Posted on 07/24/2009 3:37:21 AM PDT by nw_arizona_granny
Weekly Roundup - Living On Nothing Edition Category: Roundups | Comments(15)
Did you hear about the guy that lives on nothing? No seriously, he lives on zero dollars a day. Meet Daniel Suelo, who lives in a cave outside Moab, Utah. Suelo has no mortgage, no car payment, no debt of any kind. He also has no home, no car, no television, and absolutely no creature comforts. But he does have a lot of creatures, as in the mice and bugs that scurry about the cave floor hes called home for the last three years.
To us, Suelo probably sounds a little extreme. Actually, he probably sounds very extreme. After all, I suspect most of you reading this are doing so under the protection of some sort of man-made shelter, and with some amount of money on your person, and probably a few needs for money, too. And who doesnt need money unless they have completely unplugged from the grid? Still, its an amusing story about a guy who rejects all forms of consumerism as we know it.
The Frugal Roundup
How to Brew Your Own Beer and Maybe Save Some Money. A fantastic introduction to home brewing, something Ive never done myself, but always been interested in trying. (@Generation X Finance)
Contentment: A Great Financial Principle. If I had to name one required emotion for living a frugal lifestyle it would be contentment. Once you are content with your belongings and your lot in life you can ignore forces attempting to separate you from your money. (@Personal Finance by the Book)
Use Energy Star Appliances to Save On Utility Costs. I enjoyed this post because it included actual numbers, and actual total savings, from someone who upgraded to new, energy star appliances. (@The Digerati Life)
Over-Saving for Retirement? Is it possible to over-save for retirement? Yes, I think so. At some point I like the idea of putting some money aside in taxable investments outside of retirement funds, to be accessed prior to traditional retirement age. (@The Simple Dollar)
40 Things to Teach My Kids Before They Leave Home. A great list of both practical and philosophical lessons to teach your kids before they reach the age where they know everything. I think that now happens around 13 years-old. (@My Supercharged Life)
Index Fund Investing Overview. If you are looking for a place to invest with high diversification and relatively low fees (for broader index funds with low turnover), index funds are a great place to start. (@Money Smart Life)
5 Reasons To Line Dry Your Laundry. My wife and I may soon be installing a clothesline in our backyard. In many neighborhoods they are frowned upon - one of the reasons I dont like living in a neighborhood. I digress. One of our neighbors recently put up a clothesline, and we might just follow his lead. (@Simple Mom)
A Few Others I Enjoyed
* 4 Quick Tips for Getting Out of a Rut * Young and Cash Rich * Embracing Simple Style * First Trading Experience With OptionsHouse * The Exponential Power of Delayed Consumption * How Much Emergency Fund is Enough? * 50 Questions that Will Free Your Mind * Save Money On Car Insurance
Is my frustration showing again...
Sorry, but just had to tell someone.
As you can see, I was so darned upset that I can’t get to sleep.
Well, finally took that
ambien - so take what I say
worth a grain of salt now.
Night
All
GRAINS, FLOURS AND LEGUMES
For Storage
ABOUT GLUTEN:
As you read through the grain descriptions below you will
come across frequent mention of gluten. Gluten is a combination
of proteins found in some grains which enables the
dough made from them to rise by trapping the gases produced
by yeast fermentation or chemical reaction of baking
powder or soda. The amount of these proteins varies depending
on the species of grain and varieties within a species.
Some grains such as rice have virtually no gluten at all and
will not produce a raised loaf by itself while others like hard
winter wheat have a great deal and make excellent raised
bread. As a general rule yeast raised breads need a fair amount
of gluten to attain good dough volumes while non-yeast raised
breads may need little or none at all. Whether gluten content
is of importance to you will depend upon the end uses you
intend for your grain.
Some of the common and relatively uncommon types of grains
are listed below.
AMARANTH
:Amaranth is not a true cereal grain at all, but is a relative of
the pigweeds and the ornamental flowers we call cockscomb.
Its grown not only for its seed, but for its leaves that
can be cooked and eaten as greens. The seed is high in protein,
particularly the amino acid lysine which is limited in the
true cereal grains. It can be milled as-is, or toasted to provide
more flavor. The flour lacks gluten, so is not suited for
raised breads by itself, but can be made into any of a number
of flat breads. Some varieties can be popped like popcorn,
boiled and eaten as a cereal, used in soups, granolas, and the
like. Toasted or untoasted, it blends well with other grain
flours.
NOTE
: Like some other edible seeds, raw amaranth containsbiological factors that can inhibit proper absorption
of some nutrients. For this reason amaranth seeds
or flour should always be cooked before consumption,
whether for human food or animal feed.
BARLEY
:Barley is thought by some to be the first grain intentionally
cultivated by man. It has short, stubby kernels with a hull that
is difficult to remove. Excluding barley intended for malting
or animal feed, this grain is generally consumed directly by
humans in two forms. Most common is the white, highly processed
pearl barley with much of its bran and germ milled off
along with its hull. It is the least nutritious form of barley.
The second offering is called pot or hulled barley and it
has been subjected to the same milling process as pearled,
but with fewer trips through the polisher. Because of this,
it retains more of the nutritious germ and bran, but does
not keep as well as the more refined product without special
packaging. Unless you are prepared to try to get the
hulls off I dont recommend buying unhulled barley. Although
it can be milled into flour, barleys low gluten content
will not make a good loaf of raised bread. It can be
combined with other flours that do have sufficient gluten
to make leavened bread or used in flat breads. Barley
flour and flakes have a light nutty flavor that is enhanced
by toasting. Whole barley is commonly used to add thickness
to soups and stews.
Recently, a hull-less form has become available on the
market through a few suppliers. This is whole grain barley
with all of its bran and germ intact and should have the
most nutrients of any form of this grain available. I dont
know yet how suitable it is for long term storage.
BUCKWHEAT
:Buckwheat is another of those seeds commonly considered
to be a grain, but which is not a true cereal. It is, in
fact, a close relative to the docks and sorrels. The grain
itself is a dark, three cornered seed resembling a tiny
beechnut. It has a hard, fibrous hull requiring a special
buckwheat huller to remove. Here in the U.S., buckwheat
is most often used in pancakes, biscuits and muffins. In
Eastern Europe and Russia it is known in its toasted form
as kasha. In the Far East, its often made into soba or
noodles. Its also a good bee plant, producing a dark,
strongly flavored honey. The flour is light or dark depending
on how much of the hull has been removed before
grinding. Dark flour is much more strongly flavored than
lighter flour, but because of the high fiber and tannin content
of its hull, which can interfere with nutrient absorption,
it is not necessarily more nutritious. Buckwheat is
one of those foods with no middle ground in peoples opinions
they either love it or they hate it. Like amaranth,
its high in lysine, an amino acid commonly lacking in the
true cereal grains.
CORN (maize):
Corn is the largest grain crop in the U.S., but is mostly
consumed indirectly as animal feed or even industrial feedstock
rather than directly as food. As one of the Three
Sisters (maize, squash and beans) corn was the staple grain
of nearly all of the indigenous peoples of the American
continents before the advent of European colonization. This
American grain has an amazing variety of forms. Major
classes are the flint, dent, flour, and popcorns. To a certain
extent, theyre all interchangeable for milling into meal
(sometimes known as polenta meal) or flour (very finely
ground corn, not cornstarch). The varieties intended to be
eaten as sweet corn (fresh green corn) are high in sugar
content so do not dry or store well relative to the other
corns but instead are usually preserved as a vegetable.
There are a number of lesser corn varieties with specialized
uses that do not lend themselves to direct food use,
but these are seldom found in the open market.
As a general rule of thumb, the flint varieties make better
meal as they have a grittier texture than most other
corns. If meal, hominy and hominy grits (commonly
called just grits) are what you are interested in then
use the flint type if you can find a source. If you intend
to make corn masa for tortillas and tamales, then the
flour corns are what you want, but these are fairly
uncommon on the commercial market so the dent corns
are next best. Yellow dent seems to be the most commonly
available and will work for almost any purpose
except popping.
