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If the S really does HTF you won't be. That is how you will know, the S has in fact HTF.I'm a pretty picker eater also!
I don't try to insure a long supply of fresh dairy or eggs.
30-60 day supply is disaster prep no brainer. But most natural disasters are not SHTF. Those they are isolated and have the whole rest of the Country to back you up. They are temporary inconvenience situations. SHTF events IMHO, are Nuke war, asteroid strike, collapse of Govt., gamma ray burst from the sun or maybe super volcano Yellowstone type events.
The first are not even comparable to the second and require different supplies.
600lbs anchovy fillets packed in oil, drained
85lbs small garlic cloves
100 lbs Kosher salt
200 large egg yolks
5 gallons fresh lemon juice, plus more
78.5 lbs Dijon mustard
29 gallons olive oil
20gallons vegetable oil
3 full wheels finely grated Parmesan
15 lbs Freshly ground black pepper
2700lbs of fresh Romaine lettuce.
Then you can make a tasty Caesar Salad anytime.
Damn good post.If you are actually willing to spend the money and do the research, not just buy a pallet of Sam Andy food to stick in the garage for mental security and hope to God you never actually have to eat that gruel, here is what I would suggest.
Start with what you use on your daily/weekly/monthly menu.
Organize your pantry to have a 1 to 3 month supply of all the stuff you buy at the grocery store that is non perishable and number/stack it so you are always grabbing the oldest one first to cook with each day.
Do the same thing with frozen foods such as meat, slowly buy up 1 to 3 months worth of frozen meat and store it in your chest freezer or deep freeze, number it & stack it correctly & then be always grabbing the oldest one. If you can't do that much, try to have at least a month worth.
For things like eggs, cheese, bread and milk, buy the ones with the longest life left each time at the store and try to keep as much on hand as you can regularly eat your way thorough before average expiration dates.
If you eat things like rice, sugar, salt, wheat products, oats, peanut butter, energy bars, jam, cereal etc. Do the same thing, carefully stock several months worth and have a system to always be taking the oldest first.
In short figure out what you actually eat regularly and stockpile as much of that as you can and use it regularly.
Then if your family likes drinking bottled water, stockpile a couple months of that and always be drinking the oldest first.
That is by far the best way to go and if you have that well setup, you will be better than 95% of the US population.
Now AFTER you have done all that, I would go here and look at these guys:
They make high end freeze dried foods that actually taste really good & you can actually eat them as part of normal meals if you wish.
Their whole powdered milk is excellent as are their eggs and yogurt etc.
What they have especially is all your fruits, vegetables, dairy, meat, sauces and such that all the other "survival" food pre-packaged stuff skips over in favor of cheap bulk garbage. Again, go over your menu, pick the things you actually cook with that you can't stockpile easily fresh/frozen and then load up on those. Also their pre made meals are great for camping or quick power outage foods and their freeze dried yogurt and fruit are great for eating as is on hikes and camping trips.
Make sure you have an alternative cooking method or two and fuel for it, such as lots of extra gas bottles and a gas burner or two, or tons of firewood and a wood burning stove etc.
I've been doing the "Survival Food" thing since I was a young child & was basically born into the lifestyle of always being prepared for food emergencies. What I can tell you from experience is most of what people first want to go stock up from the "big names" in survival food packaged deals and the "survival kits" you buy online/at the stores is stuff that you really don't want to eat unless you are literally starving to death and that's all there is. Generally people spend a couple hundred to a couple thousand, buy it, let it sit for 10 or 20 years then throw it away and start over.
You'll be way ahead taking that money and stocking up on what you actually eat. Then if you like depending on your diet, get some air tight 5 gallon storage containers and fill them with rice, sugar, salt, flour, oats, cracked wheat, and all that kind of long term stuff and store them for adde peace of mind (just be sure to CO2 out all the bugs before closing up the containers. You'll throw most of them away after a couple years & need to rotate it, but it's not expensive to do so.
Dont forget med supplys an training,...We have the water figured out. Have the ammo deal figured out. Just adding a little food to the pile.
Comfort food, will calm people down. One of the reasons we stock lots of hard/soft candy as well as other none std SHTF food, for those w/o a Stalwart mind set. Sugar an Honey cooking ability's should be known to all adult's in charge to help others who will not be able to handle many things outside of whats normal today. The thing we found is when dealing with outside issues, those are compounded many times over if you have to spend time/effort to halt internal issues at the same time. Some groups only gloss over 1st an 2nd gen what if, not for everything conceivable for those inside your wire, is poor planning.I'm still trying to wrap my head around "SHTF food"...and "picky eater". Seriously?