
Let me first start by saying thanks to all of you that are reading this blog and have sent me pictures of your own food storage examples and comments to my email. I really appreciate the encouragement. Here are some pictures from a reader in Montana named Lisa. Lisa tried canning her own cheese and it worked beautifully.

Today was 'daycare day' at my nephew's Jr. high school so he 'borrowed' my little one for 45 minutes this morning to take to class with him. It was so nice to have a break and be able to shop for Easter goodies without her in tow. The reason I mentioned my nephew is that when I sent Ashley off to class with him this morning, I started thinking about when he and his family first moved to Utah. My sister-in-law, Becky, and her husband, Troy, moved here from California 6 years ago, when Troy got a chance to transfer here with his job. At that time, they put their stuff in storage and moved in with us for what was supposed to be 2 weeks while they got into a house. The 2 weeks turned into 2 months when they found a floor plan with a local development that they liked and were able to get into a newly built home and pick their own colors. The Reynolds house went from a family of 4 (my nephew was living with us at the time) to a family of 9 for almost an entire summer. Having a family of 5 as house guest for 2 months could be stressful for most people, but Becky and Troy are wonderful, easy-going people. Their 3 boys (2 of whom were teenagers at the time) were also very well behaved. It was during this transition time for their family and ours that, out of necessity, Becky and I discovered a few things about food storage. Here's a few tricks to keeping cost down and storing for large crowds.
1. Storage does not have to be pretty. It does have to be organized. I don't care if you only have scrap wood storage shelves in an unfinished basement (as I do) or beautiful finished melamine cabinets - as long as it is organized, it will work.
2. Break down bulk freezer purchases (meat - cheese - poultry) into meal sized portions before storing. Ex: When block cheese is cheaper - grate your cheese right after you buy it and store it in 1 or 2 cup portions (whatever you usually use for your family size) in sandwich baggies. Then put those baggies into your freezer bag to keep it from getting 'burned'. When a casserole calls for cheese - just pull out a baggie and you are done. I did 40 lbs of cheese (it was on a great sale!!) like this with the meat grinder attachment for my kitchen-aid mixer. It took a few hours on a Saturday afternoon to get it all done - but it was a beautiful thing not to have to grate cheese for a year!!!
3. Buy a kitchen scale and break down packages of chips, Cheetos's, cookies, ect. into proper serving size baggies before putting them into your pantry if they are going to be used for work or school lunches. Then you and your teenagers won't be serving yourselves from a big bag and overeat the junk food. Remember - a serving size of most chips is only 1 once. That's about 1/3 of what you would eat if you just served yourself without the scale.
4. Make your own oatmeal packets! Why pay so much for 10 little packets of pre-packaged oatmeal packets when they are so easy to do yourself. I put each serving into snack sized baggies, and put all the baggies into a 5 gallon bucket. I go to the basement and put 15 or so into a Tupperware in my pantry every week for use. My nephews loved this oatmeal when they lived with me. The recipe for this is at the bottom of this blog.
5. Bisquick and other pre-packaged master mixes are so expensive. Make your own for way cheaper. Check out the video and recipe for 'Master Mix' in my earlier post.
6. Co-cooking is a real blessing! Even if you don't have the opportunity to share a home with another family for a while, you can make this work by sharing the cooking duties with a neighbor. Families of similar size decide on a budget for meals and make a weekly or monthly menu plan. On alternating nights (or alternating weeks if that works for you) each family cooks a double sized meal and brings half to the neighbor. Both families have the same grocery budget as before - but eat more home cooked meals, resulting in fewer nights dining out. This saves on the family budget as well as time and effort for whoever does the cooking in the house. Another plus is that the families will usually shop for the dinner ingredients together. This saves gas money as well as more time.
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