Popcorn is for snacks or used as a cold cereal after popping
or can be ground into quite acceptable meal. In my
experience I have found it difficult to hull popcorn with
alkali treatment for making hominy (posolé, nixtamal)
though your mileage may vary. Popcorn is one form of a
whole grain available to nearly everyone in the U.S. It is
so common a snack food, particularly at movie theaters,
fairs, and ball games, that the smallest of towns will often
have at least one business selling it cleaned, dried, and
ready to pop in twenty-five or fifty pound bags. Popcorn
is harder than other varieties of corn so if your mill is not
of the heavy duty sort you may want to consider cracking
the kernels into coarse pieces first then grinding into finer
textured meal. The Family Grain Mill states that it should
not be used to mill popcorn at all and the Back To Basics
mill should not be used for any great quantity. All other
manual and electric mills that I am aware of will mill popcorn
without problem.
Once youve decided on your preferred corn type you
may also be able to choose your preferred color. There
are yellow, white, blue, red, and multicolored varieties. The
yellow and whites are the most common by far with the blues,
reds, and parti-colored varieties mostly being relegated to
curiosities, though the blue and red corns have been gaining
in popularity these last few years. These would be worth investigating
if you can find a good source. It should be kept in
mind that white corn does not have the carotene content (converts
into vitamin A) of yellow corn. As vitamin A is one of the
major limiting nutrients in long term food storage, any possible
source of it should be utilized. For this reason I suggest
storing yellow rather than white corn. Additionally, much of
the niacin content of corn is chemically bound up in a form
not available for human nutrition unless it has been treated
with an alkali. This is really of importance only if most of your
sustained daily calorie intake will come from corn, but grits,
hominy (posolé) or corn masa (for tortillas and tamales) are
traditional uses of this grain and can go a long way toward
increasing the number of recipes you can make with corn.
Give them a try, theyre quite good.
Any grain as widely grown as corn is naturally going to be
processed into many products. Here are a few suited for use
in home storage programs.
Corn Meal (polenta meal):
This is simply dry corn groundinto a meal. Corn meal intended for polenta may be found in
either a coarse or a fine grind. In the U.S. corn meal for making
corn bread and most other uses is typically ground to a
fairly fine meal. Very finely milled corn is often used for breading
foods to be fried and is known as corn flour to distinguish
it from coarser meals. This sometimes causes confusion because
corn starch (see below)is also known as corn flour in
Great Britain - a very different product and not really interchangeable.
The germ of the corn kernel contains about twice the oil content
of wheat and is highly susceptible to rancidity once the
kernel is broken in the milling process. Because of this most
commercially available corn meal will have had the germ and
hull removed to extend shelf-life then nutritionally enriched to
make up for some of the vitamins and minerals lost with the
grain germ. This is desirable for the miller and the grocer, but
for the diner it comes at a cost of flavor and some of the
nutrition of the whole grain. Some grocers may offer a whole
grain corn meal that keeps the grain germ and bran which
gives a superior flavored product and retains the full nutrition
of the grain but makes for a more perishable commodity. If
you go this route be sure of your products freshness then
store it in your refrigerator or freezer.
37The grocers corn meal is mostly milled from yellow or white
corn, but some suppliers are now offering blue or even red
corn meals. The flavor of the degerminated yellow and white
meals are largely indistinguishable from each other, but blue
and red corns are interestingly different. Might be worth investigating
if you can find them.
Storage life of degerminated corn meal is about one year in
average conditions in store packaging and a good deal longer
if you repackage it for long term storage. Whole grain meal is
good for about four weeks on the shelf, months in the refrigerator,
and several years in the freezer or if carefully put up in
oxygen free packaging. If you have a grain mill I recommend
storing your corn meal in the form of whole corn and milling it
as needed. This is what we do, milling a few weeks worth of
meal at a time then keeping it in the freezer until needed. The
fresh whole grain meal has a much fuller corn flavor than the
degerminated meal from the grocery store.
Hominy (posolé):
This is corn with the hull, and possiblythe germ, removed. Hominy cooks faster than unhulled whole
corn, is easier to digest, and in some circumstances the alkali
peeled varieties can present a superior nutritional profile to
whole corn. There are two methods of producing hominy:
Mechanical dehulling in a wet milling process or by treating
with one of a number of various alkalis such as industrial lye
(sodium hydroxide), wood ash lye (mostly potassium hydroxides)
or by using some form of lime (calcium hydroxide).
Dry lye peeled hominy is now seldom found for sale, but
canned white or yellow hominy is still common across the
Southern U.S. and many other areas as well as in Latin American
groceries. Generally speaking hominy produced using lime
is known by its Spanish name posole but this will not
always be clear on labels. I have seen can labels of lime peeled
hominy simply called hominy. Whether this is important to
you depends on the particular flavor you are trying to achieve
in the dish you are preparing. Freshly hulled corn using the
lime process that is to be ground to make masa (dough) for
corn tortillas is called nixtamal. Dry posole can be found in
Latin American groceries or ordered from the Internet in nearly
any color that corn offers. Theres a world of things that can
be done with hominy other than simply heating it up and serving
with butter and salt. A few minutes spent searching the
Internet will produce dozens of recipes using hominy as a
major ingredient. Its an excellent ingredient in hearty soups
and stews.
Hominy Grits:
Usually just called grits this coarsely groundmeal can be either simple whole corn ground coarse or corn
that has been hulled in a process using a form of lye to
make hominy then dried and coarsely ground. Grits produced
from lye peeled corn typically cook faster, have a
longer shelf life, and presents a different, possibly superior,
nutritional profile than the whole grain product. Grits
produced from whole corn take much longer to cook,
have a short shelf life if not refrigerated or put up in special
packaging, a superior flavor to the lye peeled product,
and retains the nutrition of the whole grain. Very coarsely
ground grits is also known as samp.
Hominy grits in the U.S. must be enriched like many other
refined grain products and are now typically industrially
produced. They are usually what you will find at your local
grocers. Whole grain grits are primarily the product of
grist mills making stone ground products and are often
found in living history demonstrations, heritage fairs, pioneer
day celebrations, and so on. Both yellow and white
corns are commonly milled for grits and which one you
should buy probably depends on what you ate growing
up. If youre indifferent as to the color of your grits then I
suggest buying yellow corn grits as the beta carotene content
of yellow corn can be converted by our bodies into
Vitamin A whereas white corn has none.
Masa Harina:
In Spanish masa means dough andharina means flour which is a straight forward description
of what masa harina is: A lime peeled corn that has
been dried and milled into meal to be made into tortilla
dough. Its flavor is distinctively different from either corn
meal or hominy grits and is used in making tortillas, tamales,
and many other Southwestern, Mexican, Central and
South American dishes. Can often be found in mainstream
grocery stores and grocers catering to a Latin American
trade. Will store on the shelf for about a year and even
longer if refrigerated or put up in good storage packaging.
If you have a mind to try making your own tortillas you
will save yourself much time and effort by using a tortilla
press. These can be found in some groceries catering to a
Latin American clientèle or ordered over the Internet.
Corn Starch:
A common starch used as a thickener. Madeby a roller milling process removing the hull and germ leaving
behind a nearly pure starch. Storage life is indefinite if
kept dry. In the United Kingdom and some other areas it
is known as corn flour which occasionally causes confusion
with very finely milled corn also known as corn flour
here in the States. The two products are largely not interchangeable.
38
MILLET:
Millet is an important staple grain in North China and
India, but is little known in the U.S, where we mostly use
it as bird feed. The grain kernels are very small, round,
and usually ivory colored or yellow, though some varieties
are darker. A lack of gluten and a rather bland flavor may
account for the anonymity of this cereal. Millet has a more
alkaline pH (and a higher iron content) than other grains
which makes it very easy to digest. A major advantage of
millet is that it swells a great deal when cooked and supplies
more servings per pound than any other grain. When
cooked like rice millet makes an excellent breakfast cereal.
It has little gluten of its own, but mixes well with other
flours. Adding whole millet kernels to the dough can add a
pleasant crunch to your home made breads.
