franklin wrote:I agree, particularly on the salt which I use in canning, preserving dried meat, and salting hides.
slickeast wrote:Hoarding sugar is a sweet idea.
Sorry, but that was too easy.
Nickelless wrote:Honey is a much better option than sugar. It would be worth the time to find beekeepers in your area and buy raw honey directly from them.
Derek.Sheriff wrote:Nickelless wrote:Honey is a much better option than sugar. It would be worth the time to find beekeepers in your area and buy raw honey directly from them.
You forgot to explain why
68Camaro wrote:Anyone remember when a 5 lb bag was under a buck...? Wasn't that long ago...
justoneguy wrote:I've been buying sugar from the local LDS Cannery.
6.1 pounds in a #10 can for $6.
you have to can it yourself for that price,
but it was kinda fun "canning" different things.
they knew I'm not morman, but were still very friendly.
they said tell my friends about their store.
They have a lot of good food for storage, including canned meat.
here is a link to their price list.
http://www.providentliving.org/pfw/mult ... 11_pdf.pdf
Mossy wrote:Honey can contain a bit of everything, including pesticides, weed killers, lead or other heavy metals, and fallout. I would not rely on it as my main source of sweeteners.
68Camaro wrote:I'm going to check sugar prices at Aldi's this weekend, because they've got some cheap bulk products, but the best that BJs can do is 63/64 cents a pound on 10 to 25 pound bags. (I remember as a kid 69 cents for a 10 pound bag.) I've bought a couple of the 25 lb'rs (Domino's name brand) because they are heavy-duty fiber-reinforced poly-coated bags with sewn ends. But I've got some spare 5 gal food-grade buckets that I will stack some 4-5 pound conventional paper bags in, if Aldi's has a deal on them.
franklin wrote:The south end of my town has a new HEB which has high priced sugar but, this week, $5.97/lb PRIME ribeye. The HEB on the north side of town which is primarily hispanic won't carry that cut of steak, has cheap ribs and has sugar that is a lot cheaper. I generally load up on 2 x 4 lbs every trip to the feed store. I think the last price was around 45 cents per pound.
Nickelless wrote: ...Just curious, do you have any links about honey contamination?
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