Tuesday, December 28, 2010

After Christmas Sales-Chocolate

This morning at WinCo, I noticed the Guittard Chocolate Chips (Butterscotch and Mint, also) were all priced at 98 cents. Last week, I paid $1.78 per bag. I like to buy the 63% dark since it is more healthy. I do not know how long this sale will last...they have tall stacks of all flavors of these delicious treats. A food storage plan should include some treat items. The chocolate chips can be melted and mixed with oatmeal or different cereals to make dessert clusters.


This is how the display looks at WinCO, part of an endcap. Now, that's a lot of chocolate chips!



Some bags are also on the shelf. I snapped this picture as proof of the price. I bought several bags this morning and I know they will stay good for quite a few months in my food storage pantry. I have discovered if I open a bag of chocolate chips and they have started to turn white-ish, I can melt them down to get them to harden up dark and snappy again.

EXPIRATION DATE ON THESE? There was just a code. I have at the same time purchased a bag of Ghirardelli Chocolate Chips that
have an actual expiration date stamped on it: 10-31-12. So I am assuming the Guittard expiration date is about the same. In other words, these chips should be good until mid 2012! And on into Halloween of that year.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Canstruction !







Canstruction is one way to store your canned goods and also provides material for the creative construction people in your family. Cans in the toybox? Make a can city, a can mountain. Speaking of cans, I just paid 50 cents each for Campbell's Cream of Chicken soup at Target.

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Can Organizer Systems

Much of our food storage happens to be canned goods. Canned goods should be stored in a "First In First Out" method. You want to use the older cans up first.

One way to do this is with the systems described below.

The unit below is from http://www.thecanorganizer.com/pantry.html


They come in packages of 4, mailed flat and you assemble them. They are made of cardboard and are quite inexpensive. You can fill your pantry with them. The site has good ideas on how to use these.

I was thrilled to discover these smaller, cardboard organizers since we did not have room in our house for the big metal units as shown below.
This is one version of the many versions of the "First In First Out" style can organizers found at www.shelfreliance.com. The red bags are 72 hour backpacks ready to go. The site has a feature where you can enter information to build a customized 72 hour kit.

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Solar Cooking

Today I watched a program on byutv.org about solar cooking. I printed off the free pdf file of the booklet the Wendy DeWitt authored that explained the different cookers and had lots of yummy recipes. See side bar for the link.



This is a Sun Oven.

Sun Oven Description
Helps You Harness the Power of the SunWhether you're dealing with a power outage, or just plain conserving energy, the Sun Oven can cook anything that can be baked in a conventional oven. It lets you harness the power of the sun to cook without fuel.
Lets You Create Your Favorite RecipesWith the Sun Oven you can cook almost anything - breads, cakes, muffins, pizza, vegetables, poultry, fish, meats, casseroles, grains, pasta and desserts, just to name a few.
Provides High Cooking TemperaturesOur Sun Ovens reach temperatures of 360 to 400 degrees Fahrenheit, which are more than sufficient to bake, boil or steam your favorite foods - wherever you happen to take your Sun Oven.
Makes Foods Taste BetterSun-baked foods stay moister and have less shrinkage than conventional oven-cooked foods. Also, with the Sun Oven there is never any burning or scorching to ruin a meal.
Is Totally SafeBecause of the unique way the Sun Oven operates, there is never a danger of fire.
Is Ruggedly BuiltThe Sun Oven is not a toy. It is a serious appliance that is made for years of trouble-free use. Each Sun Oven is constructed with a strong plastic case that is both durable and easy to clean. It uses Reflexo specular-finish reflectors and a tempered glass door to retain the sun's powerful heat. The Sun Oven features an easily adjustable, self-contained leveling leg to maintain the oven's maximum exposure to the sun, while a built-in Levelator keeps foods level inside the oven to avoid spills.
Is Totally PortableYou can take and use the Sun Oven virtually anywhere there is sunshine. When the oven is closed it is as portable as a small suitcase. It measures just 19'' x 19'' and weighs only 21 pounds. It even has a convenient built-in carry-handle.
Is a Great Hedge Against Power InterruptionsWith a Sun Oven, you will be prepared for any interruption to traditional power sources. You will be able to cook any kind of food as well as boiling water. You can enjoy the peace of mind of knowing that as long as there is sunshine, you will have all the power you need to cook your meals.