OATS:
Though the Scots and the Irish have made a cuisine of
oats, it is mostly thought of in the U.S. as a bland breakfast
food. Seldom found as a whole grain, its usually sold
processed in one form or another. Much like barley, the
oat is a difficult grain to separate from its hull. Besides its
longtime role as a breakfast food, oats make an excellent
thickener of soups and stews and a filler in meat loafs and
casseroles. Probably the second most common use for
oats in America is in cookies and granolas. A little creative
thought can really increase their culinary range.
Listed below are the forms of oats found in the U.S. Rolled
and cut oats retain both their bran and their germ.
Oat groats:
These are whole oats with the hulls removed.They are not often found in this form, but can sometimes
be had from natural food stores and some storage food
dealers. Oats are not the easiest thing to obtain a consistent
grind from so producing your own oat flour takes a
bit of experience. If you have a roller mill or attachment
you can produce your own oatmeal using whole oat groats.
Steel cut oats:
Also known as Irish, pinhead or porridgeoats. They are oat groats cut into chunks with steel blades.
Theyre not rolled and look like coarse bits of grain. Steel
cut oats can be found in many supermarkets and natural
food stores. They take longer to cook than rolled oats,
but retain more texture. They need oxygen free packaging
to be kept at their best for long term storage.
Rolled oats:
These are also commonly called old fashioned,thick cut or porridge oats. To produce them, oat
groats are steamed and then rolled to flatten. They can
generally be found wherever oats are sold. They take slightly
longer to cook than do the quick cooking oats, but they retain
more flavor, texture and nutrition. This is what most people
will call to mind when they think of oatmeal.
Quick cooking rolled oats:
These are just steamed oatgroats rolled thinner than the old fashioned kind above so
that they will cook faster. They can usually be found right
next to the thicker rolled oats.
Instant rolled oats:
These are the just add hot water ormicrowave type of oat cereals and are not particularly suited
for a storage program. They do, however, have uses in bug
out and 72 hour food kits for short term crises.
Whole oats:
This is with the hulls still on. They are sold infeed & seed stores and sometimes straight from the farmer
who grew them. Unless you have some means of getting the
hulls off, I dont recommend buying oats in this form. If you
do buy from a seed supplier, make certain that they have not
been treated with any chemicals that are toxic to humans.
QUINOA
:Quinoa is yet another of the grains that is not a true cereal.
Its botanical name is Chenopodium quinoa (pronounced
keen-wah), and is a relative of the common weed
Lambsquarter. The individual kernels are about 1.5-2 mm in
size and are shaped rather like small flattened spheres. When
quinoa is cooked, the germ of the grain coils into a small tail
that lends a pleasant crunch when eaten. Some forms of this
grain have a bitter tasting water soluble component that should
be removed by a thorough washing unless this was already
done by the processor as most of the quinoa sold in the U.S.
apparently has. There are several varieties of quinoa that have
color ranging from near white to a dark brown. The larger
white varieties are considered superior and are the most common.
RICE
:Rice is the most widely consumed food grain in the world
with the U.S. being the leading exporter of this important staple,
though we actually only produce about 1% of the global supply.
The majority of the worlds rice is eaten within five miles
of where it was grown.
Much like wheat and corn, rice comes in a number of varieties,
each with different characteristics. They are typically divided
into classes by the length of their kernel grains; short,
medium and long.
39Short grain rice:
The short grain variety is a little softer andbit moister when it cooks and tends to stick together more
than the longer rices. It has a sweeter, somewhat stronger
flavor than long grain rice.
Medium grain rice: The medium grain variety is not very common
in the States. It has flavor like the short variety, but with
a texture more like long.
Long grain rice:
The long grain variety cooks up into a drier,flakier dish than the shorter types and the flavor tends to be
blander. It is the most commonly found size of rice on American
grocery shelves.
Each of the above may be processed into brown, white, parboiled
or converted, and instant rice. Below is a short discussion
of the differences between the various types.
Brown rice:
This is whole grain rice with only the hull removed.It retains all of the nutrition and has a pleasant nutty
flavor. From a nutritional standpoint it is by far the best, but it
has one flaw: The essential oil in the germ is very susceptible
to oxidation and soon goes rancid. As a result, brown rice
has a shelf life of only about six months unless given special
packaging or storage. Freezing or refrigeration will greatly
extend this. Its possible to purchase brown rice from long
term food suppliers already specially packaged in air tight
containers with an inert nitrogen atmosphere or you can do it
yourself. In this kind of packaging, (if properly done), the
storage life can be extended for several years.
Converted rice:
Converted rice starts as whole rice still inthe hull which undergoes a process of soaking and steaming
until it is partially cooked. It is then dried, hulled and polished
to remove the bran and germ. The steaming process drives
some of the vitamins and minerals from the outer layers into
the white inner layers. This makes it more nutritious than polished
white rice, but also makes it more expensive. Its storage
life is the same as regular white rice.
White rice:
This is raw rice that has had its outer layersmilled off, taking with it about 10% of its protein, 85% of its
fat and 70% of its mineral content. Because so much of the
nutrition is lost, white rice sold in the U.S. has to be enriched
with vitamins to partially replace what was removed.
It stores very well and is generally the cheapest form of rice
to be found in the market place making it a very common
storage food.
Instant rice:
The type of rice is fully cooked and then dehydratedneeding nothing more than the addition of water to
reconstitute it. In a pinch, its not even necessary to use hot
water. Its not particularly suitable for inclusion in storage programs,
but may have a place in seventy-two hour and
other short-term emergency kits. The white variety is by
far the most common, but in the last few years instant
brown rice has made an appearance on the market.
RYE
:Rye is well known as a bread grain in the U.S. It has dark
brown kernels longer and thinner than wheat, but less gluten.
Rye flours can be found in varying stages of refinement
from dark whole grain flour to semi-refined medium
to pale fully refined offerings. Bread made from this grain
tends to be dense unless gluten is added (often in the form
of a lot of wheat flour). German pumpernickels and Russian
black breads, made with unrefined rye flour and molasses,
are two of the darkest, densest forms of rye bread.
Many sourdoughs are built upon a rye base with a resulting
interesting, intense flavor.
SORGHUM
:Sorghum is probably more widely known here in the States
for the syrup made from the sweet juice squeezed from
the stalks of some varieties of this grain. Also known as
milo, it is one of the principle cereal grains of Africa. Its
seeds are somewhat round, a little smaller than peppercorns,
of an overall brown color with a bit of red and
yellow mixed in. The varieties called yellow endosperm
sorghum are considered to have a better taste. It is a
major feed grain in the Southwestern U.S. and is where
the vast majority of the national production goes. Like
most of the other grains, sorghum is low in gluten, but the
seeds can be milled into flour and mixed with higher gluten
flours or made into flat breads, pancakes or cookies. In
the Far East, it is cooked and eaten like rice, while in
Africa it is ground into meal for porridge. Its also fermented
for alcoholic beverages.
TEFF
:Easily the smallest of the grains, teff kernels are only about
1/32nd inch in diameter. The name itself means lost because
if dropped on the ground, its too small to recover.
Its been very little known until recently, but has been a
staple grain in Ethiopia for nearly five millennia. Small
amounts are now being grown in South Africa and the
United States. This grain ranges in color from reddish
brown to near white. It has a protein content in the 10-
12% range, good calcium and a useful source of iron. It is
traditionally used in making the Ethiopian flat bread injera,
but has no gluten content of its own. Itll combine
well with wheat flour though and has something of a sweetish
flavor.
40
TRITICALE
:Triticale is not a creation sprung from the smooth brows
of Star Trek script writers. It is, in fact, a cross between
durum wheat and rye. This youngest of grains combines
the productivity of wheat with the ruggedness of rye and
has a high nutrition value. The kernels are gray-brown,
oval shaped larger-than-wheat and plumper than rye. It
can be used in much the same way as either of its two
parents. It will make a raised bread like wheat does, but
its gluten is a bit weak so wheat flour is frequently added
to strengthen it. Because of the delicate nature of its gluten,
excessive kneading must be avoided.
WHEAT
:The most widely consumed grain in the United States and
along with rice and corn one of the three most widely grown
in the world. Wheat is also one of the most intensively
processed to turn into food of all the grains. It comes in a
number of different varieties each more suitable for some
purposes than others based on its particular characteristics.
