Welcome

I will start by stating that I am NOT an expert - nor am I involved in any profession that would give me a particular understanding of food preparation or storage techniques. I simply have done some things for myself over the years and have learned a thing or two. I have done internet research on different storage techniques and recipes. I have gathered quite the hodge-podge of information and thought that it might be nice to have it all in one place for those that ask me for my advise from time to time. I hope that this blog will be useful and informative to those of you that visit and that you will come back often to see what is new. I will not promise to update daily or even weekly. I will simply say that I will update as I find new things and as I have the time in my personal schedule. I am sure that I will update quite a bit at first as I endeavor to post the information that I have gathered thus far. After that - who knows...

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1. Make sure and go to the bottom of the page for some of my favorite recipes and tips on preserving certain foods.


Monday, March 9, 2009

What a Year's Supply Looks like

Note: I got this information in an email from a friend - though I would like to take credit for it - it is not my work.

Exactly What Does a Basic 1 Year Food Storage for 1 Person Look Like? These are the MINIMUM Basic Amounts of Food Needed for Survival for ONE PERSON for ONE YEAR:


Grain - 400 lbs
Legumes - 60 lbs
Powdered Milk - 16 lbs
Cooking Oil - 10 Quarts
Sugar - 60 lbs
Salt - 8 lbs
Water - 14 Gallons (2 week supply)






Top shelf: cooking oil
2nd shelf down: 3 bags of beans
3rd shelf down: 4 cans powdered milk
6 10-lb. bags sugar
4th and 5th shelves each hold 200 lbs. wheat

This isn’t much to eat for a year!







(Note: You could only do the bread if you had stored yeast, which isn’t on the list.)

Food Storage COST for ONE PERSON for ONE YEAR: (Approximate)
Grains $200
Legumes $75
Instant Milk $94
Cooking Oil $44
Sugar $120
Salt $3
TOTAL APPROX. COST = $523
PLUS $70 shelf = $600

NOTE: There are LOTS of places you can buy food and supplies. This list is intended as a basic outline to show general prices of food. The important thing is to DO SOMETHING. Food Storage Prices as of 1/7/09 - all prices are approximate.

The following quotes come from talks on the LDS Church’s website http://providentliving.org/
“Encourage our members to regularly put into their home storage a few wholesome, basic food items and some water that is safe to drink. They should save some money, if only a few coins each week. This modest approach will soon enable them to have several months’ reserve. Over time they can expand these modest efforts into a longer-term supply by adding such essentials as grains, legumes, and other staples that will keep them alive in case they do not have anything else to eat. As we do our very best, we can be confident that ‘the barrel of meal shall not waste, neither shall the cruse of oil fail.’ We shall enjoy greater wisdom, security, peace of mind, and personal well-being. We shall be prepared, and because we are prepared, we shall not fear.”
Bishop Keith McMullin, Lay up in Store, General Conference, April 2007

“As we have been continuously counseled for more than 60 years, let us have some food set aside that would sustain us for a time of need...I do not wish to sound negative, but I wish to remind you of the warnings of scripture and the teachings of the prophets which we have had constantly before us. I cannot forget the great lesson of Pharaoh’s dream of the fat and lean kine and of the full and withered stalks of corn.”
President Gordon B. Hinckley, The Times in Which We Live, General Conference, October 2001

“ As long as I can remember, we have been taught to prepare for the future and to obtain a year’s supply of necessities. I would guess that the years of plenty have almost universally caused us to set aside this counsel. I believe the time to disregard this counsel is over. With events in the world today, it must be considered with all seriousness.”
Elder L. Tom Perry, If Ye Are Prepared Ye Shall Not Fear, General Conference, October 1995

“Recent surveys of Church members have shown a serious erosion in the number of families who have a years supply of life’s necessities. Most members plan to do it. Too few have begun.”
Thomas S. Monson, Guiding Principles of Personal and Family Welfare, Ensign, September 1986

“The revelation to produce and store food may be as essential to our temporal welfare today as boarding the ark was to the people in the days of Noah.”
Ezra Taft Benson, Ensign, November 1980, p. 33

Start today - it is not too late!

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