#250608 - 09/04/12 10:39 PM
Re: Got any food projects going on?
[Re: spuds]
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Journeyman
Registered: 11/15/10
Posts: 90
Loc: Maine
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Wow Spuds, that's some serious bacon! I just finished canning 12 pints of spiced applesauce today, after going apple picking yesterday. That should be it as far as canning projects for the season.
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The rhythm is gonna get you...and if it's v-tach or v-fib, the results will be shocking!
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#250610 - 09/04/12 11:12 PM
Re: Got any food projects going on?
[Re: Jolt]
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Old Hand
Registered: 06/24/12
Posts: 822
Loc: SoCal Mtns
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Wow Spuds, that's some serious bacon! I just finished canning 12 pints of spiced applesauce today, after going apple picking yesterday. That should be it as far as canning projects for the season. Jolt,that sounds soooooo good,a nice treat of sweets,man I cant wait to do some soon. The basic preps are good,but the sweet stuff,I would really miss those,applesauce sounds so good right now. I still have some of that tomato jelly,sweet as can be.If I wind up with green maters I will make more of that.
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#250762 - 09/09/12 12:29 AM
Re: Got any food projects going on?
[Re: spuds]
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Old Hand
Registered: 06/24/12
Posts: 822
Loc: SoCal Mtns
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9.25 lbs betterboys and 3.75 lbs romas today.Amazing!!!!! We are even dehydrating em have so many. Getting about 12 lbs a week right now,awesome! I doubt we have six plants,a row maybe 20 feet long? A lot from such a small space.And no cages.I just let em grow against a 3 foot high fence and rest on ground,pick ground ones before fully ripe and even pill bugs dont bother em,lost I bet easily less than a dozen,which went to chickens.Just amazed. Pics a couple weeks ago....
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#250853 - 09/11/12 09:28 PM
Re: Got any food projects going on?
[Re: spuds]
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Pooh-Bah
Registered: 07/11/10
Posts: 1680
Loc: New Port Richey, Fla
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I've been trying to cut down on the bread and pasta, so have been grilling on a small tailgate size propane grill recently...
flashback from 1971...on a slow mid shift in Japan there was not much activity so a couple of us analysts would make a yakitori run for the entire flight (600 sticks of yakitori...every bar in Saitozaki was cooking for us)at least once a month
yakitori is typically chicken (or pork) on a skewer....so bought some bamboo skewers...cut up some chicken breast, marinated in soy, sugar, garlic powder and organge juice... alternated between onion slices... another time with pork..
and it dawned on me..the bamboo skewers (cut the points off with a wire cutter after skewering) would be an excellent cooking method for a power out setting... sanitary...no clean up...utilize a small heat source from most any fuel...with the tips cut off they could be used to eat noodles, rice, veggies as chop sticks (hashi/kuaizi)...never was able to use them well enough to drink soup...perhaps an ancient society might have figured out the way to eat with minimum resources...we might better pay attention...
Edited by LesSnyder (09/11/12 09:29 PM)
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#250870 - 09/12/12 04:15 AM
Re: Got any food projects going on?
[Re: spuds]
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Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 04/28/10
Posts: 3162
Loc: Big Sky Country
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Not sure if it's a "project" or not, but I did pick up some of these LRP rations. IIRC these are the summer rations. I didn't really want the breakfast ones all that much but the dinner/lunch entrees are really good. They're basically Mountain House Pro-Pak in slightly different packaging. They're pretty hard to find at times (the LRPs). There are a couple places that have them reliably but you need to buy pretty large amounts. They're really not a food storage item, more of a camping & survival product.
_________________________
“I'd rather have questions that cannot be answered than answers that can't be questioned.” —Richard Feynman
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#250879 - 09/12/12 02:05 PM
Re: Got any food projects going on?
[Re: LesSnyder]
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Old Hand
Registered: 06/24/12
Posts: 822
Loc: SoCal Mtns
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I've been trying to cut down on the bread and pasta, so have been grilling on a small tailgate size propane grill recently...
and it dawned on me..the bamboo skewers (cut the points off with a wire cutter after skewering) would be an excellent cooking method for a power out setting... sanitary...no clean up...utilize a small heat source from most any fuel....
perhaps an ancient society might have figured out the way to eat with minimum resources...we might better pay attention... I went the 'traditional' food storage,ie,lots of carbs.....now Im thinking,after recent research has shown, that a high fat diet is actually good for you heart wise.That the caveman diet with lots of meat and fat may just have the science behind it to back up heart healthy claims. Sooooo many food myths that sound good on paper when in actuality have pretty much zero actual research to back it up. But thats another topic..... Back to your Asian cooking.I like their emphasis on fast hot cooking,based on the fact that cooking fuel was a luxury for them. I used to cook steaks fast and hot on a grill with sticks/twigs on the ground in my starving student days (Lived in a bus in middle of desert),fast and hot,just 7 minutes approx for a steak,amazing! So great post for that idea! ============================== Phaedrus,those LRPs sound super if not a bit pricey. Looks like the Mtn House just in a heavier package,what a super item for the car BOB. I like Mtn House a lot,a little salty,but you will need that salt too in a survival situation.Good stuff! A Bud runs a survival/prep store.He is down on MRE's because he says they constipate and are designed to do just that.Retired military....he cant understand why MRE's sell so well,he wont eat em!But I guess short term meals they have a place?
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