Showing posts with label how to start a food storage supply. Show all posts
Showing posts with label how to start a food storage supply. Show all posts

Saturday, January 5, 2013

Week 6 - First Aid Kit, 72 Hour Kit Options, Start Home Storage

Start a minimal First Aid Kit

Week 6 – January 6
Container to hold medical supplies.  A variety of bandages.
Container Suggestions: Pencil box, kid’s lunch box, quart size plastic, large baby wipe box, or cloth bag.
Bandage Suggestions:  Miscellaneous sizes of individual bandages, long strips of cloth such as sheets and muslin. Cloth can be folded and used as needed on a wound, used as a sling or torn into strips and tied to hold bandaging in place. Feminine flat and cylindrical products are excellent for major injuries.

72 Hour Kit Optional Additions:
Add feminine products if needed.   Add a light source.
Light Sources Suggestions: flashlight, small candles and matches or disposable lighter, or glow sticks.  Wooden matches can be dipped into wax to make them waterproof.

Ideas to start home food storage:
Create a two week menu and buy extra items on the menu until you have an addition two weeks supply of those meals.
Inventory you current food supply and purchase items needed to create complete meals.
Bag or box and label complete meals and place in designated food storage area.
Start purchasing anything extra.  Commit to a can or two each shopping trip, a planned dollar amount with the unspent amount saved for expensive items, or go on-line and find a weekly plan to follow.

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Building a Food and Nonfood Supply and Planning a Dinner Menu

The best way to begin adding to your food storage is to buy one or two extra cans, bags, or bottles of something that you are getting at the store when you go shopping.  When you feel that your cupboards are getting full take time to inventory what you have.  Focus on food first, then get paper goods, personal products, and cleaning supplies.
In no time you will have a good stock of supplies.  Work your way up to a years supply if possible or at least to a level that will make you feel secure.
To figure out how much laundry soap I needed for a year, I took a maker and wrote the date I opened the package on it and when I finished it I wrote the date again.  When I had some free time I transferred those dates to a notebook.  I did this type of thing with everything you use.

Here are two ways to begin planning a menu:
This is what I did:
I wrote down everything that I could think of that I liked to eat for dinner.  Next I asked my family members to tell me their favorite dinners.  I used that list of favorites to make my menu calendar.
Here is Linda's suggestion:
Write on your calendar each night what you fix for dinner and at the end of the month you will have a month worth of menus.

I started my menu list about 20 years ago.  I keep it next to my cookbooks with my old and new menu calendars.  I add to this list when I find really good new recipes.  A couple of years ago I rewrote my list, because the old one was looking worn out.  I save my menus for several years.  Some months I copy the previous year's same month almost exactly.  Sometimes they are just fun to look at and see how our food likes have changed.

About the third week of each month I plan the next months menu.  I only go grocery shopping every other week at the most.  Some months I don't go at all.
I plan my menu to use the things that will perish quickly first.  It took me a while to figure this out.  I found in the beginning I was switching menus to different days often, because something was not going to last until the day I had planned to use it.
I don't plan breakfast and lunch.  We have a small list of things we eat.  Those items are almost always on hand.