The most common classifications of these varieties
are based on their respective growing season, hardness
of kernel, and color of their bran layers - spring or winter,
hard or soft, red or white.
The hard wheats have kernels that tend to be small, hard
in texture, and with high protein (primarily gluten) contents.
As a general rule, hard varieties have more protein
than soft varieties. Yeast raised breads that need a lot of
gluten are where its at for the hard wheats.
The soft wheats have kernels tending to be larger, plumper
and softer in texture than hard wheats. As their gluten content
is lower they are primarily used in biscuits, pastries,
quick breads, some pastas, and breakfast cereals where
a higher gluten content would contribute an undesirable
tougher texture. Soft wheats do not produce as fine a loaf
of yeast raised bread as high gluten hard wheat, though it
can still be used for yeast breads by combining with higher
gluten flours or using methods suitable for its protein level.
Many traditional European yeast raised breads are made
with lower protein flours.
Durum wheat also has a very hard kernel and a high protein
content, but of a somewhat different nature than the
other hard wheats. Durum is not primarily used for breads
but is instead consumed mostly in the manufacture of pasta
where it lends its characteristic yellowish color to the finished
product. There are some specialty breads that call
for durum/semolina flour so it can be used for bread making
even if its not best suited to the task.
Winter wheats are planted in the Fall, over winter in the field,
grow through the Spring and are harvested early the next
Summer. Spring wheats are planted in the early Spring and
are harvested the following Fall. Red wheats comprise most
of the hard varieties while white wheats comprise most of the
soft. Recently, hard white wheats have been developed that
are very suitable for yeast raised bread making. Some feel
the hard white varieties make a better tasting whole wheat
bread than the hard reds and I am inclined to agree. When
milled, whole grain hard white wheat flour looks somewhat
like unbleached refined white flour in appearance.
The hard red varieties, either spring or winter, are commonly
chosen for storage programs because of their high protein
content which should be no less than 12% with 14% or more
being excellent. The hard white spring wheats are still relatively
new and not yet as widespread but are steadily growing
in popularity. They have the same excellent storage characteristics
as the hard red wheats and should be selected
with the same protein contents as well.
With so many different varieties of wheat it should come as
no surprise that there are a number of different types of wheat
flour offered to the home baker. Distinguishing between the
array of products available through both retail grocery stores
and commercial supply houses catering to bakers nearly requires
the knowledge of a professional baker or a cereal chemist
and would take up page after page to explain it all. Instead
I will briefly cover only those flours or flour products that one
can usually find in supermarkets in the U.S. and elsewhere. If
you need more advanced knowledge in order to purchase
through commercial or institutional food channels I recommend
taking your questions to the Usenet newsgroups
rec.food.baking, sci.bio.food-science, or alt.bread.recipes
where you may be able to get answers from professionals in
the field.
All Purpose Flour:
Of all the flours in the retail market allpurposeflour is the one most subject to major differences
between brands, regions of the U.S., and/or other nations.
This refined flour is typically made from a blend of hard and
soft wheats with a protein content that can range from as low
as 8% to as high as 12%. The regional brands of the Southern
U.S. have traditionally been on the lower end of the protein
scale. This is due to the fact that historically only soft
wheats were grown in the South and the resulting flour was
best used is in making biscuits and other types of non-yeast
41raised breads that did not require high gluten levels. The regional
brands of the Northern U.S., and Canada are typically
at the high end of the protein scale at or approaching 12%.
This is because hard wheats are primarily northern grown
and are well suited to making yeast raised breads which need
higher gluten levels as were customarily made there. The national
brands either differ by region or are in the 10-11%
range in an effort to try to satisfy all markets.
In the U.S. all-purpose flour is enriched and can be had either
bleached or unbleached and may possibly have small
quantities of malt added as well (see below about enrichment,
bleaching and malting).
As the name implies all-purpose is meant to serve as a general
all-around flour from which you can make anything from
cakes and pie crusts to sandwich bread. So far as it goes you
can, but its a lot like one-size-fits-all clothing in that chances
are it wont work as well for a given project as a flour milled
with that particular use in mind. The lower protein all-purpose
flours sold in the Southern U.S. will produce a more
tender biscuit, cake, or pie crust than the higher protein allpurpose
flours of the Northern U.S. and Canada, but unless
you use some special techniques (like how true French bread
is made) it wont produce a very satisfying loaf of yeast bread.
The flours in 10-11% range try to strike a happy medium
between the two, but still wont serve as well as flour produced
specifically with a given end use in mind. If you want
to limit the number of types of flour you put into your storage
program Id recommend going with the 10-11% flours and
either plan on adding gluten as needed to make the best yeast
raised breads or cornstarch to produce more tender cakes
and pie crusts.
In the United Kingdom and Canada all-purpose flour is oft
times labeled as plain flour, top patent, general purpose,
or family flour.
Bread Flour:
A refined white flour with a higher protein (gluten)content than most all-purpose flours to achieve better
performance in making yeast raised breads. Protein levels
should be at least 12% with 13-14% better still.
As this is a refined flour in the U.S. it will be enriched with
added vitamins and iron, and can be found either bleached or
unbleached. Because it is intended primarily for use in yeast
raised breads this flour will usually have other additives such
as small amounts of malt to improve yeast performance and
vitamin C (ascorbic acid) to improve dough volume and texture.
Some bread flours may also be treated with potassium
bromate to improve gluten qualities, but concerns over
possible toxicity of this additive is leading to its diminished
use.
A high gluten refined bread flour is commonly added to
whole wheat doughs to strengthen them which can improve
loaf rises and volume. Bread flour is most commonly
used in the production of yeast raised breads, pizza
crusts, and some specialty baked goods. In Great Britain
bread flour is often labeled as Strong Flour meaning it
has a high protein content.
Whole Wheat Flour:
Real whole wheat flour should include100% of the bran and germ so read your ingredient
labels carefully to be sure this is so. This flour is mostly
milled from hard red wheats, but whole grain hard white
flour is available from some mills and will produce a bread
that looks closer to refined white bread if that is what you
are accustomed to eating. Protein contents can vary, but
as most whole wheat flour is used in yeast bread making it
should be at least 12% with 13-14% being better still.
This is good because the bran and the germ can interfere
with good gluten development as the dough is mixed and
kneaded. Some do not mind this while others strengthen
their flour by adding vital wheat gluten or high protein refined
bread flours to achieve the rise and volume they are
accustomed to in yeast breads. Approximately 90% of
the total protein of a kernel of wheat is gluten with the
remaining 10% other proteins being mostly found in the
grain germ. Refined flours have had the germ removed so
a statement of protein content can be taken as an indication
of that flours suitability for making raised yeast breads.
With whole wheat flours one must remember that ten percent
of non-gluten germ proteins and judge that flours
protein content accordingly. Whole wheat flour milled from
lower protein soft wheats may be offered as whole wheat
pastry flour so be sure of what you are buying. Some
whole-wheat flours are also enriched.
Whole wheat flour may also be called Graham Flour,
sometimes simply Stone Ground Wheat Flour and in
Great Britain, Canada, and Australia may be known as
Whole Meal Flour. In Britain there is also a Brown
Flour which is midway between whole meal and white
flour in that it retains about 85% of the wheat kernel rather
than only the 72-75% that is typical of refined white flours.
The real disadvantage to storing whole wheat flour is that
like other processed grain products that includes the oil
rich germ it wants to go rancid. How fast this can happen
depends upon temperature, moisture, etc, but four to six
42
weeks is generally enough time for rancidity to become
noticeable. One can, of course, package the flour in good
containers with oxygen absorbers and the like, but better
still would be to buy the flour in the form of whole wheat
berries and mill them yourself. This is exactly what I and
many other folks with food storage programs do. Baking
with fresh, whole wheat flour is something of an art so the
time to get good with it is right NOW while you can toss
your failures to the chickens rather than having to eat them
regardless because you cant afford to waste the food.
Vital Wheat Gluten:
Sometimes labeled as simplywheat gluten. This is the purified gluten of hard wheat
extracted from flour. It is generally 75-80% protein and is
used to strengthen weak or whole grain flours for making
yeast raised breads or made into seitan a wheat protein
meat substitute. Somewhat confusing the issue is High
Gluten Flour which is available in some markets. Careful
investigation is needed here because this flour can range
from a mere high gluten bread flour (approx 14%) to a
gluten enriched flour typically 40%+) all the way up to
purified wheat gluten (75%+). Be clear as to what it is
youre buying and if youre not certain contact the manufacturer.
