Dont know what I will do with the grains.. maybe save them for the chickens I will eventually get.
Thogey wrote:Wow. I'm really surprised it went down like that. Not my experience.
"People from the street?" Ef em! Let them have their clique. We'll just make do. Religious sects do seem to end up behaving like that don't they?
Just be one of the 'people from the street'.
involuntary tentacle wrote:Well, thanks for the replies.
I went to the cannery earlier. Discovered that everything at this particular cannery is dry-pack. Stuff like rice, wheat, oats... stuff like that.
Was told that as a non-member, I would need to bring a member of the church with me next time. He let me buy only a few things, but told me that they normally discourage people from the street... saying that, "if we let non-members from the street buy from us, the grocery stores would get mad at us for selling to the general public." Also, in order to can stuff myself, I would need to be in the company of a church member.
BS. But whatever. I know someone that I can bring next time. But I did not think I would meet that kind of resistance, though.
Anyway, picked up 25 pounds of rice for $10.00. This is awesome because you cant even get 20 pounds of calrose rice for that cheap anymore... It is extra long grain, and quite different from the varieties i am used to, but it is not a big deal..
AGCoinHunter wrote:Wow, tn-dave great link. I will be ordering from them. Prices are not too bad also once you take into account of the free shipping. Sales tax stinks but you pay that anyway if you buy it from the store. Do those #10 cans hold up for 30 years?
tn-dave wrote: Not sure how the price compares to buying locally
How much will each can hold?
Fill volume of a #10 can is approximately .82 gallon. The weight varies by product. For example, a #10 can holds 5.8 pounds (2.6 kg) of wheat, 5.7 pounds (2.6 kg) of white rice, or 4.1 pounds (2.3 kg) of nonfat, instant dry milk.
Devil Soundwave wrote:Unfortunately for me, the LDS movement is much smaller in the UK, so the likelihood of me being able to utilise a cannery or buy stuff is slim.
Mossy wrote:Devil Soundwave wrote:Unfortunately for me, the LDS movement is much smaller in the UK, so the likelihood of me being able to utilise a cannery or buy stuff is slim.
Gee, too bad you don't have internet access or you could use Google to look up
England LDS missions
and email one near you about whether they have any canneries.
Darn. I was trying for "Smart adze".Devil Soundwave wrote:Good point wise guy.
frugalcanuck wrote:We have the LDS churches here in Canada but I cant find much info on them canning in Canada and I read they dont ship their catalogue products to Canada
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