Showing posts with label food storage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food storage. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 22, 2015

HOW TO CREATE A FOOD STORAGE SUPPLY FOR YOU AND YOUR SPOUSE … FOR AS LITTLE AS $5 PER WEEK




Aug 2nd, 2010 | By Esther / Off The Grid News / http://offthegridnews.com/2010/08/02/how-to-create-a-food-storage-supply-for-you-and-your-spouse-for-as-little-as-5-per-week/ 


People who live in America rarely consider the need for building up a food supply to offset a national crisis, such as a devastating war or a natural disaster, simply because food in the United States is so readily available and easy to obtain.

However, if something terrible did happen and supermarkets did not remain open, people who planned ahead – like you, for instance – would have the ability to survive and overcome the food shortage. This is not to suggest that Armageddon lies ahead, but it is always wise to prepare for the unexpected and the unforeseen.

And now … you can do just that.  A recent article appearing in a survivalist magazine provided the blueprint for building a substantial and nourishing food supply over a 52-week period. Importantly, the foods that can sustain you and your spouse can be bought once each week for about $5 (perhaps a bit more if prices in your area have risen).

Do the math: the cost for building your emergency food supply is going to be very affordable – just $5 per week (approximately) for 52 weeks … a mere $260. That’s not a lot of money, especially when you consider that you can spread the cost out over a full year. And, while the foods may not seem exotic or overly enticing to you (see the list below), they will sustain you and your spouse. And they are nutritious.

See further explanations at the end of the article.

Here is the list of purchases you need to make weekly – for One Full Year
Week 1:     6 Pounds of Salt
Week 2:     5 Cans Cream of Chicken Soup
Week 3:     20 Pounds of Sugar
Week 4:     8 Cans Tomato Soup
Week 5:     50 Pounds of Wheat
Week 6:     6 Pounds of Macaroni
Week 7:     20 Pounds of Sugar
Week 8:     8 Cans of Tuna
Week 9:     6 Pounds of Yeast
Week 10:   50 Pounds of Wheat
Week 11:   8 Cans of Tomato Soup
Week 12:   20 Pounds of Sugar
Week 13:   10 Pounds of Powdered Milk
Week 14:   7 Boxes of Macaroni and Cheese
Week 15:   50 Pounds of Wheat
Week 16:   5 Cans of Cream of Chicken Soup
Week 17:   1 Bottle of 500 Multi-Vitamins
Week 18:   10 Pounds of Powdered Milk
Week 19:   5 Cans of Cream of Mushroom Soup
Week 20:   50 Pounds of Wheat
Week 21:   8 Cans of Tomato Soup
Week 22:   20 Pounds of Sugar
Week 23:   8 Cans of Tuna
Week 24:   6 Pounds of Shortening
Week 25:   50 Pounds of Wheat
Week 26:   5 Pounds o f Honey
Week 27:   10 Pounds of Powdered Milk
Week 28:   20 Pounds of Sugar
Week 29:   5 Pounds of Peanut Butter
Week 30:   50 Pounds of Wheat
Week 31:   7 Boxes of Macaroni and Cheese
Week 32:   10 Pounds of Powdered Milk
Week 33:   1 Bottle of 500 Aspirin
Week 34:   5 cans of Cream of Chicken Soup
Week 35:   50 Pounds of Wheat
Week 36:   7 Boxes of Macaroni and Cheese
Week 37:   6 Pounds of Salt
Week 38:   20 Pounds of Sugar
Week 39:   8 Cans of Tomato Soup
Week 40:   50 Pounds of Wheat
Week 41:   5 Cans of Cream of Chicken Soup
Week 42:   20 Pounds of Sugar
Week 43:   1 Bottle of 500 Multi-Vitamins
Week 44:   8 Cans of Tuna
Week 45:   50 Pounds of Wheat
Week 46:   6 Pounds of Macaroni
Week 47:   20 Pounds of Sugar
Week 48:   5 Cans of Cream of Mushroom Soup
Week 49:   5 Pounds of Honey
Week 50:   20 Pounds of Sugar
Week 51:   8 Cans of Tomato Soup
Week 52:   50 Pounds of Wheat

Now, it should be noted that this list was the creation of a writer by the name of “AZ Pepper.” If you look closely at his suggestions, you’ll see – almost immediately – that they make sense. The supplies he suggests are affordable (perhaps no more than $5 for each weekly purchase, maybe a bit more) and they can last a long time. These foods will not spoil quickly.

