The Preppers Cookbook: Essential Prepping Foods and Recipes to Deliciously Survive Any Disaster. Rockridge Press

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The Preppers Cookbook: Essential Prepping Foods and Recipes to Deliciously Survive Any Disaster - Rockridge Press


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food. Without water, you’ll die in a matter of days. Water storage and purification will be covered in Chapter 3.

       Additional Store-Bought Foods

      Although making your own emergency food based on the delicious recipes in this book is recommended—they are more flavorful and cheaper in the long run—you can begin building your supplies immediately with store-bought foods. Once you begin making your own canned and dehydrated foods, swap these items out. Note that many of the items in this list do not have a long shelf life. Check the best-by dates regularly (it’s recommended you do this every 3 months).

       Baking and pancake mixes

       Baking powder, yeast, and baking soda

       Bouillon cubes or powder

       Boxed potatoes

       Canned beans

       Canned fruits, fruit juices, and vegetables

       Canned meat, chili, and soup

       Canned nuts

       Crackers

       Dried beans

       Dried corn

       Dried fruit

       Dry pasta

       Evaporated milk

       Fruit juices and sports drinks

       Granola and sports bars

       Instant coffee, tea, and cocoa

       Jams and jellies

       Peanut butter

       Powdered milk

       Ready-to-eat cereals and uncooked instant cereals

       Salt and other spices

       Sugar, honey, or molasses

       Vegetable oil or shortening

       Vitamins and mineral supplements

       Wheat or other flour (for bread making)

       White rice

       Meal Planner

      Use the following table to plan the meals and water you and your family will need for one week.

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      3

      WATER STORAGE AND PURIFICATION

      Regardless of what is going on around you, you won’t be able to survive for long without clean, potable water. In fact, after just 24 hours without water, your brain stops functioning properly, and within three days, your organs will start to fail. In less than a week, you’ll be dead. Water doesn’t just keep your tissues hydrated, it also:

       Carries waste and toxins out of your body

       Helps keep your body temperature normal and regular

       Keeps your joints lubricated

       Keeps your blood liquid so it can carry oxygen and nutrients throughout your body

       Aids with digestion

       Keeps your eyes lubricated and healthy

       Keeps your brain functioning properly

      In a nutshell, water keeps you alive and you have to have it.

       Finding and Gathering Safe Drinking Water

      One of the first steps to emergency preparedness is finding a viable source of water. Unfortunately, after certain disasters such as earthquakes, hurricanes, or floods, sources of water that were once safe to drink may no longer be, so you need to have backup plans.

       Finding Viable Sources of Water Locally

      If you had to name five sources of fresh water within a five-mile radius, would you be able to do it? It seems easy, but many people struggle with it because they simply don’t take the time to familiarize themselves with their surroundings. Just knowing where to find water in an emergency situation is going to give you an advantage over many of your peers, and it can be quite enjoyable, too!

      Field trips are always fun and are a great way to take your family out and learn about your surrounding area. Make it fun. If you have kids, do a scavenger hunt or go camping. If you don’t, make it a hiking trip or picnic with friends or significant others. Make a map with distances marked, because five minutes in a car is actually quite a distance when you’re on foot. Some of the best sources for fresh water include:

       Rivers

       Streams

       Retention ponds (Make sure it’s not a wastewater pond!)

       Lakes

       Springs

       Natural ponds

       Wells

      It’s important to know the difference between fresh water, wastewater, brackish water, and salt water because only the freshwater is really useful as a water source. Wastewater is no good for drinking for obvious reasons, and brackish or salt water can actually kill you by dehydration because of the salt in it . . . although it may be okay for such things as flushing toilets.

      Wells are actually great because they’re generally built over an underground stream or spring and are thus a self-replenishing source of water. As a matter of fact, it’s not a bad idea to have a well dug on your property, or make that something you look for when you’re searching properties.

       Rainwater

      Rainwater is another great source of potable water and can be captured in many different ways. Perhaps the easiest ways are to just use buckets or barrels, or to hang a tarp to capture it and then drain the tarp into your barrels. There are also capture systems that you can buy that actually purify water as it’s captured. As a matter of fact, you can use these systems for your home as a natural water source instead of depending upon your local water company to provide chemically treated water for a price.

      Like all of your other supplies, rotate your rainwater supply so it stays fresh. Even if you don’t have a rainwater purification system to use the water in the house, it’s great to use outside for watering your plants, bathing, filling the pool, or doing outside chores such as washing windows.

       Bottled Water

      In addition to knowing where to find a ready supply of fresh water for long-term use, it’s a good idea to store bottled water as well. Many people store only enough for a few days or a week because of the amount of space it takes up. Plan for at least one gallon of water per person, per day, and that’s just for drinking and cooking purposes. If you’re going to plan for hygiene uses as well, double that to two gallons of water per person, per day. Here are some options that you have for storing water:

       Commercially bottled water in personal-sized bottles

       Commercially bottled water in gallon bottles or larger containers

       Home-bottled tap water, purified

       Home-bottled rainwater, purified

       It’s fine to bottle water from the tap or from your home filtering system, but make sure that it’s purified before you store it so that bacteria can’t grow in it. Rotate your water stocks just like you rotate your foods. Use it naturally and replenish


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