If your whole wheat bread is not rising for you as
much as youd like then an addition of a few spoonfuls of
gluten or some high gluten flour may perk it up a bit.
Cake Flour:
Typically the lowest protein content (6-8%)flour available to the home baker. This highly processed
flour will make the tenderest cakes, cookies, and biscuits
but performs poorly for yeasted breads. The flour is nearly
always bleached (chlorinated) both to give it a bright whiteness
and to improve its moisture holding capacity for cakes
calling for a high ratio of sugars or fats. Unless you make
a lot of cakes this is a rather specialized item to store.
Pastry Flour:
Similar to cake flour, but generally slightlyhigher in protein, not chlorinated, and may be found
bleached or unbleached. Used to produce tender pie crusts,
biscuits, etc. Very similar to the regional all-purpose flours
of the Southern U.S. Can also sometimes be found in a
whole-wheat version as well. In Great Britain, Canada,
and Australia may be known as soft flour.
Semolina/Durum:
Produced from durum wheat this flouris typically high in protein, 12% or more, enriched, unbleached
with a distinctive pale yellow color. Texture depends
largely on brand and can range from fairly coarse
to bread flour fine. Most commonly used in the production
of pastas, noodles, and couscous, but some specialty
bread types call for semolina flour. May also be known as
alimentary flour, macaroni flour, or pasta flour. Farina,
a coarse meal used as a breakfast cereal, is made from durum
wheat.
Self-Rising Flour:
This is ordinary refined and enriched allpurposeflour to which approximately 1.5 teaspoons of baking
powder and 0.5 teaspoons of salt have been added to
each cup of flour. This flour has its fans, but its not well suited
to long storage as the baking powder wants to go flat over
time even with special packaging. Nor is it suited to making
yeast raised breads. Most self-rising flours are in the mid to
low end of the protein scale (8-10%) because this is where
chemically leavened quick breads perform best to achieve
good rises and textures. You can make your own self-rising
flour by adding in the requisite amount of double acting baking
powder and salt mentioned above which is what I recommend
doing rather than trying to store the ready-made product.
Self-rising flour is sometimes known as phosphated flour
(for the baking powder used in it) and in Great Britain,
Canada, and Australia may be known as self-raising flour
or raising flour.
Instant Flour:
This specialized flour product is also sometimesknown as shaker flour for the shaker can in which its
usually found This is a low-protein flour in a granular form
processed for easy and rapid dissolution into hot or cold liquids
for making sauces, gravies, and batters. A fairly specialized
item which any worthy cook can use ordinary flour to
replace.
FLOUR TREATMENTS AND ADDITIVES
Flour milling companies (and home bakers) use a variety of
additives and treatments in their flours to improve or suppress
a particular quality in their product. If you read the package
labels carefully you can discern quite a lot about what
has and has not been done. Here are a few of the more common:
Enrichment:
U.S. law (and some other nations) requires thatrefined flours which have had their bran and germ portions
removed to be enriched by adding back a portion of the
niacin, thiamin, riboflavin, folic acid, and iron that were lost in
the refining process. Some milling companies go even further
by adding vitamins A & D as well. There are various opinions
about the value of this enrichment, but its there. It has no
affect on the taste, color, texture, caloric value, or baking
qualities of the flour. Outside of the U.S. refined white flours
43may or may not be enriched so study your package labels
carefully if this concerns you.
Bleaching
: White bread and white cakes come by their snowybeauty thanks to bleaching. This is a process by which the
yellowish carotenoid pigments that naturally occur in wheat
are bleached white in order to improve the appearance of the
flour and perhaps to change some of its physical characteristics
as well. This would occur naturally by itself were the refined
flour allowed to sit around for several months, but its
an uneven process and time is money to the milling companies
who cannot afford to have large stocks of product sitting
around in their warehouses for long periods of time.
Beyond making naturally off-white flour snowy in appearance
bleaching can perform several other functions which the
individual baker must decide if they are important to his needs.
Until fairly recently much refined flour was also bromated
using potassium bromate both to lighten the color, and to improve
the qualities of the gluten. Concerns over the toxicity
of this chemical has led to its gradual decline or outright ban
on its use. Other bleaching agents are now used such as chlorine
gas, chlorine dioxide, benzoyl peroxide and possibly others
as well. Flours treated in this fashion will often exhibit
improved loaf volume, finer grain, and look better in the finished
product.
Cake flour is generally chlorinated not only whiten but also to
improve its moisture holding ability when used in cakes with
a high ratio of sugar and fat to flour. This bleaching also further
tempers the already low gluten of the flour to produce
the tenderest possible texture.
For the folks who do not care to buy bleached flours, small
amounts of ascorbic acid (vitamin C) are often added as a
dough conditioner and yeast nutrient. Home bakers often add
their own vitamin C to their breads when they make them for
the same reasons. A mere 1/8 tsp of ascorbic acid per cup of
flour is all that is necessary.
All bleached flours must be so labeled in the U.S.
Malting
: Many bread flours and some all-purpose flours willhave small amounts of malt, malted barley flour, malt flour, or
diastatic malt added to them. This additive improves the performance
of the yeast by providing enzymes which speed the
conversion of some of the flour starches into the digestible
sugars the yeast use as fuel which can improve both the rise
of the dough and the flavor of the finished product. The malt
can also serve to improve the appearance of the bread when
baked and lengthen its shelf life. You can add your own
diastatic malt in the ratio of about 0.5-1.0 teaspoons for
every three cups of flour.
Organic
: This is flour produced and processed under theguidelines of the U.S. Department of Agricultures Organic
foods program. Most of the basic flour types (allpurpose,
bread, pastry, etc.) can be found in organic forms
though you may have to search a bit to find them.
Pre-Sifted:
This is flour sifted at the mill before it waspackaged. Supposedly this means you do not need to sift
it again at home, but many feel that due to settling during
transport and storage if the recipe calls for sifted flour it
should be done again.
Other Additives
: There are many other potential additivesthat you may potentially come across in flour which
would require more space than is possible here to cover
them. Most are for use within the commercial/industrial
baking fields and you would need to contact the supplier
to determine precisely what it is they can do for you.
STORING FLOUR PRODUCTS
As already mentioned above whole wheat flour wants to
go rancid rather quickly after it has been milled. Once
ground it will stay fresh for about four to six weeks sitting
on your room temperature kitchen shelf. In a sealed container
in the refrigerator the flour will stay good for a year
or so. In the freezer it will keep for years. Personally, I
think it best to store your whole wheat flour in the form of
wheat berries and only mill as much flour as you will use in
a week or two and keep that in the refrigerator or freezer
until you do. If for some reason you cannot do this then
buy the freshest product you can and package it well in
Mylar bags, glass jars, or metal cans with oxygen absorbers.
Due to the fine texture of flour it will not gas flush very
well at all.
Even the refined white flours have limited shelf-lives. In
spite of what some would have you believe they are not
dead foods. The bran and germ may have been removed,
but a minute portion of the germ oils will remain as well as
the naturally occurring enzymes found in the grain. Refined
white flour wont noticeably go off on you the way
whole wheat flour will, but given sufficient time and exposure
to heat and atmospheric humidity the protein content
of the flour will slowly breakdown. Your first indications
of trouble may be a slowly developing musty smell or de
44graded dough performance poor rises and bad loaf volumes.
In a sealed, air tight container you should easily
achieve six months to a year at room temperatures. Sealed
containers in the refrigerator or freezer will last for at least
several years. If you want your white flour to stay at its
best for the longest possible time then package it in Mylar
bags, glass jars, or metal cans air tight with oxygen absorbers.
At a decent storage temperature sealed in a low
oxygen environment you should easily achieve five years
of shelf life or more.
THIS MANUAL MAY BE SOLD AT COST ONLY - AND IS NOT TO BE OFFERED FOR RESALE.LEGUMES
and dairy products its not necessary to store legumes at all.
