Free prepping help from the grocery store.

in prepping •  2 years ago 

Sometimes prepping can be less cash if you outthink the groceries. I was buying a load of canned goods (yes everyone stores some) to add to my storage inventory; but I, like everyone else don't have unlisted shelving. So I have to stack cases of canned goods, but I don't want to be buried under a load of loose cans!

This is a free option to stabilize stacked cases of cans:
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The case bottoms are scrap to the grocéry store, and by consolidating a few cans; you can find enough emptie bottoms to cover the cases being purchased! Adding a top cover to each case, increases the stability to allow safe stacking. A spare corner can be used to store a significant quantity of extra cans using this method!

Another thing to consider:
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Turning the can labels out before stacking, will allow a quick sight inventory. In a floorspace where 3 cases will sit next to one another, about 600 cans can be safely stored, for about $300. If they are stacked two cases deep, a written inventory is needed; and I would leave the list in place on the front of the stack!

Prepping does Not have to be expensive, if you are careful. This is obviously not the only prep needed, but it is an easy step; that will increase survival success probability!

So carefully continue to store what you can afford to purchase, while it is still available; and remember to bless someone less fortunate!

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  ·  2 years ago  ·  

I've done that before to stack cans👍

  ·  2 years ago  ·  

It's a good method, and it costs nothing extra!

So keep on stacking those cans.

👍🤠🙏💙

I also recommend a dehydrator and a sealer. My partner has been dehydrating rice, beans, ginger, and just began trying it out on eggs. We determined we need a grinder for the eggs though. They are already limiting how many eggs we can buy and have signs up apologizing for shortages. Going to look into dehydrating milk soon. Been stocking up here and there on canned goods. Not as far along as I wished, but will still be better prepared than most for how bad it's going to get.

  ·  2 years ago  ·  

The problem here is that so many dry goods come with free insect eggs - that eventually hatch in the heat. So, yeah, vacuum packed is ok, like rice, but can't find beans and other pulses. Will be on rice, oil and wild veg! Although, there is so much food here, they'd have stop people moving.

The problem here is that so many dry goods come with free insect eggs - that eventually hatch in the heat.

True. My main concern for now is having enough food on hand to make it through the winter. I'm a little on the fence when it comes to prepping. I don't trust my capacity to safeguard years worth of goods in a case of SHTF, nor anywhere to secure it in hiding. I figure if I can try to prepare for at least one winter it might help enough if things get to bad for me to have to become a nomad into less populated areas.

I have more than 100,000 heirloom seeds I bought that are packaged to be good for some time, so in a worst case scenario if things get to bad if i do become a off the trail nomad once winter is over I can grow some food.

Not looking forward to the necessity of having to test my mettle on this, yet still preparing regardless to increase the odds of an outcome that allows for my survival.

  ·  2 years ago  ·  

Winters are not really cold here, so concerns are slightly different. After seeing a similar country, Sri lanka, get shafted, that methodology could happen here - to make the "business" of food unprofitable. However, take away the dumbphones, and life here isn't so different to 100 years ago.

And yeah, none of it is "welcoming".

  ·  2 years ago  ·  

True on the insect eggs, that's why I freeze or vacuum all the SHTF materials, before storing. Frozen materials can still be used for seeds, but vacuum materials are much faster. The freezing takes 2 days, but I always run them for 3 days just to be safe. Vacuum takes almost no time beyond the filling time.

Look for lentils, sometimes people who buy up the beans miss them. I've found some other items like cous cous and quinoa to store. Buying pasta will extend the inventory of stored goods too. Stock in spices to avoid menu exhaustion, it's cheap and easy to add.

Keep on prepping!

👍🤠🙏😁

  ·  2 years ago  ·  

we'll be buying up animal feed soon! No joke, a lot of it is edible for humans, we've just become fussy. I'll have to look into vacuuing, coz the insect thing pisses me off. eg I stopped buying any pasta that was PACKED outside of Italy, as those factories suck. Genuine Italian pasta, made and packed there, has never been infested.

