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Freeze Dried Beef, Chicken and Hamburger
The Freeze Dry Guy (http://www.freezedryguy.com/ offers a "club" where you can purchase 3 #10 cans of freeze dried meat (1 each of beef, chicken and hamburger) at a cost of $138 a month. That represents 47 servings a month for the price (less than $3 for each 2/3 - 3/4 cup serving.) They make the claim that this represents a 1-year supply for 2 people. Only if you're eating meat 3 days out of 4!
My question for you preppers is this: Does this represent a fair price for what you are getting? It is freeze dried, nitrogen flushed, 98% free of O2. They present that the product is good for 30 years or more. I kind of like the Christmas Club savings plan aspect of it because I'm not in a position to buy thousands of dollars of preps at one time. In other words, I know that I could get a better price by purchasing volume. Given that is not what I'm doing, do you folks think this is a decent way to purchase freeze-dried meat? |
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I'd want to try it first before I commit to it.
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On the other hand, I can purchase a case of Yoders canned meats (not freeze dried) for $75. This provides 168 2-ounce portions of canned meat at a cost of $0.45 per serving.
Now here is the problem. The Yoders solution makes no claim at all about 2/3 - 3/4 cups per serving. In fact, the 2 ounces per serving that they put into that #2 1/2 cans cannot possibly be anywhere near as much product per serving. So we are comparing apples and Yoders, yes? Yoders claims only a 10 year shelf life. But, we all know it will last longer than that if the can integrity is intact. What to do? What to do? |
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his prices look high to me .......... you cannot buy just one can to see if you like it
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I like the idea, but I also like ordering individual #10 cans each month, being able to choose the variety on my own. I buy mostly from the Ready Store, going for the "on sale" items and I order just over $100 each time so the shipping is free.
As far as Yoders, I mix it in with my freeze dried preps for variety. (I really like the Yoders bacon) and I plan to rotate it every 7 or 8 years. |
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I've never had freeze dried meat or Yoders?, so I 'd want to try them first too.
Sorry no help here. |
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Cheaper faire here maybe..........http://grandmascountry.com/?uid=8519&page=4765
Their dried milk is the best in my family's opinion. |
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Rated 1.5 out of 5.0 stars here... I do see some concerns that would stop me from selecting them, such as the heavy use of preservatives.
http://storablefoodwatch.org/rated_c...e_dry_guy.html Text summary: Freeze Dry Guy includes Mountain House freeze-dried foods and dehydrated foods. They offer individual cans on special, but not on their year units. The Mountain House cans have the dates on the lid. Their 4 person supply includes some basics such as wheat and sugar, but doesn't include enough. They mention the number of servings per case on the freeze-dried items. No calories were mentioned. They do include sugar, flour, and salt as fillers. Freeze Dry Guy suggests a year supply. Their Mountain House foods are loaded with preservatives. They don't differentiate between freeze-dried and dehydrated. They don't mention how long a person should store. They do mention their unit was designed for storing wheat and sweeteners. No other mention on the basics. They include just one can of cracked wheat in their year supply unit and about 18 lbs of beans. In their 4 person unit they have about 312 lbs of wheat and 66 lbs of pinto beans. That's not enough wheat or beans for 4 people. They do include sprouts in the 4 person unit only. For a great summary of suppliers and ratings, look here: http://storablefoodwatch.org/ratings.html The star ratings don't seem consistent, but the selection of suppliers and summary of what to expect is most useful. |
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The Yoders sausage arrived sort of the same way. I opened a can and have used it in split pea soup, omelettes and scrambled eggs, and sausage gravy. You can't make patties out of it because it's been cooked already and will not retain a patty shape. There is liquid in the can too; but that can come in handy, as it did this morning, if you want to make a roux and get some gravy going. |
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If you have an understanding of what you need, it looks like 21st Century Food Storage is worth checking out. No preservatives or additives, very few fillers. Not sure how competitive pricing is. They lost a lot of points on the advice part of the review, but scored well on the food.
http://www.storablefoods.com/catalog/index.cgi |
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I can vouch for the pork chops at FDG...quality product
wish the beef was grass fed |
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Seems silly to me. The costs are astronomical.
Is the idea to "trade" this stuff when TSHTF or eat it? |
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I dont like the fact that honeyville doesn't stand behind thier product for the same shelf life as other FD food companies. Only 10-15 years on their meat opposed to 25 years for other brands. Same with their FD fruit. Makes me wonder how well they pack them (ie if their is residual oxygen in the cans.)
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I'm eating what I'm prepping because I prep what I eat. While I could theoretically trade food preps for other necessities WTSHTF, I'd prefer that nobody outside my family who knows me in real life would know what food I have. Same with my silver. Having said that, I might make anonymous gifts of food to people in the middle of the night when nobody can see what I'm doing, but advertising that I have food or other preps would not be advantageous. Quote:
Or you could make your own. ;) Here's what I've done with spinach--I thawed 4 lbs. of frozen spinach for several hours, dehydrated it in my Nesco and then afterward the entire 4 lbs. fit into a one-quart mason jar. I have about 16 quarts of spinach at the moment. http://i223.photobucket.com/albums/d...r/100_1211.jpg http://i223.photobucket.com/albums/d...r/100_1213.jpg http://i223.photobucket.com/albums/d...r/100_1219.jpg |
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Any guess the shelf life for spinach done that way? There was a someone dehydrating cooked hamburger, I think it was, and storing it, too, but they might be gone, banned, I think. My beef jerky would be fine to grind up and make soup out of, but after 2 yrs, it tastes fine but not good looking. |
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http://www.mredepot.com/servlet/Stor...rt_id=15603646 15 % off code 8tray
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The only products I'm ordering from companies such as these are high-sugar dehydrated foods (apples, tomatoes, bananas, etc.) that are a pain to do myself, because they stick to the dehydrator trays. |
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Do you really like dehydrated mackerel? Sounds great, if you've got a cat.
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I'm surprised that the in-can shelf life is only 3 years. By the way, what does your house smell like after you've dehydrated several trays of fish?
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The fish odor really isn't problematic--there's a difference between the smell of baked fish (which is what I'd compare this to) versus the smell of just plain old fish or the lingering smell of oil-fried fish, which lingers because the oil mist hangs in the air, sort of like at fast-food restaurants. But the smell of dehydrating fish doesn't come close to that. The flavor of the fish intensifies as it's dehydrated, but the smell diminishes the longer it's in the dehydrator because the water is removed. That's not to say it doesn't have an aroma, but the smell of dried fish isn't much stronger than dried chicken. But besides that, which would you rather have--a kitchen that just needs to be ventilated after cooking, or an ample supply of animal protein for your survival? I guess what it boils down to is, how badly do you want to have food for your own long-term survival? I'll take a little fish smell in the kitchen now for the sake of being able to eat down the road. |
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this is not a bad deal for 6 cans after the 15 % it was around 40 http://www.mredepot.com/servlet/the-...ey-Beef/Detail the other place was 100 bucks for 3
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