I want to quickly put down some info, partly just to help me remember it and sort out some ideas. But it also might help people who are interested in getting started on this.
How I started—originally I bought emergency food— a few cases of MREs and then a bunch of #10 cans of freeze-dried foods. It's pretty expensive, but this stuff will literally keep for a decade or longer. This was my only plan in the beginning, but then an idea hit me—
I should look into stocking up on foods I already eat, that I know I like.
That accomplishes a couple of things at once. First, it costs a lot less than emergency food, and second, I don't need to go to the store every time I want to cook something, I now have my supplies right at home. It's simply a matter of buying them ahead of time. Like, way ahead.
I decided to start with spaghetti, because it occurred to me pasta itself, in dry form, will probably last a long time on the shelf. And you can get canned tomatoes and sauce etc. Though I quickly learned tomatoes are very acidic, and metal cans won't last more than a year or so before they rust out around the bottom edge. But you can also get them in glass jars.
So, at that point I had two tiers of storage foods—long term and shorter term. I also got a few large canisters of coffee, and was thinking about stocking up on powdered creamer. This actually began the next phase.
I never really liked using powdered creamer, because it like causes cancer or whatever. Some pretty nasty artificial stuff. Then suddenly it hit me—don't they make powdered milk? Yes, yes they do. On basically a whim I bought a large container of bulk powdered milk. When it came in it was just a plastic bag, like a trash bag, in a cardboard box, and the bag wasn't sealed airtight. It just had something like an industrial-strength bread-wrapper wire twisted around the bunched-up bag. Well, that didn't seem right! I went online and looked into this matter, of bulk powdered milk and how it needs to be stored properly, because I had a sneakin' suspicion if left like that it would go bad pretty soon.
Turns out I was right. It needs to be vacuum sealed or it will go bad in about a month. After a rapid session of crash research I bought a vacuum seal machine and set to work divvying up the powder into little bags, each with enough powder to make a quart of milk. Oh, the powdered milk is actually delicious. Tastes just like regular milk if you mix it thoroughly enough. I use an electric immersion blender, the kind you stick into the jar or container.
This nifty little device is what launched me on the rest of the journey. I mean, not the blender—the vacuum sealer. Now that I had it I started using it to seal meat and all kinds of stuff, including cooked spaghetti noodles (not recommended—it smashes them down into pulp). Removing the air (in particular the oxygen) makes things keep much longer than just plastic wrap or ziplock bags. The vacuum makes a big difference.
But it occurred to me—not only are we facing food shortages and rising prices, but there are also power blackouts on the way. Vacuum-sealed and frozen meat doesn't do so well when the power is out. But I remembered those old mason jars with the funky two-piece lids my mom used to can food in when I was a kid.
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