(photo from providentliving.org)
"For over 100 years we have been admonished to store up grain. 'Remember the counsel that is given,' said Elder Orson Hyde, 'Store up all your grain, and take care of it! . . . And I tell you it is almost as necessary to have bread to sustain the body as it is to have food for the spirit.' From the standpoint of food production, storage, handling, and the Lord's counsel, wheat should have high priority. Water, of course, is essential. Other basics could include honey, or sugar, legumes, milk products or substitutes, and salt or its equivalent. The revelation to store food may be as essential to our temporal salvation today as boarding the ark was to the people in the days of Noah."
--Elder Ezra Taft Benson (Oct. Conference 1973)

Friday, March 13, 2009

What Else?

In addition to our basic food storage we should also store some convenient foods as well as comfort foods to add variety and nutrition. Remember, though, "Don't place all your eggs in one basket." You'll want to store these items in different ways to ensure some food and supplies are available no matter what the circumstances.

1. Fruits and vegetables
Bottled/canned
frozen
dried
2. Meats
bottled/canned (tuna, chicken, beef, etc.)
livestock (chickens, cows, pigs, etc.)
frozen
3. Canned beans (in addition to your dried legumes)
chili
beans
refried beans
4. Toppings/condiments
ketchup
salsa
hot sauce
jam
peanut butter
BBQ sauce
salad dressings
spices and flavorings
etc.
Don't think you need a year's supply of all these things but having them in your storage will make your basic storage more practical and usable so some is better than none. But if you are just beginning, begin with the basics--especially wheat--and go from there.

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