For the past 14 years, these ovens have been used successfully in 126 countries around the world. Thousands of cooking enthusiasts in the United States and around the world are using them and appreciate the unparalleled features and benefits of using the best manufactured solar cooking device in the world.
Whether you are preparing for emergencies, or you just want to experience the superior taste and nutritional benefits of sun-baked foods, the sun oven will prove to be a wise investment.
http://www.pureenergysystems.com/store/Sun_Oven/

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Chile Missionaries Were Warned About Earthquake

This article was lifted by me, Joan, from the Meridian Magazine site:
http://www.ldsmag.com/churchupdate/100303chile.html

I am ever grateful for stories like this that motivate us to always be open to the spirit's promptings! Also..I learned about the concept of a 36 hour kit. Read on.....

Editor’s Note: President Larry Laycock and his wife, Sister Lisa Laycock head the Santiago Chile East Mission and had spent the two weeks prior to the 8.8 earthquake visiting each missionary apartment and preparing them for an earthquake. They brought specific instructions on what to do, supplied water purification bottles for the missionaries, told them how to create a 36-hour kit for emergencies and how to stay in communication should an earthquake strike. They prayed with each missionary and dedicated their apartments. Why? Because of a special experience that alerted them to what was coming. They told their missionaries, “If ye are prepared, ye shall not fear.”

They have 171 full-time proselyting missionaries in this mission.

Special thanks to the Laycocks for allowing Meridian to publish this letter that Sister Laycock sent to her family shortly after the earthquake sharing their remarkable experience of kindness from the Lord. They are in Chile with their son, Landon.

The picture of the missionaries on the cover and in this article were taken at a March 1st gathering. These are post-earthquake smiling faces.

Dear Everyone,

I am writing to let you all know how very grateful we are for your prayers, concern, and love. Please keep praying! We need the Lord's help and guidance in order to do all He would have us do to learn what He would have us learn from this earth quake tragedy, and to minister in the way He would have us minister.

During the past few days, we have witnessed many events which serve to remind us that the Lord is in charge and that as missionaries and members of His church, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, we are performing His work, and as President Monson teaches, "When we are on the Lord's errand, we are entitled to His help." I want to share with you a few miracles that will help you to understand our profound feelings of gratitude.

When we were set apart for this calling, Elder Scott of the Council of the Twelve Apostles taught us many important lessons. He spoke from personal experience when he was a mission president in Argentina. One message that he shared with us is this: "At times, during your mission, you will be awakened in the middle of the night or the early morning hours with thoughts of specific things you should do for certain missionaries. Do not ignore these thoughts. They are promptings from the Holy Ghost who will communicate with you in the stillness of the night or the peace of the early morning hours. He will speak to you then because that is when you are still enough to hear."

Elder Scott further instructed us to keep a notebook beside our bed so that we could record these precious promptings. He said that by the next morning, we would be likely to forget the promptings if we didn't write them down.

We have been astonished at the fulfillment of Elder Scott's prophetic words. We have received many promptings in the exact manner that Elder Scott described. We are so thankful that Elder Scott taught us how to recognize and act upon these precious promptings. Had he not taught us, we may not have given these promptings the attention they require.

Nearly two-and-one-half weeks ago, I was awakened at around 4:00 AM by just such a prompting. I did not hear a voice, but the thought was as clear as if it had been in the form of spoken words: "There is going to be an earthquake. Prepare your missionaries." I sat up in bed and immediately remembered Elder Scott's counsel. That morning I told Larry what had happened. He immediately set to work organizing our missionaries to prepare for an earthquake.

In talking with our office missionaries to arrange for them to put together a list of everything we would need to prepare...in both Spanish and English...we discovered that the Lord had also let two of our office missionaries know of the possibility of an earthquake (in the form of dreams) and the need to prepare our mission.