But most people do choose to keep a selection of beans,
peas, and lentils in their larders either for reasons of economy,
because they like them, or both. There are few non-animal
foods that contain the amount of protein to be found in legumes
with the varieties commonly available in the U.S. ranging
from 20%-35%. As with most non-animal proteins, they are
not complete in themselves for purposes of human nutrition,
but become so when they are combined with the incomplete
proteins found in grains. This is why grains and legumes are
so often served together the world around.
The legume family, of which all beans, peas, lentils, and peanuts
are a part, is one of the largest in the plant kingdom.
Because of this and the many thousands of years of cultivation
and development that man has given them on several
continents the variety of edible legumes available to us is huge.
Both their appearance and their names are colorful and varied.
They range from adzuki beans, a type of soybean from
the Orient, to zipper peas, a common field-pea here in the
Southern U.S. Their color can range from a clean white, to
deep red, dull green to flat black with thousands of mixtures
and patterns in between.
In spite of this incredible variety, many legumes are largely
interchangeable in cooking, although some dishes just wouldnt
be the same if a different type were used. Below is a partial
list of common legumes. ADZUKI BEANS: These small, deep red beans are very popular in Japan, China and other Asian nations, but are not as well known in the U.S. They are actually a cousin of the soybean and are commonly used in producing sweet bean paste for Chinese buns and other dishes. Pressure cooking will sometimes impart a bitter flavor so they are best presoaked then boiled in the conventional fashion. Their flavor is somewhat milder than kidney or small red beans, but they can serve as an adequate substitute for either in chili and other dishes in which those beans are commonly used. BLACK BEANS: Also known as turtle beans, they are small, dark brownishblack and oval-shaped. Well known in Cuban black bean soup and commonly used in Central and South America and in China. They tend to bleed darkly when cooked so they are not well suited to being combined with other beans, lest they give the entire pot a muddy appearance. The skins of black beans also slip off easily so for this reason they are generally not recommended for pressure cooking for fear of clogging the vent. This can be lessened by not presoaking before cooking. BLACK-EYED PEAS: Also known as cowpeas or field peas there are many varieties these peas eaten across the Southern United States, Mexico, and Africa with black-eyed peas being the most commonly known in the U.S. The coloring of field-peas is as varied as the rest of the legume family, with black-eyed peas being small, oval shaped with an overall creamy color and, of course, their distinctive blackeye. Dried field-peas cook very quickly and combine very tastily with either rice or cornbread and are often eaten as Hoppin John every New Years for luck. Theyre also reputed to produce less flatulence than many other beans. CHICKPEAS: Also known as the garbanzo bean or cecci pea (or bean), they tend to be a creamy or tan color, rather lumpily roundish and larger than dried garden peas. Many have eaten the nutty flavored chick-pea, even if theyve never seen a whole one. They are the prime ingredient in hummus and falafel and are one of the oldest cultivated legume species known, going back as far as 5400 B.C. in the Near East. Chickpeas tend to remain firmer when cooked than other legumes and can add a pleasant texture to many foods. I like them in red spaghetti sauces in particular and they are often used in Spanish cuisine in a tomato based sauce. Roasted brown then ground they have also served as a coffee substitute. FAVA BEANS: Not as well known in the U.S. as in Europe and the Mediterranean favas are also known as broad beans or horse beans being broad in shape, flat and reddish brown in color. This is one of the oldest legume species in European cultivation, but it does require more effort to consume. The hull of the bean is tough and not conducive to being tenderized by cooking so is often peeled away. The skinless bean falls apart so is made into a puree. A small number of people with Mediterranean ancestry have a beans, a condition known as favism so should avoid consuming them. GREAT NORTHERN BEANS: A large white bean about twice the size of navy beans they are typically bean flavored and are frequently favored for soups, salads, casseroles, and baked beans. One of the more commonly eaten in the U.S. Milled into meal these mild flavored beans can be included in many baked goods as a protein booster or used to thicken soups and stews. KIDNEY BEANS: Like the rest of the family, kidney beans can be found in wide variety. They may be white, mottled or a light or dark red color with their distinctive kidney shape. Probably best known here in the U.S. for their use in chili and bean salads, they figure prominently in Mexican, Brazilian and Chinese cuisine. LENTILS: Lentils are an odd lot. They dont fit in with either the beans or the peas and occupy a place by themselves. Their shape is different from other legumes being roundish little discs with colors ranging from muddy brown, to green to a rather bright orangish-red. They cook very quickly and have a distinctive mildly peppery flavor. They are much used in Far Eastern cuisine from India to China. Next to mung beans they make excellent sprouts though their peppery flavor tends to strengthen somewhat so are best mixed with milder sprouts. LIMA BEANS: In the Southern U.S., they are also commonly called butter beans. Limas are one of the most common legumes, found in this country in all manner of preservation from the young small beans to the large fully mature type. Their flavor is pleasant, but a little bland. Their shape is rather flat and broad with colors ranging from pale green to speckled cream and purple. They combine very well with rice. MUNG BEANS: Best known here in the States in their sprouted form, they are quite common in Indian and other Asian cuisines and are a close relative of the field peas (cowpeas). Their shape is generally round, fairly small with color ranging from a medium green to so dark as to be nearly black. They cook quickly and presoaking is not generally needed. NAVY BEANS: Smaller than Great Northerns these petite sized beans are also sometimes knows as pea beans. They are the stars of Navy and Senate Bean Soups, favored for many baked bean dishes, and are most often chosen for use in commercial pork and beans. They retain their shape well when cooked. Ground into meal they can be added to many soups and stews without overpowering them. PEANUTS (Groundnuts): The peanut is not actually a nut at all, but a legume. They are another odd species not much like the more familiar beans and peas. Peanuts have a high protein percentage and even more fat. Whatever their classification peanuts are certainly not unfamiliar to U.S. eaters. They are one of the two legume species commonly grown for oilseed in this country, and are also used for peanut butter, and boiled or roasted peanuts. Peanut butter (without excessive added sweeteners) can add body and flavor to sauces, gravies, soups, and stews. Many Central and South American, African, Chinese, and Thai dishes incorporate peanuts so they are useful for much more than just a snack food or cooking oil. PEAS, GREEN OR YELLOW: More often found as split peas though whole peas can sometimes be had. The yellow variety has become somewhat uncommon but has a milder flavor than the green types which well lends them to blending inconspicuously into other foods. Probably best known in split pea soup, particularly with a smoky chunk of ham added. They are also used in Indian cuisine, especially dals. Whole peas need soaking, but split peas can be cooked as is. Split peas and pea meal makes an excellent thickener for soups and stews. Because splitting damages the pea, this more processed form does not keep for as long as whole peas unless given special packaging. PINK AND RED BEANS: Related to the kidney bean these are smaller in size but similar in flavor. The pink bean has a more delicate flavor than the red. The are both often favored for use in chili and widely used across the American Southwest, Mexico, and Latin America. They can add nicely to the color variety in multibean soups. PINTO BEANS: Anyone who has eaten Tex-Mex food has likely had the pinto bean. It is probably the most widely consumed legume in the U.S., particularly in the Southwestern portion of the country. Stereotypically bean shaped, it has a dappled pattern of tans and browns on its shell. Pintos have a flavor that blends well with many foods. When ground together with great northern or navy beans they make my favorite homemade version of falafel. When milled into a meal pintos will cook in mere minutes, making a near instant form of refried beans. SOYBEANS: The soybean is by far the legume with the highest protein content in large scale commercial production and its amino acid profile is the most nearly complete for human nutrition. Alongside the peanut it is the other common legume oilseed. The beans themselves are small, round, and with a multitude of different shades though tan seems to be the most common that Ive seen. Because of their high oil content, they are more sensitive to oxygen exposure than other legumes and precautions should be taken accordingly if they are to be kept for more than a year in storage, especially if they are to be processed for soymilk or tofu. Although the U.S. grows a large percentage of the global supply, we consume virtually none of them directly. Most go into cattle feed, are used by industry, or exported. What does get eaten directly has usually been intensively processed. Soybean products range from soymilk to tofu, to tempeh, to textured vegetable protein (TVP) and hundreds of other forms. They dont lend themselves well to merely being boiled until done then eaten the way other beans and peas do. For this reason, if you plan on keeping some as a part of your storage program you would be well served to begin to learn how to process and prepare them now while youre not under pressure to produce. This way you can throw out your failures and order pizza, rather than having to choke them down, regardless. THIS MANUAL MAY BE SOLD AT COST ONLY - AND IS NOT TO BE OFFERED FOR RESALE.
genetic sensitivity to the blossom pollens and undercooked
Do you REALLY have a years supply?
