Storable Food Supply for Emergencies and Survival


Dehydrated Storable Food Vs. Freeze Dried Storable Food

Dehydrated Storable Food Vs. Freeze Dried Storable Food

Many people are uncertain about the differences between dehydrated storable foods and freeze dried storable foods. Both foods are optimum for long term storage, offering essentially the same shelf life for the same type of products. The real difference is found in the following areas:

Cooking

Cooking is very simple. Measure out the amount of ingredients you wish to make (depending on the number of servings you want) and dump into hot water.

Cooking times are pretty short. Usually, 10 – 15 minutes will do it for most foods. This applies to all the freeze dried foods from all product lines, and many of the soups, stews and mixes from various food lines. Items such as biscuits, cookies, pancakes and bread mixes take a little cold water to make dough and are baked. Indian bread (Scones) are fried on a hot frying pan for flat bread.

Other storable foods, such as rice, beans, wheat (whole grains) take longer cooking times and can be simmered for 30 minutes to an hour or more. For these products, a pressure cooker is great, drastically shortening the cooking time required. A pressure cooker is a huge time saver and energy saver, if you don’t have one, we definitely recommend one. Just add all of the ingredients into the pot and cover with water. Put on a low heat and let it cook for anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour. Even beans cook considerably faster with a pressure cooker then on the stove. Make sure you don’t let the cooker run low on water, so check it occasionally until you get a feel for how they work.

Dehydrated and freeze dried foods are actually rather easy to prepare and cook. They are identical to the foods you are buying now in the supermarket. All that rice, beans, pasta and mixes you are accustomed to buying and preparing? That’s what we sell, same food, lower price and much larger quantities then those little packages you’re throwing away now. Our food is high quality, tasty and nutritious, packaged for long term shelf life.

Taste

Dehydrated foods are generally packaged without any seasoning or additional ingredients. There are some exception to this, found in the “mixes” and the soups and stews many companies carry. These products do contain multiple ingredients and can be used to make a complete meal without adding anything.

But many of the other products are single ingredients. For example, rice. It’s just rice, the same rice that you can buy in the supermarket.

Dehydrated foods require cooking and seasoning. Cooking times vary, but most are added to hot boiling water. You can also do “thermos cooking” by adding boiling water to a thermos, adding ingredients and letting it sit for a couple of hours. Just forget about it, it will cook itself. This will cook the food slowly using the minimum amount of energy.

Stovetop cooking can be easy too. Add the ingredients to boiling water and allow to cook until tender. This varies from a few minutes to a hour or so, depending on the product. Whole grains and legumes, such as rice, beans and wheat take the longest, while potatoes, par-boiled rice and other products like pancake mixes are the easiest and shortest cooking time. By adding water, you’re rehydrating the food back into it’s original natural state before dehydration, but it’s still “raw”. It still needs to be cooked until tender.

Pancake mixes, bread mixes, cookie mixes, muffins, etc., are all good storable foods and require just a little water (cold) to be ready for baking or frying. Scone mixes are an example of fried bread (Indian bread) and are very easy to prepare.

Most dehydrated storable food will benefit from adding seasoning. Rice doesn’t taste like much until you add something to it. You can use anything, dehydrated vegetables, TVP (textured vegetable protein, a meat substitute, real meat, potatoes, whatever you want) and seasoning, such as salt, pepper, tobasco sauce, garlic, or even ketchup. Pasta is the same, they don’t taste like much until they’ve had something added to them. Spaghetti is everyone’s favorite, but it’s the toppings that make it so. You can add any ingredients or topping to dehydrated foods. Seasoning is recommended simply for taste.

Freeze dried storable foods, on the other hand, are usually foods containing a multitude of ingredients and seasonings. Nothing more is needed, just a little cook time in hot water to rehydrated them and have them ready to eat. They are pre-seasoned, pre-cooked and pre-mixed with other ingredients, making them the fastest, easiest and tastiest foods available.

Seasoning

Keep on hand your favorite seasonings. We sell a few seasonings, but there are many more. Dehydrated food should be seasoned for best taste. The freeze dried entrees won’t need any at all, unless you’re one of those that drowns everything in ketchup. You can even make ketchup from our tomato powder….

Ingredients

Freeze dried food is usually an “entree”, containing multiple items for a complete meal. Most dishes have several items included within them and you don’t need to do any other cooking or adding ingredients to make a complete meal. Because it’s freeze dried, you simply add hot water, or add the product to hot water and cook for about 10 minutes. These rehydrates the food completely and it’s ready to eat!

Dehydrated foods are usually single ingredients. You can mix any dehydrated food with any other food product for a combination of tastes, textures and varieties.

Best Value

Pound for pound, and dollar for dollar, dehydrated food costs less then freeze dried food. We get this question a lot. Nothing comes close to the value of dehdyrated food, not even store bought canned food. A single can of dehdyrated green beans, for example, represents 27 cans of canned green beans, which take up a whole lot of space and is mostly water.

Freeze dried food are the easiest and tastiest foods we carry, bar none. If you don’t like to cook and want great foods with great taste (and free shipping!), freeze dried foods is the hands down winner.

Number of Servings

Every package is labeled with serving size, instructions and preparation information. The large #10 cans (large coffee can size) will make quite a few servings, depending on the product and product line. For example, a #10 can of freeze dried entree will make 10 – 11 servings on average. A #10 can of dehydrated green beans however, contains 48 servings. The actual number of servings is found on each product detail page on our website.

Dehydrated and freeze dried foods are highly concentrated, compared to what you will find in the supermarket. There’s no fancy packaging, excess air and small serving sizes. Even our 2 person foil pouches contain a whopping amount of food when rehydrated. I just did a 30 day diet eating nothing but dehdyrated and freeze dried food in December, 2006 and couldn’t finish most single servings sizes.

Space Requirements

Storable foods, whether freeze dried or dehdyrated foods, are very compact, way more compact then canned foods. There is no excess water or fancy packaging, no empty air spaces and giant sized boxes with tiny servings inside. A entire years supply can be fit into a 2 ft x 3 ft area, stacked 5 ft high. Or under the bed. Or in a closet. Or in the pantry. Or in the basement, or under the house. These foods are concentrated, because the water has been removed before packaging. A single can contains many servings, instead of a single serving found in the supermarket.

Shelf Life

You can normally expect 25 – 30 years shelf life for storable foods. Store your food storage in a cold (or cool) dark place out of direct sunlight, preferably at a constant temperature. Keep it away from flooding basements or put it on pallets if you need to. Read the link above for more information on temperature, time, humity and oxygen for more information.

Food Security

This is a subject dear to heart. We have followed closely the issues with the global food supply for many years. Most people are utterly unaware how fragile the US food supply really is. The mega-mergers of family owned farms and corporate giants, the declining energy supply, the fragile state of our infrastructure and the vulnerability to things like hurricanes, pandemic, and oil prices are often misunderstood. America is the land of plenty, right?

Wrong. Not always. And certainly, not forever. During times of crisis, the supermarkets are stripped bare in a matter of hours. American used to stock food as part of their everyday preparations, but have since forgotten this time honored practice. Now, everyone rushes to the store to “stock up” when the news or events frighten them into doing so. Or worse, they wait until after a disaster and find out there’s nothing left. This has happened countless times in America’s history of regional disasters. Everything gets sold out and some merchants even take advantage of the crisis by jacking up prices sky high.

Don’t be vulnerable, plan ahead. You simply never know when you’re going to need to be ready. We’ve written much more on this subject, some of it can be found here.

3 Responses to 'Dehydrated Storable Food Vs. Freeze Dried Storable Food'

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  3. Derrick said,

    They are concerned with being ready for the kind emergency that happens regularly.
    Freezing and reducing the substance allowed the frozen water
    in the food to transit directly from the solid phase to the
    gas phase. Soon the family realized that all of their food was perishable without electricity
    and they started to run out of food.


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