We set a goal and arranged our schedule so that we could visit every apartment in the mission to check for safety and to review with our missionaries what to do in case of an earth quake. What a wonderful experience we have had as we have met with them and shared scriptures with them about being spiritually and physically prepared. "...if ye are prepared, ye shall not fear" (D&C 38:30).

We instructed every missionary to have a "go-bag" (36 hour kit). We reviewed our emergency action plan with them of where to go and what to do if they had phone service and in case they did not. We gave everyone a paper with all instructions in English and Spanish, and we reminded them that "this life is the time to prepare to meet God" (Alma 34:32-34). We shared with them our thoughts and feelings about the need for spiritual and physical safety.

Some of them became frightened and asked us if we knew something they didn't know. We smiled and repeated "...if ye are prepared, ye shall not fear." We didn't want to unduly alarm them, but we did want to impress upon them the need to be prepared. We tearfully reminded them of our recent transfer conference where we had shared our feelings about our dear Elder McKay Burrows who was unexpectedly called home in January while serving his mission in Romania...how he was prepared in every way to meet God. We reissued our challenge to "be prepared" in every way. Then we knelt with them in their apartment and dedicated each apartment, asking for a blessing of safety and security to be upon every apartment.

When the earthquake came, we were prepared. We did not experience the panic that many felt. We knew we were prepared. Because of the words of the Lord's chosen Apostle, Elder Scott, we had listened and heeded the quiet, but clear promptings of the Holy Ghost. We were blessed with peace in the midst of chaos. We learned an important lesson: our preparation helped us to avoid panic and fear, but the Lord, in His wisdom, allowed us to experience enough discomfort to know that He has all power. He is in charge. We are nothing without Him. We are dependent upon Him for every breath we take. Only He can save us from death and destruction. He is the way, the truth, and the life. He is our perfect example. If we follow Him, we will be saved through obedience to the laws and ordinances of His Gospel.

As the earthquake became more violent, the mission home groaned and wailed. The power died, so the whole city was black. The windows made a hideous screeching sound, and flying objects banged against swaying walls. The printer/fax machine, books, book ends, and fifty-pound television burst from the entertainment center and crashed to the floor, cabinets emptied, drawers flew open, the refrigerator moved, water sloshed out of the toilets, the floor jolted up and down as we ran across it trying to hold onto the walls to keep from falling down, and the piano toppled over like a small toy. As we made our way to the back yard, I remember thinking, "God is all-powerful. He is our only refuge from this horrible mess." I prayed and prayed for Him to still the earth.

When we reached the back yard, we watched in terror. By the light of the moon we could see the swimming pool water form giant waves and crash out onto the rocks. House and car alarms screamed into the night...some from being crushed by falling debris and others, I guess, from the bizarre movement of the earth. I am not sure if the intense rumbling sounds came from the earth itself or from everything else that was shaking so violently. Finally, it stopped.

When the calm came, we had to sit down because our legs were weak and unstable. My legs stayed wobbly all day and night yesterday. Today the muscles in my legs hurt like I ran a marathon. The aftershocks have been extremely unsettling. Each one begins like the one last night started. We just close our eyes and wait to see if it escalates or dies down. .I have never experienced anything like this!

We were awakened this morning by a very strong after shock. Larry jumped out of bed and yelled, "Welcome to another glorious day in Chile!" We just had to laugh. We moved a mattress into the floor in our bedroom and made Landon sleep in our room. He was in his room with the door locked the night before and we couldn't wake him up. He never locks his door, but he was playing a joke on Larry because every morning Larry wakes him at 5:30 AM for seminary by tickling him unmercifully. So Landon had decided to stop him.

When we couldn't open his door, in the middle of the quake, we thought he was trapped, so we screamed and banged. Landon thought that everything was falling off the walls because we were banging so hard on the door. I think we scared him more than the earthquake did!

Today, we attended a strong ward where Larry was invited to speak. The entire chapel and beyond was filled. People were so humble and so teachable. Larry taught the importance of doing the small things. He taught about Jesus Christ and the opportunity we have to love one another and to share what we have with others.

It was a great blessing for us to be with these beautiful Chilean people. Some have lost their homes...or at least parts of their homes. But they are strong and they want to serve the Lord. He taught of the scripture in Luke 21:11,13 which says, "and great earthquakes shall be in divers places...and it shall turn to you for a testimony." He also welcomed the sweet young woman who was in the congregation with the missionaries...her first time attending church...and then he invited her to be baptized from the pulpit. He asked her to please invite us to her baptism, and she said, "I will." The Lord always knows what His people need.

Landon was reading in Alma 15:17 today. He said, Mom listen to this. This is what is happening here in Chile just like in happened in Ammonihah. The people were humbled and "checked as to the pride of their hearts and began to humble themselves before God, watching and praying continually that they might be delivered from Satan, and from death, and from destruction."

Our hearts are filled to the brim with gratitude for all of the blessings we have received in the Chile Santiago East Mission. We see miracles every day. In the midst of great pain and suffering, we can always find our Savior. He stands with His arms open, pleading for all of us to humble ourselves and come unto Him. He loves us. He invites us to accept His gift...the atonement. He invites us to repent. He wants us to love one another and to serve one another. He wants us to bring our families and those we love to Him. We can do it. We can do all that He asks, no matter how difficult it may seem. "With God all things are possible"

We are having a devotional tomorrow for all of our missionaries to talk about the last week of Christ's life in preparation for Easter. We want to remind our missionaries to teach and preach with increased vigor of Christ. Last Monday in our office meeting, Larry suddenly stopped in the middle, and said, "During the prayer, I had a very strong impression that March 2010 is going to be our best baptizing month we have ever had in this mission."

Now we know why he received that feeling. We are going to prepare to bring many souls to the waters of baptism in March. Please continue to pray for us and for the people of Chile. Please pray for the missionaries to have strength and courage to do all that is being required of them, even in difficult times.

We are so thankful that the tsunami did not turn out badly in Hawaii. Who would ever think that an earthquake in Chile could threaten the shores of Hawaii? Thankfully, the Lord is in charge. He is the one to whom we must turn for refuge from every storm. He has the power to save us.

Editor’s Note:

The letter ends here, but President and Sister Laycock told us:

“We’ve never experienced anything like the earthquake. We have had 90 aftershocks, some stronger than others. Our legs are wobbly. It is a scary feeling to experience an aftershock because it brings back all the feelings we had during the earthquake.

“We love being with our missionaries. Because they were prepared, they were immediately able to turn their attention to helping others. They were never concerned about themselves. They were concerned with those who need help and by mid-morning the day of the earthquake, we were able to dispatch them to help others. We told them to investigate the needs of their neighbors and help in any way they could.

President Laycock noted, “The Spanish translation of Luke 21:13 says that there will be earthquakes in many places, and it will give you the occasion to bear testimony. We met with 10 sisters this morning, and one of them mentioned a neighbor next door whom they always asked if she would have time to speak with them, and she always said no. Yet in the crescendo of the toll of the earthquake, she was speechless with fear and not prepared. When the sisters said, ‘Could we pray with you?’, she answered, ‘I have time to pray with you.’ It opened the door to a teaching opportunity to share the gospel.

President and Sister Laycock said, “Everyone we talk to has been so willing to talk about Christ and God’s power. We’ve been sharing God’s love with them. We are seeing God’s love everywhere. People are reaching out to one another. They are serving one another. The news reports looting. We are seeing a different side. We are seeing people who want to communicate with God, who are sincerely looking for the truth.”


Sunday, February 7, 2010

Meet Crystal Godfrey

This is Crystal Godfrey. She is an amazing woman: LDS (Of course), author (you can buy her book "I Can't Believe It's Food Storage" on amazon.com), she has many youtube postings
(for example:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LXDF8C-SQBU , a 9 minute video of herself teaching you how to use a canner from an LDS cannery)

and her website is all you ever really need...it is so comprehensive and attractive and fun . It has recipes, tutorials, etc! In this link below, you will see her and hear her talk about the importance of long term food storage. Do explore her blog...she has a lot to teach you! Enjoy!






http://everydayfoodstorage.net/2009/09/04/a-case-for-long-term-food-storage-and-using-it-every-day/food-storage-recipes

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Regarding The Long Predicted "Big One"

I would like to ask you if you think you may be a little complacent about preparing for Califonia's "Big One". The Haiti earthquake is a reminder to us all!
Photo courtesy of www.hopeforhaitinow.org
Please read this excellent reminder to us all! From the LA Times recently....