  ·  2 years ago  ·  

Mind you, I'd rather have a ton of flour and make some quick bread - is really same as pasta, and there are even italian dishes made with chunks of bread instead of pasta.

  ·  2 years ago  ·  

I have stored a lot of pasta, but I've never seen bug problems there? But Packing pasta in jars and pulling a hard vacuum, would definably avoid it any egg problems!

Working on quick breads myself, not happy this far. Still need to build a wood fired oven too, but I do have a dutch oven I can cook with until the oven is built.

Keep on prepping!

👍🤠🌿🐟💗

  ·  2 years ago  ·  

For "quick", I think one needs to cheat, using baking powder instead of waiting for yeast. Is more like flat bread, pittas or naan bread, rather than an actual loaf. I also like making white pizza, which does use yeast.

  ·  2 years ago  ·  

I plan to do pan flat bread, and I already bought the baking powder. I also want to make burrito wrappers with no Leven, until I get the malibar spinach growing leaves big enough to wrap with.

The bread will have to move to sourdough, as yeast will drop out when the SHTF! I have 3 powered mills, and 2 hand mills to make wheat into flour.

I looked today and I also have oats and rye in storage!

👍🤠💗😆

  ·  2 years ago  ·  

Vacuum packing works well. I need pet food too, but I hope I've stocked in enough that I don't need to eat it for them. A 50 pound bag of wheat costs less than a 25 pound bag of dog food, so I'll be grinding a lot of whole wheat flour!

I found a coop that has that plus buckwheat, barley, spelt, and half a dozen other bags of seeds. I have happily spent a lot of cash there...but I'm planning to go back soon.

👍🤠🌿🐟🥦

  ·  2 years ago  ·  

And some of these "older" grains have not yet been GMO'd ; some are hard to find, while others have become "premium". lol.

And yes, I get dry pet food for my own laziness, but real meat is much cheaper if the cheap cuts. I avoid canned food as the cats have been sick on that shit.

  ·  2 years ago  ·  

I picked this coop specifically because it doesn't handle GMO seeds. If the farmers insist, they make them prepay, and unload them in the parking lot. They never being them inside, and they call him to come get them when they arrive!

I'm pressure canning as much meat as I can lately, but I see the rise in costs; and that might stop that prepping soon. I've been buying canned meat to store too, so we should be good!

But I do need to buy more dog food, for my spoiled rotten beasties, LOL! 😆 They do prefer what I eat over dog food anyway....

👍🤠💗🐕‍🦺😁

  ·  2 years ago  ·  

smart dogs!
cats are smaller and I calc ages ago costs about half the price feeding them real meat - they also eat less of it as more nutritious.
when I did have dogs I'd buy bags of soup bones - dogs less fussy, as cats are strict carnivores.

  ·  2 years ago  ·  

A dehydrator is a good tool for prepping! I find that frozen vegetables work well in a dehydrator, because they are already blanched. I can put about six pounds of frozen / dehydrated vegetables into a quart jar. Then I pull a hard vacuum on the jar to extend the shelf life.

I bought some freeze dried eggs, but I bplsm to use my Sister's quail and Chickens for eggs after SHTF. But dehydrating and grinding is a good idea. I'd store it under a vacuum too.

👍🤠🙏😳

Yeah, we do the hard vacuum as well, although we got a batch of defective bags a couple of weeks ago. We are slowly building up a collection of canning jars, but they are not as easy to store.

I really like your blog here. So much great information and discussion, much better than the typical here was what I ate for lunch today posts.

  ·  2 years ago  ·  

I try to post something that is helpful, and hopefully some reader can use something from it!

The hard vacuum is an excellent preservation method, but I like it best in jars. They stack well in case-lots, and will accept a lot of vertical distance. This allows a Lot of jars to be stored in the same place. The dehydrated stock, is quite light; compared to normal canned goods.

I have mylar bags too, and like them. They are good for long term storage!

👍🤠🌿🐟🥦