I see you running, tell me what your running from
Nobody's coming, what ya do that was so wrong.
"...quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est." [...a sword never kills anybody; it's a tool in the killer's hand.] -- (Lucius Annaeus) Seneca "the Younger" (ca. 4 BC-65 AD)
“I regret that I have but one life to lose for my country.” ~ Nathan Hale (final words before being hanged by the British, September 22, 1776.)
If at first you don't succeed -- skydiving is not for you
Shelf stable bread was tested in 1990 and I was a guinea pig for natic. I think it came on line in 91 or so. The first bread was a small white loaf that could be cut in two to make a sandwich. Back then we had the ham slice so all you were looking for was the mayo. Sadly the ham slice left us in 2000.
Somewhere in the early 2000's they started making the round "burger buns" these along with the older style are part of the T-rat family and come packaged in singles and 6 packs. In the system they can be ordered separately or if you order certain T-rat items they are included. If your T-rat order includes a tray of BBQ pork 3 packages of 6 buns will go with it.
They have never been included in the MRE line. It is kinda hard to find in the surplus world but is not bad at all. All this useless information running around my brain.And officially they are good for 3 years @ 80 degrees. And as we all know drop the temp on MRE's and the life goes up.
I see you running, tell me what your running from
Nobody's coming, what ya do that was so wrong.
Does anyone have experience with these?
http://www.thereadystore.com/food-st...e/valuebuckets
I have about three hundred dollars to spend on food, I have 2 cases of MRE's, about a weeks worth of Mountain House pouches, and my normal food in my pantry.
Should I be looking at Long term storage next? Any thoughts would help. What types of food would you buy first?
How many people? How much canned goods do you have and how much do you use them?
I try and get people to look at 1 week, 1 month, 6 months and then a year.
The biggest thing people forget when planning food storage is the little stuff. Spices, mixes, gravy's, and dairy items need to be looked at. Having a bunch of rice and beans is great but you have to have something to put on it.![]()
I see you running, tell me what your running from
Nobody's coming, what ya do that was so wrong.
I used to store large buckets but went to smaller packaging for a few reasons. I now store most items in #10 bags. For smaller things like spices I can make 1/2 or 1/3 size bags out of the bigger ones.
I have a list on what I store and what is in the each box alond with the pack date. In my case I had a supply of boxes that were about 20"X15"X15" that work well and at best weigh 25-30lbs I always try to pack a few heavy items like rice and beans along with lighter stuff. This makes it easy for a number of reasons.
I would start with some simple items that you might like and use. Rice, beans, pasta, flour, sugar. Some powdered milk and other items.
Also take a look at the sticky links page. Add some freeze dried or dehydrated veggies and fruit along with some of the other items. Do not forget things like the tomato powder. Short term keep small cans of paste.
Whatever you think of getting or storing always think of how to prepare it and items that go along with it.
Example. You have some MRE's. Most of the entrees I can take and add some pasta or rice, a little water and extend it to two servings. Anything that is canned can be bulked up with the right and cheap items. I always try something different just to see what the outcome is and if we like it.
One must also practice with the food one stores. No good to have a bunch of one thing and find out later your not sure what to do with it.
Hope this gets you started.![]()
I see you running, tell me what your running from
Nobody's coming, what ya do that was so wrong.