Day 43. New Hampshire. I was sitting on a boulder, staring at my food bag, and dreading every single thing inside it.
I'd been eating all day — bars, GORP, peanut butter packets — and I was still hungry. Constantly, maddeningly hungry. I'd bonked twice that week and couldn't figure out why. I was eating. Just nothing that actually satisfied.
Then Marcus came up the switchback, 58 years old and moving like someone half his age. He handed me something in a red wrapper: "Eat the whole thing before you say anything." I bit in. Light, crispy, chocolate chips — like a chocolate Rice Krispie Treat. I finished it in four bites and waited for the emptiness to come back. It didn't. I checked the label: 410 calories. 34g protein. 19g fat. 6g fibre. Not a snack. A meal.
Two hours later I was still going. Not white-knuckling it — actually going, legs under me, brain working. I finished the AT without bonking once after that.
"I wasn't eating too little. I was eating food that didn't fill me. There's a difference — and it took 800 miles to figure it out."— Jamie Calloway, AT Thru-Hiker 2025
Most Trail Food Leaves You Hungry. By Design.
The backpacking food aisle is full of bars — but most of them fail you:
- Only 150–200 calories per bar
- Heavy on sugar, light on protein and fat
- Quick spike, then reaching for the next one 45 minutes later
- Not fuel — a vending machine in a wrapper
Satiety — real fullness — comes from protein, fat, and fibre working together. Not just calories. Your body knows the difference between eating and being fed. On a long day in the mountains, that gap is where the suffer begins.
Mucho: A Meal You Can Eat in Four Bites
Mucho built the bar they wish had existed on their first thru-hike: the calorie density of a real meal, the macro balance that actually keeps you full, and a texture so good you'll look forward to eating it on day 10 as much as day one.
- Light and crispy — not dense and chalky like most protein bars
- Tastes like a chocolate Rice Krispie Treat
- Sunflower butter + milk protein isolate for serious nutritional backbone
- Sugar-free chocolate chips with monk fruit for great taste
- Does the job of lunch — without the weight, the prep, or the cleanup
Five reasons it outperforms everything in your pack
Complex carbs and 410 nutrient-dense calories power even the steepest climbs without the spike-and-crash of sugar-loaded bars.
34g protein with BCAAs, micronutrients, and antioxidants repair muscle, reduce inflammation, and help you bounce back faster for tomorrow's miles.
Tastes like a chocolate Rice Krispie Treat. No gross dehydrated meals, no chalky aftertaste. The bar you'll actually want to eat on day eight.
94g. Fits in your hip belt pocket. Handles heat, cold, altitude, and rough conditions without crumbling or melting. Reliable fuel anywhere on earth.
We packed in as much protein, healthy fats, complex carbs, and prebiotic fibre as possible. One bar keeps most hikers satisfied for 3–4 hours. That's a meal — in your pocket.
Why it actually keeps you full
Hunger on trail isn't just about calories — it's about the type of calories. Mucho's macro balance (34g protein / 19g fat / 6g fibre) triggers satiety hormones the same way a real meal does. That's why one bar holds you for 3–4 hours when three regular bars wouldn't. It's not magic. It's just how food is supposed to work.
Hikers Who've Made the Switch
"I've tried every bar on the market. Nothing else keeps me full like Mucho does. One bar and I'm genuinely not hungry for three hours. On trail, that's everything."
"I replaced my lunch stop with a Mucho bar and a handful of nuts. Same energy, 40 minutes faster, half the pack weight. I'm not going back."
"It doesn't taste like a protein bar. It tastes like food. That sounds like a low bar but after five days on trail it's the only bar that matters."
What Changes When You're Actually Full
I finished the AT averaging 17 miles a day for the final two weeks. Not because I got fitter — I was already fit. Because I stopped being hungry. Constantly, distractingly hungry like I'd been for the first 800 miles.
When you're full, the trail gets easier — not physically, it's still hard. But mentally, emotionally, the whole experience shifts. You stop counting miles to the next campsite and start actually being in the place you came to be.






