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#230031 - 08/18/11 05:18 PM Disaster Cooking demonstration
Blast Offline
INTERCEPTOR
Carpal Tunnel

Registered: 07/15/02
Posts: 3760
Loc: TX
Very cool, the Canadian Red Cross had two chefs show shoppers how to prepare good meals using disaster prep food and items.
Attention Walmart shoppers: Disaster cooking demo in Aisle 3.

-Blast
_________________________
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Medicine Man Plant Co.
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#230034 - 08/18/11 05:40 PM Re: Disaster Cooking demonstration [Re: Blast]
gonewiththewind Offline
Veteran

Registered: 10/14/08
Posts: 1517
That is a great idea, disaster cooking. I would like to find a book or those types of recipes. Maybe ETS could compile one from all of us, and there could be a group who tries them out to ensure they meet the proper standards for an emergency situation. They could sell them on the web sight. I think the entire Gulf Coast would be a good market for them.

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#230039 - 08/18/11 06:23 PM Re: Disaster Cooking demonstration [Re: Blast]
Susan Offline
Geezer

Registered: 01/21/04
Posts: 5163
Loc: W. WA
Quote:
...about a dozen staff came to watch. There was no public announcement, but some bemused shoppers wandered by.


Pity. The demo could have been put to better use and wider viewing than that. Good idea, poorly executed.

Sue

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#230042 - 08/18/11 07:23 PM Re: Disaster Cooking demonstration [Re: Blast]
Am_Fear_Liath_Mor Offline
Carpal Tunnel

Registered: 08/03/07
Posts: 3078
Quote:
The Canadian Red Cross invited two chefs to show how to make “delicious and nutritious meals in times of emergencies, using only non-perishable food and no electricity.”


Does this actually mean no microwave oven. I'm a little confused here, doesn't disaster cooking just mean its time for a barbecue. Are there really folks out there who have no idea about cooking without using a microwave oven (which is really just reheating)? I can't really believe that preparing food outside an electricity powered kitchen environment is too difficult, or is it really a survival skill for disaster victims (Sorry FEMA I mean survivors) or are there folks out there who really don't know how long it takes to boil and egg and are clueless as to how a box of matches work. crazy

Saying that though, it is quite hard to find folks who know today how to prepare a rabbit of fillet a Cod.

To get the ball rolling on survival recipes, here is a recipe for Cullen Skink.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/cullenskink_86087



Edited by Am_Fear_Liath_Mor (08/18/11 07:56 PM)

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#230044 - 08/18/11 08:54 PM Re: Disaster Cooking demonstration [Re: Blast]
NuggetHoarder Offline
Member

Registered: 07/01/11
Posts: 145
Loc: Appalachians
It goes beyond "no microwave". I've lived through enough hurricanes to know that the power outage comes when they shut down the grid upon winds hitting 75mph. That's early in the storm. The power stays off for a week at least (at least where I lived) and the roads are all flooded and covered with downed trees so no one is going anywhere for a long time. After the storm, the bugs are thick and so is the humidity. Definitely not the best time to be barbecuing.

Everything in your freezer will thaw over that one week so you have to cook it or throw it out. My mother and sisters would begin cooking everything in the freezer the day before the hurricane arrived, while all the men and boys were outside with hammers and saws.

Since we had a big family and a couple of huge chest freezers, it turned into a feast. Whole turkeys, hams, steaks, seafood - all the perishables got cooked and laid out on the big table. Then we'd spend the next few days huddled in the dark, eating some great food, and then working our way into the canned goods by the end of the first week.

For people who are new to this dynamic, I think that disaster cooking classes would probably be a really good thing.

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#230045 - 08/18/11 09:15 PM Re: Disaster Cooking demonstration [Re: Blast]
Bingley Offline
Veteran

Registered: 02/27/08
Posts: 1576
Originally Posted By: Blast
Very cool, the Canadian Red Cross had two chefs show shoppers how to prepare good meals using disaster prep food and items.
Attention Walmart shoppers: Disaster cooking demo in Aisle 3.


Dude, this disaster cooking is already more than what I do on a daily basis. (I'm sick, so sometimes every day resembles disaster day. I have you guys to keep me company, though!)

Stuff I've eaten today:

1. a can of soup
2. a croissant
3. a muffin
4. soda

Send those Red Cross chefs over!

-bingley


Edited by Bingley (08/18/11 09:15 PM)

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#230046 - 08/18/11 09:27 PM Re: Disaster Cooking demonstration [Re: Blast]
JBMat Offline
Old Hand

Registered: 03/03/09
Posts: 745
Loc: NC
An aside -

Tabasco sells a cookbook for MREs. I had the older one for C rats at one point, given to me by a former 1SG.

Some of the meals are fairly decent.

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#230051 - 08/19/11 12:33 AM Re: Disaster Cooking demonstration [Re: JBMat]
Hikin_Jim Offline
Sheriff
Pooh-Bah

Registered: 10/12/07
Posts: 1804
Loc: Southern California
They ate Cheez Whiz? Voluntarily? That really was a cooking disaster. wink

HJ
_________________________
Adventures In Stoving

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#230052 - 08/19/11 03:15 AM Re: Disaster Cooking demonstration [Re: Blast]
MoBOB Offline
Veteran

Registered: 09/17/07
Posts: 1219
Loc: here
According to my DW, most of my cooking IS disastrous.
_________________________
"Its not a matter of being ready as it is being prepared" -- B. E. J. Taylor

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#230056 - 08/19/11 07:45 AM Re: Disaster Cooking demonstration [Re: Bingley]
MDinana Offline
Pooh-Bah

Registered: 03/08/07
Posts: 2208
Loc: Beer&Cheese country
Originally Posted By: Bingley
Dude, this disaster cooking is already more than what I do on a daily basis. (I'm sick, so sometimes every day resembles disaster day. I have you guys to keep me company, though!)

Stuff I've eaten today:

1. a can of soup
2. a croissant
3. a muffin
4. soda

Send those Red Cross chefs over!

-bingley

That's not "sick" that's "bachelor."

Like in Futurama, someone needs to invent "bachelor chow." Sell it in 50lbs bags next to the dog food.

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