Here is something else you need to know, courtesy of “AZ Pepper.” There are some weeks in this process of food accumulation and storage when there will be money left over after your purchase (perhaps some loose change). Don’t spend it. Instead, put it aside for use in the weeks when your purchase exceeds $5. This will help you stick to the budget. In fact, there will also be weeks when the items you want to buy are on sale. Take full advantage of these sales to save money and get ahead.

Clearly, if you follow this shopping strategy, you will be able to meet your one year food storage goal while staying right at – or near – your pre-planned budget. This is something you can do, if you remain motivated and focused.

Now … for the really good news …

Here is What you will have Stored … after just 52 Weeks

You’re about to be surprised, maybe even shocked, at what your 52-Week Food Storage Plan has enabled you to purchase and store for emergencies. You will have accumulated all of the following:
  • 500 Pounds of Wheat
  • 100 Pounds of Sugar
  • 40 Pounds of Powdered Milk
  • 12 Pounds of Salt
  • 10 Pounds of Honey
  • 5 Pounds of Peanut Butter
  • 45 Cans of Tomato Soup
  • 15 Cans of Cream of Mushroom Soup
  • 24 Cans of Tuna
  • 15 Cans of Cream of Chicken Soup
  • 21 Boxes of Macaroni and Cheese
  • 500 Aspirin
  • 1000 Multi-Vitamins
  • 6 Pounds of Yeast
  • 6 Pounds of Shortening
  • 12 Pounds of Macaroni
Here is the BEST NEWS of all: the nutritional value for all of this food is, believe it or not, a whopping 1,249,329 calories (give or take a few calories).  And, based on a daily diet in which you and your spouse each consume 2000 calories, the food listed above can sustain the two of you for about 312 days. That’s the better part of a full year.

At a cost of just $5 per day – just $260 for a full year – this is a bargain you can’t afford to pass up. In fact, it would still be a bargain if you doubled the cost because even if you were to spend $10 a week … the cost to you would still be a very, very modest $40 a month.

In 21st century America, you simply can’t feed two people for such a small sum of money and remain healthy. Well, now you can. Put this amazing one year food storage plan to the test.

Start planning your first weekly purchase today.

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Great Depression meals


On Facebook there was a topic with a title of “5 Great Depression Era Meals”. A large number of people could not access it, including myself because of a page coming up with an error message. So I began to search out meals and found the following information. This will be good for preppers or just to save some money. There are some things included that I do not think most would want, such as gopher, chicken feet and road kill.

A list of Great Depression meals.

With all the talk about food storage and growing our own food, I did a little digging around to find out what some people ate during America’s Great Depression of the 1930’s.  Surprisingly, a few of these were made by my mother and grandmother, traditions, I’m sure, from a more frugal era.  I still have a soft spot for Chipped Beef on Toast!  How many of these are familiar to you, and do you have any others to add to the list?

Lessons learned from this list?  Stock up on ingredients for bread, including buckets of wheat.  Bread, in some form, is one of the main ingredients for many of these meals.  Second, know how to make different types of bread.  Next, have chickens around as a source for meat and eggs, and if possible, have a cow or goat for milk.  Another lesson is to have a garden that will provide at least some fresh produce, and plant fruit trees and bushes.  Finally, don’t waste anything, even chicken feet!

Check out these Great Depression cookbooks: