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Campfire Dutch Oven Italian Stuffed Peppers

Whether you are camping or need a family friendly dinner, these campfire Dutch oven Italian Stuffed Peppers include ground beef, Italian sausage, quinoa and tomatoes and topped with cheesy goodness all served in a sweet bell pepper. Find my delicious cast iron campfire Dutch oven recipes.

Cast iron Dutch oven filled with Italian stuffed peppers

This week is my kids’ last week of school. My first baby, The Professor, is graduating from high school. I’ve been aware of this fact for some time, but it really hasn’t hit me yet because we have been so busy this year with college applications, driver’s license tests and the usual hustle and bustle of the year winding down.

Despite my desire to forget that my baby boy is leaving in August to attend NAU in Flagstaff, the world keeps on turning and the seasons change. School is ending and summer vacation is here. And for many families, summer means camping. And you know I’m all about eating good food while camping!

My giant baby knows he is going to miss my home cooking, so I better make sure I feed him well before he leaves. We love cooking with our Dutch oven when camping because you can fit a big meal in one pot, which is perfect for this family of 5. The Dutch oven is super easy to cook and bake in, so if you are new to using them, check out my post here where I share my tips on how to cook in a Dutch oven.

California Farm Tour

About a month ago, I had the pleasure of visiting Baloian Farms in Coachella Valley, California. It’s hard to believe that in the middle of the driest part of California, home of Palm Desert and the Salton Sea, is some of the lushest farms producing bell peppers, green beans, eggplants, grapes, figs, dates and even corn. 

I learned so much on this visit and share the trip in the video here in this post. I was lucky enough to watch red and yellow bell peppers get harvested in the field. Did you know that all bell peppers start off green and then change color, either red, yellow or orange? The green bell peppers you know and love are just immature, young red or yellow bell peppers.

You can use any color variety of bell peppers to make these Italian stuffed peppers. Just remember that the green bell peppers are not as sweet as the yellow, orange or red variety. When I came home from my farm tour I was given a large box full of vegetables, including a huge variety of bell peppers.

So, I decided to use green, yellow and red bell peppers to make these Dutch oven stuffed peppers. All of those colors do make a stunning presentation, am I right?!!

The stages of a bell pepper a flower, baby pepper and larger green pepper by FamilySpice.com

Ingredients you need

Overhead view of a cast iron Dutch oven filled with colorful bell peppers by FamilySpice.com

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Step-by-step directions

1. Prepare the stuffing: Quinoa cooks quickly, so bring a small pot of water to boil and add quinoa. Cook until fluffy, about 10 minutes. Transfer to a mixing bowl.

multi colored quinoa in a pot with water

Prep the peppers: Cut tops off the bell peppers, remove stem and dice remaining pieces of bell pepper. Reserve. Remove seeds and membranes from peppers. Place peppers in your 12-inch Dutch oven, cut side up, and make sure the tops of the peppers are below the rim of the Dutch oven. Remove hollowed peppers and reserve.

Overhead view of a cast iron Dutch oven filled with hollowed out bell peppers by FamilySpice.com

Brown the meat: Sauté the chopped onions and reserved bell peppers in olive oil. When softened, add garlic and ground meat. Break down meat while it cooks. Stir in seasonings and canned tomatoes. Add meat mixture to the quinoa mixture and mix completely.

Light the coals: In chimney starter, light up 30 charcoal briquettes.

Campfire chimney with coals and fire by FamilySpice.com

Assemble peppers: Place hollowed out peppers, cut side up, inside Dutch oven and fill up each pepper with meat mixture. Top each stuffed pepper with shredded parmesan cheese, finishing with a generous helping of shredded mozzarella cheese.

Cook peppers: Place lid on Dutch oven and transfer to a fire ring or fire safe container. When briquettes are mostly gray (about 15 minutes), place 12 briquettes evenly underneath the Dutch oven and 18 briquettes evenly on top. Bake until cheese is browned, approximately 45 minutes.

Expert tips and recipe FAQs

Whether you are cooking these Italian stuffed peppers at home or while camping, they are very easy to throw together. If you are camping, you have two choices in preparing the stuffing. You can cook everything on site in the Dutch oven, requiring some cleaning before baking the peppers back in the pot.

Or you can cook the stuffing at home, place the meat mixture and cooked quinoa in containers and just mix everything in a bowl before stuffing. Either way you prepare the Italian stuffed peppers, the stuffing mixture does need to be cooked first.

As I mentioned earlier, the Dutch oven is incredibly versatile and easy to cook and bake with. You can sauté in it like a cast iron skillet or bake in it like mini oven. I used a 12-inch cast iron Dutch oven in this recipe because my bell peppers were huge and wouldn’t fit in the 10-inch size.

The key to cooking in a cast iron Dutch oven is the coal count. For the 12-inch sized pot, use a chimney starter and light up 30 charcoal briquettes. When they all start to turn gray, about 8-10 minutes, they are ready to be placed on and below the Dutch oven.

If you do use smaller peppers, I give cooking instructions for the 10-inch pot in the recipe below. Using long handled tongs, place 18 hot coals evenly on the lid of the Dutch oven and 12 evenly underneath. Bake the stuffed peppers for 45 minutes or until the cheese tops are browned.

The stuffed peppers are just as easy to cook at home. Just place the stuffed peppers in a casserole dish that is large enough to hold all of the peppers and bake it in the oven for 400ºF/204ºC for 45-60 minutes, or until the cheese tops are browned and bubbling.

Can you freeze Italian stuffed peppers?

You can also assemble the peppers all the way through the recipe til they are topped with cheese. Then place the assembled peppers in an airtight container and freeze.  Just thaw completely prior to baking. And of course, you can also freeze any leftover cooked peppers for up to 6 months. They should keep in the refrigerator for 3-4 days.

What can I cook in a cast iron Dutch oven?

The real question is what CAN’T you cook in a cast iron Dutch oven – the list is shorter! If you can fit it in a Dutch oven, you can cook it. Some people say not to cook acidic foods in cast iron. All this does is wear away the seasoning, which is easy to replace. I bake cakes, breads, cookies, cobblers… almost any dessert in my Dutch oven. And for meals? The possibilities are endless!

Can I use my Le Creuset on a campfire?

Please do not place your fancy enamel cast iron pots and pans over a campfire. The only pots and pans that can go directly over a campfire or hot coals are cast iron. For Dutch ovens, look for pots that have little feet so that it can sit above the hot coals and air can circulate. For lids, make sure yours has a lip around it as you put hot coals on top and you don’t wash ash to trickle into your food when you life the lid.

The Camp & Cabin Cookbook: 100 Recipes to Prepare Wherever You Go by Laura Bashar of FamilySpice.com

Camping Cookbook

And if you didn’t know, I have a new cookbook out that is perfect for whenever you cook outdoors, whether you’re camping, at the beach, park or lake house: The Camp & Cabin Cookbook (Countryman Press 2018). I have 100 recipes that are all prepared outdoors and over fire using multiple techniques, including the beloved Dutch oven. Learn more about my camp cookbook!

Laura's Cookbook
The Camp & Cabin Cookbook: 100 Recipes to Prepare Wherever You Go
4.0
$28.00 $22.19

This cookbook was definitely a labor of love! I share 100 recipes, from breakfast to mains, even drinks, all prepared over a campfire. I share multiple cooking techniques, including ash, grilling and Dutch oven cooking. There is something for everyone!

Buy Now
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02/19/2024 06:09 am GMT
Yield: serves 7

Campfire Dutch Oven Italian Stuffed Peppers

Cast iron Dutch oven filled with Italian stuffed peppers

Whether you are camping or need a family friendly dinner, these campfire Dutch oven Italian Stuffed Peppers include ground beef, Italian sausage, quinoa and tomatoes and topped with cheesy goodness all served in a sweet bell pepper.

Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour 15 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 30 minutes

Ingredients

  • 7 large bell peppers
  • ¾ cup uncooked quinoa
  • 1 TBS extra virgin olive oil
  • 2 medium onion, diced (approximately 2 cups)
  • 3 garlic cloves, diced
  • 1 lb ground beef
  • 1 lb Italian sausage, casings removed
  • 1 TBS dried oregano
  • 1 TBS dried basil
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • ¼ teaspoon ground black pepper
  • ¼ teaspoon red pepper flakes (optional)
  • 30 oz canned petite diced tomatoes
  • ½ cup shredded parmesan cheese
  • 1 ½ cups shredded mozzarella cheese

Instructions

  1. Place quinoa in a fine mesh strainer and rinse with water.
  2. In a fire safe pot add 1 ½ cups water with your rinsed quinoa. Cover pot, bring to boil and then reduce heat to low and continue cooking until water is absorbed and quinoa is fluffy.
  3. Remove from heat and transfer quinoa to a large mixing bowl.
  4. Cut tops off the bell peppers, remove stem and dice remaining pieces of bell pepper. Reserve.
  5. Remove seeds and membranes from peppers.
  6. Place peppers in your 12-inch Dutch oven, cut side up, and make sure the tops of the peppers are below the rim of the Dutch oven. Remove hollowed peppers and reserve.
  7. Heat Dutch oven over medium high heat and add olive oil. When oil is hot add diced onions and bell pepper. Cook until vegetables are softened about 5-8 minutes.
  8. Stir in garlic and sauté for an additional minute.
  9. Add ground beef and Italian sausage and continue cooking and breaking down meat until crumbly in texture and cooked through.
  10. Stir in dried oregano, basil, salt, pepper and red pepper flakes (if using).
  11. Stir in canned tomatoes and remove from heat.
  12. Add meat mixture to the quinoa mixture and mix completely.
  13. Quickly rinse and wipe down Dutch oven.
  14. In chimney starter, light up 30 charcoal briquettes.
  15. Place hollowed out peppers, cut side up, inside Dutch oven and fill up each pepper with meat mixture.
  16. Top each stuffed pepper with shredded parmesan cheese, finishing with a generous helping of shredded mozzarella cheese.
  17. Place lid on Dutch oven and transfer to a fire ring or fire safe container.
  18. When briquettes are mostly gray (about 15 minutes), place 12 briquettes evenly underneath the Dutch oven and 18 briquettes evenly on top.
  19. Bake until cheese is browned, approximately 45 minutes.

Notes

To bake at home, place stuffed peppers in a large casserole dish and bake at 400ºF/204ºC for 45-60 minutes, or until cheese is golden.

If using a 10-inch Dutch oven, place 10 hot briquettes evenly underneath the Dutch oven and 16 briquettes evenly on top.

Nutrition Information:

Yield:

7

Serving Size:

1 stuffed pepper

Amount Per Serving: Calories: 551Total Fat: 33gSaturated Fat: 11gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 22gCholesterol: 95mgSodium: 851mgCarbohydrates: 30gFiber: 6gSugar: 9gProtein: 35g

PS If you try this recipe, why not leave a star rating in the recipe card right below and/or a review in the comment section further down the page? I always appreciate your feedback.

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Disclosure: This post does include affiliate links. I was paid to visit Baloian Farms and share what I learned with you all. The story I have written is all true, and the opinions are truly mine. If I didn’t like it, I wouldn’t blog about it!

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