Just how big is a Years Supply of food? As explained on the previous page, our Church is suggesting
the following minimums for each adult:
400 lbs
. Grains (17.5oz / day)60 lbs
. Beans (2.6oz / day)10 quarts
Cooking oil (0.87oz / day)60 lbs
. Honey (2.63oz / day)8 lbs
. Salt (0.35oz / day)16 lbs
Powdered milk (0.70oz / day)14 gallons
of drinking water (for 2 weeks)So, just how much is this?
Two 5 gallon buckets will hold about 75lbs of wheat, rice or other grains.
This means you need
11 buckets of grain for each person in your family.If you store all your grains in #10 cans...
Wheat, Rice, Corn, etc..
You would need 64 cans or 10.5 cases per person.
Pasta
You would need 32 cans or 5.25 cases per person.
Rolled oats
These are lighter but bulkier, so they require more storage containers and space.
You would need 124 cans or 21 cases person.
Beans
A 25 lb bag of beans will about fit in a single 5 gallon bucket, with a little space over, so 2 buckets would
hold a one person supply, or 12 -13 # 10 cans or about 2 cases.
Daily Food
Dividing 400lbs by 365days, equals out to 1.09589lbs, or just over 1 lb of grain, per person, per day. That
is approximately 2 cups of unground grain to cover your breakfast lunch and dinner.
Dividing 60lbs by 365, this works out to 0.16 lbs of beans per day, or 2.6 ozapproximately 3/4 cup.
The other foods listed would also need to be used in limited amounts.
This is not much food
, folks. Get the basics, then immediately begin to add more kinds of grain,soup mix, canned and/or dehydrated vegetables and fruit, etc to add variety and provide more than the
minimal survival diet.
As an example, the minimum recommended amount of grain, when ground and prepared will yield about
6 small biscuits or a plateful of pancakes. Its enough to keep you alive, but a far cry from being satisfied
and not hungry.
Inventory WorksheetGRAINS = 400 lbs per adult _____ Barley _____ Cereal _____ Corn (meal or Dent) _____ Cous Cous _____ Flour (4lb/can)_____ Millet _____ Multi grain soup mix(5lb/can)_____ Oats, rolled quick(3lb/can)_____ Oats, rolled regular(3lb/can)_____ Popcorn _____ Rye _____ Sprouting Seeds _____ Wheat(6lb/can)_____ White Rice(6lb/can)Pastas _____ Macaroni(3lb/can)_____ Noodles _____ Spaghetti(4lb/can)MILK / DAIRY = 75 lbs per adult _____ Brick cheese _____ Canned Milk _____ Canned sour cream _____ Cheese spreads _____ Condensed milk _____ Dried cheese _____ Dried eggs _____ Infant formula _____ Non-dairy creamer _____ Non-fat dry milk(4 lb/can)_____ Powdered cheese _____ Powdered sour cream (20 lbs per adult) _____ Bacon _____ Beef _____ Beef jerky _____ Chicken _____ Clams _____ Corned beef _____ Crabmeat _____ Deviled meats _____ Fish _____ Ham _____ Hamburger _____ Lamb _____ Lunch meats _____ Mutton _____ Pepperoni _____ Pork _____ Tuna _____ Salmon _____ Sandwich spreads _____ Sardines _____ Sausage _____ Shrimp _____ Spam _____ Treet _____ Turkey _____ TVP- Textured vegi Protein _____ Veal _____ Venison jerky _____ Vienna sausage FRUITS and VEGETABLES 90 lbs Dried, 370qts canned, 370Lbs fresh Fruits _____ Apples (2lb/can)_____ Applesauce _____ Apricots _____ Peaches _____ Berries _____ Cherries _____ Coconut _____ Currants _____ Figs _____ Fruit cocktail _____ Grapefruit _____ Grapes _____ Mandarin oranges _____ Nectarines _____ Olives _____ Pears _____ Peaches _____ Pineapples _____ Plums _____ Prunes _____ Raisins _____ Tomatoes BEANS & LEGUMES (90 lbs per adult) _____ Beans, pink(5lb/can)_____ Beans, pinto(5lb/can)_____ Beans, white(5lb/can)_____ Lentils _____ Nuts _____ Peas _____ Sprouting beans and seeds _____ Soybeans SPICES / CONDIMENTS _____ Almond extract _____ Allspice _____ Baking chocolate _____ Basil _____ BBQ sauce _____ Bouillon cubes / granules Beef, chicken, onion, vegetable flavors _____ Cayenne pepper _____ Celery salt _____ Chili powder _____ Chives _____ Chocolate chips _____ Chocolate syrup _____ Cinnamon _____ Cloves _____ Cocoa _____ Coriander _____ Cumin _____ Curry _____ Dill weed _____ Garlic salt _____ Ginger _____ Gravy mixes _____ Herbs _____ Ketchup _____ Lemon extract _____ Lemon / lime juice _____ Liquid smoke _____ Majoram _____ Maple extract _____ Nutmeg _____ Onion flakes _____ Onion salt _____ Orange peel Remember, these are quantities for EACH adult person. |
JUICES/BEVERAGES = 25 lbs _____ Apple juice _____ Apricot nectar _____ Baby strained juices _____ Cocoa drink mix(4lb/can)_____ Cranberry juice _____ Dried juice mix(6lb/can)_____ Grapefruit juice _____ Grape juice _____ Kool-aid _____ Lemonaid _____ Orange juice _____ Pineapple juice _____ Plum juice _____ Prune juice _____ Punch crystals _____ Soft drink mixes _____ Soft drinks _____ Tomato juice _____ V-8 juice FATS / OILS = 20 lbs per adult _____ Butter _____ Cooking oil _____ Lard _____ Margarine _____ Mayonnaise _____ Olive Oil (extra virgin) _____ Peanut butter _____ Powdered butter _____ Powdered margarine _____ Powdered shortening _____ Salad dressing _____ Shortening _____ Baking powder _____ Baking soda _____ Cake mixes _____ Calcium supplement _____ Casserole mixes _____ Chow mein noodles _____ Cookies _____ Cookie mixes _____ Cornstarch _____ Crackers _____ Cream of tartar _____ Hot roll mixes _____ Hydrated lime (for tortillas) _____ Instant breakfast _____ Instant yeast _____ Iron supplement _____ Marshmallows _____ MREs _____ Muffin mixes _____ Non perishable pet foods _____ Pancake mixes _____ Pastry mixes _____ Pectin _____ Pie crust mixes _____ Pie fillings _____ Pizza mixes _____ Plain gelatin _____ Rennin tablets _____ Salt _____ Sourdough starter _____ Survival bars _____ Tofu Solidifier _____ Vitamins and minerals _____ Whipped topping mixes Vegetables _____ Artichoke hearts _____ Asparagus _____ Beans _____ Beets _____ Broccoli _____ Brussels sprouts _____ Carrots (3lb/can)_____ Cauliflower _____ Celery _____ Corn-sweet _____ Green beans _____ Hominy _____ Mushrooms _____ Okra _____ Onions (2lb/can)_____ Parsnips _____ Peas _____ Peppers _____ Pickles _____ Potatoes, flakes (1.5lb/can)_____ Potatoes, pearls (3lb/can)_____ Pumpkins _____ Rhubarb _____ Rutabagas _____ Salsify _____ Sauerkraut _____ Soups _____ Spinach _____ Squash _____ Sweet potatoes (yams) _____ Tomatos _____ Tomato powder _____ Turnips _____ Water chestnuts _____ Oregano _____ Paprika _____ Pepper _____ Poultry Seasoning _____ protein supplement _____ Sage _____ Salad dressings _____ Salt (5 lbs per adult) _____ Sauce mixes _____ Seasoned salt _____ Spaghetti sauce _____ Soy sauce _____ Steak sauce _____ Tarragon _____ Thyme _____ Turmeric _____ Vanilla extract _____ Vinegar _____ Worcestershire sauce SUGARS = 60 lbs per adult _____ Corn syrup _____ Hard candy _____ Honey _____ Jello _____ Jelly or jam _____ Maple syrup _____ Molasses _____ _____ _____
|
Note
:For an average adult Female - multiply the weight by 0.75
For children ages 1-3 multiply by 0.3, 4-6 multiply by 0.5, 7-9 multiply by 0.75
For adults engaged in manual labor multiply by 1.25-1.50
BTTT
[California]
Here is a map of where it is: http://www.bambiland.com/MtKnight10ACForestMap.html
Here is a webcam shot from Sonora in Tuolumne Co.: http://www.sonnet.com/bob/wsp/
Here is the fire from outer space: http://sat.wrh.noaa.gov/satellite/loopsat.php?wfo=sto&area=west&type=vis&size=1
Here is the Hotlist thread: http://www.wildlandfire.com/hotlist/showthread.php?t=10017
Per the air attack the acreage is at 150-200 acres and holding at present as they fight fiercely to protect the flank that is threatening the Mount Knight Subdivision.