The Big One is inevitable. Catastrophe is not.

The message for Southern California from the horror in Haiti should be -- but probably won't be -- to prepare for disaster.

By Cathleen Decker

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-week17-2010jan17,0,6099530,print.story
January 17, 2010

With a faraway shudder of the Earth, Californians last week went from contemplating the fates of two multimillionaire late-night comics to confronting horror in a painfully poor country.Half a hemisphere away, homes shattered, entombing young and old. Roads clogged with debris and bodies. The injured begged for help, unheeded. Elsewhere in the world, the portrait was enough to wrench the heart. In California, it was that and more: a chilling look into the future.

For those whose livelihoods involve a constant gaze in that direction, there was a fleeting hope that the Haiti disaster would change California's reality:
Despite decades of ever more urgent warnings, not enough here are really ready for the big earthquake to come.

The long-predicted Big One, exponentially more powerful than that to which Port-au-Prince has succumbed.Denial being what it is, there are always more pressing things to think about -- a foundering economy, a job on the knife's edge, morning traffic on the 405, Jay and Conan.

"This is a reminder to us that the worst-case events sometimes do happen," said Richard Andrews, who ran the state Office of Emergency Services in the 1990s, a time when California suffered repeated blows. Among them was the 1994 Northridge quake.

It may have seemed big to you--scores dead, tens of billions in damages--but seismically speaking it didn't come close.The dry bureaucratic titles manage to startle nonetheless.

The "Uniform California Earthquake Rupture Forecast," released in 2007, said California had a 99.7% chance of a 6.7 magnitude earthquake within 30 years. The likelihood of a quake of 7.5 or greater? About half and half, the flip of a coin.

The "Shakeout Earthquake Scenario" released by seismologists and others a year later filled in the gaps: The likely 7.8 magnitude breach of the southern San Andreas, now long overdue, would kill 1,800 people. Another 50,000 would be injured enough to be treated at a hospital, if they could find one.
Utilities would cease; some buildings would be without water for six months. Downtown Los Angeles, some distance from the epicenter, would shake for 55 seconds, eight times longer than Northridge.Granted, buildings in California are far stronger than those in Haiti, but a 7.8 temblor would be much more powerful than the Haitian quake and is far from the worst the San Andreas could deliver.

Much of the damage could be lessened with preparation, earthquake experts say, but people don't prepare. California's earthquake insurance authority says only 12% of those who insure their homes also carry earthquake protection.

A state-financed report now winding its way to the governor's office is expected to show that not enough people have adopted cheaper ways to get ready -- stocking water and food, buying a fire extinguisher, tying down water heaters and heavy furniture, making a plan.In part, that is because most of the quakes in recent times -- indeed, for California natives, for their parents' times as well -- have been fairly survivable.

Armchair earthquake psychologists say that, for many, the assumption is that if they survived Northridge, or the 1989 Loma Prieta quake in Northern California, well, how much worse could it get?"

It's human nature to consider your risk based on your experience and also to deny the risk you have in order to feel safe," said Mark Benthien of the Southern California Earthquake Center at USC.

"If we didn't think that way instinctively, we'd never leave the house."There is also a common misperception that in times of grievous damage, rescue will come from the hand of government. Not terribly likely.Glenn Pomeroy heads the California Earthquake Authority, which provides catastrophic insurance to homeowners in the state. In 1997, when North Dakota's Red River broke its banks and flooded Grand Forks, he was the state's insurance commissioner. "We learned a lot about people's false hopes -- 'Well, the government's gonna help out,' " he said.

