handle
Stuff sack
A staple of multiple expeditions for more than 50 years, MSR gear is trusted by climbers, mountaineers, explorers and researchers in some of the highest and coldest places on earth. The brand has earned an enviable reputation for turning out reliable, durable, high-performance kit – and has come a long way since its founding by Seattle engineer and lifelong mountaineer Larry Penberthy in 1969. Back then, MSR – or Mountain Safety Research, to use its full moniker – was solely focused on improving the safety of climbing equipment. Why? Because Larry knew that better equipment meant greater adventures.
Since then, the product range has grown hugely, but the core ethos remains the same. That’s why MSR gear is characterised by its user-led design that prioritises functionality, simplicity and reliability, wherever you roam in the great outdoors – whether you’re on a weekend camping trip, or perched on a portaledge 2,000ft up one of the world’s big walls.