More resources are en route.
Kim Patrick Noyes
Atascadero,
On Sun, Jul 26, 2009 at 6:00 PM, Kim Noyes wrote:
There are three scanner feeds per the Hotlist:
http://www.incidentfeed.com
http://www.radioreference.com/apps/audio/?ctid=187
http://www.radioreference.com/apps/audio/?ctid=237
The first one is getting overloaded and keeps bumping me off but the other two are better in that regard.
Per the Hotlist, emergency evacs taking place in the Mount Knight subdivision area.
Follow this on the Hotlist here:
Kim Patrick Noyes
On Sun, Jul 26, 2009 at 5:11 PM, Kim Noyes wrote:
A serious fire has begun in the Knight Mountain area of the Stanislaus Nat’l Forest and is threatening structures.
It has begun rather explosively with some reports that the convection column has already ice-capped out with pileus clouds.
This has happened already with the size of fire appearing to still only be under a few hundred acres but it burning in heavy forest fuels.
It is reportedly running and crowning and spotting ahead of itself.
You may follow it on the Hotlist here: http://www.wildlandfire.com/hotlist/showthread.php?t=10017
You may listen to it here: http://www.incidentfeed.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=64&Itemid=74
__._,_.___
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Please join our Discussion Group at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/californiadisasters_discussion/ for topical but extended discussions started here or for less topical but nonetheless relevant messages.
http://recipes.kaboose.com/garlic-chicken-stir-fry.html
Garlic Chicken Stir-Fry
Originally submitted by Teresa Shields and modified by Kaboose.com
Average User Rating:(4.5/5)
Crunchy vegetables and chicken are treated to a quick garlic-ginger saute, then tossed in a lightly sweetened soy sauce for a quick and colorful stir-fry. Dish it up over rice or noodles and you’re done!
2 tablespoons peanut oil
6 cloves garlic, minced
1 teaspoon grated fresh ginger
1 bunch green onions, chopped
1 teaspoon salt
1 pound boneless skinless chicken breasts, cut into strips
2 onions, thinly sliced
1 cup sliced cabbage
1 red bell pepper, thinly sliced
2 cups sugar snap peas
1 cup chicken broth
2 tablespoons soy sauce
2 tablespoons sugar
2 tablespoons cornstarch
Heat peanut oil in a wok or large skillet. When oil begins to smoke, quickly stir in 2 cloves minced garlic, ginger root, green onions and salt. Stir fry until onion becomes translucent, about 2 minutes. Add chicken and stir until opaque, about 3 minutes. Add remaining 4 cloves minced garlic and stir. Add sweet onions, cabbage, bell pepper, peas and 1/2 cup of the broth/water and cover.
In a small bowl, mix the remaining 1/2 cup broth/water, soy sauce, sugar and cornstarch. Add sauce mixture to wok/skillet and stir until chicken and vegetables are coated with the thickened sauce. Serve immediately, over hot rice if desired.
Nutrition Facts
Servings per Recipe: 4
Amount Per Serving
calories: 335cal
total fat: 9.2g
cholesterol: 66mg
sodium: 1388mg
carbohydrates: 31.8g
fiber: 6.2g
protein: 32g
Servings: 4
There was a fire on the little peninsula down at Pine Flat Lake a couple of weekends ago. About eleven fire trucks came screaming up from Sanger and from Cal Fire. A couple of helicopters showed up too. Good thing was they had the lake water right there.
THANK YOU!!!
That took a lot of work to put in order, how you found the time, I don’t have a clue.
Please forgive me for taking so long to comment, things were not so that I could get on the internet.
And thats all I need. The ashtray, the remote control, the paddle game, this magazine and the chair.<<<
That reads like my list for a camping trip.
LOL, in my family they do not mention the fact that I took sheets, and dish towels, etc, on my first camping trip.
Thanks for posting, sorry that I had to be off line and could not answer.
Anytime you can use buttermilk instead of sweet milk in bread, the bread will rise lighter and fluffier.
Never use liquid oil when making bread. Youll end up with hard, flat dough.<<<
The oil may be the reason that folks do not like their bread machine bread.
On the buttermilk, you can make your own, use a cultured butter milk and add it to sweet milk, leave it out till it is soured, a few hours or overnight, in a warm spot, like yogurt, it will keep going, batch, add a cup to a quart of new milk and powdered will work.
Next time you make pancakes, use beer for the liquid and the pancakes will float in the air.
All are good tips, thanks for sharing them.
And if you are hatching eggs, feed the new babies with buttermilk for the first week and then add a dish of water to the cage.
Makes for a healthy bird/poultry.
A friend and I are having a garage sale and Ive already made over $100 on useless to me stuff that Ill never miss! Thats going into the generator fund, because thats the last survival-type thing we need, but thats got a hefty price tag, so its taking a while.<<<
That is good planning, hope you get rich with the garage sale.
It is that time of the year, I made arrangements for my rabbit cages and some of the other odd cages to go to the 4-H groups of the area today.
Thank you for reading our efforts, do come and post more often, you have so much knowledge to share.
PENNSYLVANIA Dutch COOKERY<<<
Good find, thanks for sharing it.
One of my pet peeves, with all this immigration, is that today, they rush to throw out the old ways and be new Americans.
In the old days, we paid attention to others holidays and many celebrated them here and shared them with us.
It is so boring, with only one food on the table, all out of the latest tv ads.
I like variety and loved the Mormon PotLucks, LOL, 40 kinds of chicken and even more Jello dishes.
And please add me to the ping list. Thanks.<<<
We will and thank you for coming to read the thread, join us as often as you would like.
Granny, granny, NEVER wrap your baked taters in aluminum foil. Makes the skin soft and soggy. Didnt you know that the crisp skin is the very best part of baked taters? LOL<<<
LOL, as usual, you are correct.
I do use the tinfoil, if cooking them in the ashes of a campfire.
When I learned to cook, we rubbed butter on the skins before cooking/baking.
Welcome and do join in, you know things about cooking that we do not.
There is so much to learn and LOL, every cook has a different way, so one will never know it all.
Thanks to all like-minded posters on these threads.<<<
I agree, there are so many sharing their knowledge with us.
Thank you for coming to read and letting us know it can be useful.
All of this is not good news and we hope that we and Howe are wrong regarding the severity and length of this crisis. But we fear that we are both right. We must stress again that never previously has the the whole world entered a downturn simultaneously in such a fragile state both financially and economically which is why the Dark Years are likely to be so devastating and long lasting.
link to full article:
http://matterhornassetmanagement.com/newsletter/?newsletter=20?321
FR Thread:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2300251/posts
<<<<
Thanks for the links.
I am attempting to hold out hope, for my step-grandson got the nice job that he wanted and is living with Scott.
Sister, Diana at last has an interview set for next week, so she needs our prayers on that one.
Still for many of us, it is a hard depression.
Thank you for sharing the link for thread #3.
Smiling at you.
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