"As we learn time and time again, from floods in North Dakota to hurricanes in New Orleans, the federal government doesn't just swoop in and build back homes."Pomeroy and others are trying to ease one impediment to preparation: the high cost of earthquake insurance. Members of Congress and senators from California are trying to push through a change in the funding requirements that would allow the earthquake authority to drop both the rates and the high deductibles."They're not buying because it costs too much and the deductible is too high," he said.

Despite their desperate financial straits, county and state governments have managed not to cut too grievously into earthquake planning or emergency programs. Helping them out since 2001 has been the influx of anti-terrorism money, of which about $2 billion has flowed into California."Whether you're preparing to protect critical infrastructure from willful attacks or earthquakes, some of that is the same type of work," said Jay Alan, director of communications for the California Emergency Management Agency.But never-ending budget woes do strain the system, noted Ryan J. Alsop of Los Angeles County's chief executive office.

Disasters are always a priority, he said, but if they happen, there is less and less left over for anything else."We hope we don't have one right now," he said facetiously. "It's not a good time."

The day the quake struck Haiti, Ken Kondo got a call from an L.A. group that wanted someone to talk about earthquake preparation. A program manager at the county's office of emergency management, he showed up and took a survey. Of the 200 in the audience, how many had a disaster kit? Three hands rose.

"Southern Californians are used to earthquakes and so sometimes you get a little complacent with it," he said. "The goal is to prevent disasters from becoming catastrophes."cathleen.decker@latimes.comEach Sunday, The Week examines implications of major stories. It is archived at latimes.com/theweek.
Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Great Product for your Prepared Purse or 72 Hour Kit.






Yesterday at Target (on 7th Street-sometimes called Palmdale Rd.- Victorville) I purchased for 5 bucks something that could save my life.

Maybe some day when I am in a movie theatre and all the lights go out because of electrical failure, I can whip this out of my purse and use it to guide everyone out of the theatre safely. If I am lost somewhere where there is no one around-like deep in a woods-and there may be a search party out looking for me...I can use the whistle to show my whereabouts...and the flashing light if it is dark night.

Every kid on a camping trip should have one of these on his person at all times.
(Or a flashlight and a whistle)

It is called Life Gear Glow Red. It also comes in blue and in green. It has 200 hours of light power stored in it! Batteries can be replaced.

They can be found in an aisle across from the backpacks, where all the other flashlights are displayed...at the far side of the store near where the seasonal goods (Xmas decorations, etc.) are displayed What I like about it is that is has a flashlight feature, as well as the bright glowstick look of bright red that can be a steady light or flashing. It has a whistle on one end that is nice and shrill and it has a cord you can attach to it.
Here is more info:

200 Hour Glow Sticks
LED Glow Stick, Flashlight, Flashers and Whistle

FEATURES
•200 HOUR GLOW STICK
•FLASHLIGHT- built in
•Emergency Whistle
•LED Technology
•Replaceable batteries (3x AG-13 Batteries included)
•Emergency Flasher
•10,000 Hours product life with Replaceable batteries

Dates on Food Jars and Cans





Today I am making a slow cooker spaghetti dish. I found 2 bottle of Ragu deep in my cupboard. There was a date on each of the lids: AUG 16 07. That's all. It did not say "Best by" or "Sell by" or "Use by".

I tested the screw on lid...the "button" in the middle was depressed. If it had popped up and down with the pressure of my finger, I would have not hesitated to through it out immediately.
So...since the seal was good, and since it was glass (I have read that canned tomato sauce, if kept for long periods of time, will get some of the resinous coating of the inside of the can absorbed into the food.)I felt completely 100 % confident to use this product, even though today's date is 2 and 1/2 years past the date on the jar lid.

I once saw a show on BYUTV that had a woman who was a food science professor say she opened and ate a can of vegatables that was 12 years old...it was not harmful. The flavor and nutritional value were somewhat diminished but it was edible and provided needed calries. Of course, she said, if the can was bulging, or if the lid was not depressed (that is, if you could push the top of the can down and feel it pop up again)...then you would definitely not eat it. Or if you opened it and it smelled bad, you would not eat it.

I found a great article on this by Jane Brody(famous nutritionist, author) and posted the link on the side bar.