MO-SILVER! wrote:How do you "dry can" the dehydrated food? Do you dehydrate them and then drop
them in sterile jars and throw in the air/moisture absorbing packets? Are there any links to Sites that have that info?
justoneguy wrote:is the chicken in the picture of spices chicken or chicken bullion?
if it is chicken, how long can that store?
misteroman wrote:How long can you keep dehydrated carrots around for?
MO-SILVER! wrote:Has anyone tried Canned Bacon? I saw it online and can imagine it tastes like bacon but the texture and what not is what would concern me. haha Plus its 16 dollars for one can!
Nickelless wrote:Building up your preps $25 at a time
Treetop wrote:One good thing to do imo. Go to a store that sells dry bulk goods. Various ways to store such things cheaply.
but get things like dry beans, and WHOLE peas, (yes you can find them), wheat berries, (which are wheat that isnt ground) rye, amaranth, whole barley... etc.
The reason? Well these things are as cheap as any other bulk dry good. They can store for very long periods if you do it right.
but the bigger reason is these serve dual purposes. All of these things are readily planted. They are all seeds!!! amaranth the leaves are also edible by the way. So you can have a leaf crop and grain from the same plant.
this can be good for you, if TSHTF but also trading. There likely will not be enough seeds to go around if TSHTF, so this could be amazingly valuable, and if not its still cheap food, that can store a long time if you do it right. So its not unlike hoarding copper pennies in that.....
MontanaPM wrote:Nickelless wrote:Building up your preps $25 at a time
Great ideas.
I've recently adopted the policy of buying 2 of everything (nonperishable) that I eat, 1 is for storage.
I'm also preparing for the bulk food storage, and I have a dehydrator that needs more work.
Nickelless wrote:http://hungrythirstystranger.blogspot.com
MontanaPM wrote:Nickelless wrote:http://hungrythirstystranger.blogspot.com
Bookmarked, Thanks!
Engineer wrote:Its a bit over $25 when you fill it, but bottles of propane should be high on the list.
Nickelless wrote:justoneguy wrote:is the chicken in the picture of spices chicken or chicken bullion?
if it is chicken, how long can that store?
That's chicken. It was cooked, then diced and marinated, and the dehydration took close to 24 hours per batch. It could probably store for years if it's dried thoroughly. I'm about to do a taste test in a few weeks on the one-year anniversary of my first batch of dehydrated chicken.misteroman wrote:How long can you keep dehydrated carrots around for?
They should be OK in storage for several years. They're completely dried and kept in a sealed mason jar in a dark pantry, so they can't spoil and won't degrade as long as they're kept in a cool, dry, dark place.MO-SILVER! wrote:Has anyone tried Canned Bacon? I saw it online and can imagine it tastes like bacon but the texture and what not is what would concern me. haha Plus its 16 dollars for one can!
The thing you're NOT getting from canned bacon is the grease, and bacon drippings are absolutely one of the best flavoring agents in the world, IMO. I don't like the fact that pint and half-pint mason jars cost nearly as much per case of 12 as the quart-size jars, but I've bought a few cases of each so I can store bacon drippings and other similar items that will be very useful to help flavor food.
Just my two cents, I wouldn't worry about storing bacon itself, but bacon drippings could be a huge (and IMO valuable) flavor enhancer for your food preps. Here's a link I found a little while ago, and a site I want to check out at length when I have time:
http://cooklikeyourgrandmother.com/2008 ... bacon-fat/
Nickelless wrote:MontanaPM wrote:Nickelless wrote:http://hungrythirstystranger.blogspot.com
Bookmarked, Thanks!
Bookmark StockingUp.net to go to the front page.
Return to Non-Metals Necessities and Things To Think About
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests