dmccarty
Super Star Member
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Don't get weird about food. Buy what you eat, except buy more of it until you get a supply built up, then eat the old stuff while replacing it. I have lots of canned chili, fruit, tomato sauce, beans, mushrooms, pickles, hot sauce, jellies and vegetables. Quite a bit of it I canned myself, in glass, which keeps much better than stuff canned in metal.
Dried foods keep well. Pasta, beans, rice, potato flakes, dried skim milk, egg powder, oatmeal, corn meal, flour, semolina (cream of wheat), buckwheat, wheat berries, pearl barley, etc. My family is getting potato flake mashed potatoes for Thanksgiving. Storing dried foods free of insects and rodents is a challenge. Don't trust plastic, a rodent can chew right through it. You can get glass gallon jars from fast food joints really cheap or free. Vacuum seal anything you want to last for a long time.
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Soap. Lots of soap. Hand soap, dish soap, body soap, laundry detergent, degreasers, floor cleaner, window cleaner and ammonia.
Unfortunately, bleach has a very short shelf life, so you can't stock up. Instead, stock up on alcohol. Rubbing alcohol is cheap but poisonous. Ethyl Alcohol (ethanol) is just as good, plus you can use it to disinfect drinking water. Everclear (190 proof) is cheap. Iodine tablets have a reasonable shelf life, but still need to be rotated every year or two.
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Water, shelter, food, sanitation, in that order.
Soap and sanitation is very important. I mentioned the Fox Fire books because in one of the first few books they talk about making lye soap from wood ashes and fat. The 1950s animal care book I was reading yesterday at the family farm had quite a discussion on sanitation. They mentioned using Lye and I THINK Calcium Hypochlorite. They mentioned using liquid bleach or mixing salts/powder with water for a cleaning solution. I THINK the power was Calcium Hypochlorite. I should have borrowed the book I was reading. I bet nobody in 30 years has pulled the book from the shelf.....
We keep all of the chicken feed in galvanized buckets so the rats/mice can't get the food.
When I started canning we needed a pressure cooker. I looked at a bunch of models, and in the end, bought the ubber expensive cast Al model that has a gauge and more importantly, a weight, to control the pressure. Figure that thing will last generations and as long as gravity works so will the weight. For years I would make a gallon of soup on the weekends to last us the week. The light bulb finally went on to make TWO gallons,
Two summers back we bought a dehydrator which makes drying food really easy. If we did not have power we could make a dehydrator out of materials we have on hand. Course, people used to cut up apples and toss them on the roof to dry... The dehydrator along with the vacuum sealer can really preserve food. I have some apples I dehydrated sitting on my desk at work that are two years old. I was trying to make fruit leather for the first time and messed up by adding water.
Salt. Oh my, but salt is cheap NOW, but if the SHTF, salt will be like, well, money.
Sugar will be really valuable as well since it requires quite a bit of industry to produce. Sugar is really a modern invention and used to be very expensive. Course, any spice will be expensive which is why knowledge of local wild foods will be important. Coffee. Oh my coffee... What to do without coffee? :shocked: Frankly, that will be the end of the world if there is no coffee......
Getting hungry. I think I will get another mug of coffee. :laughing::laughing::laughing:
Later,
Dan