It's been a full week living solely on home storage. The bumps have smoothed out, and it has been smooth sailing.
DD19 was able to attend the women's group meeting where the challenge was issued. It was really interesting to hear how everyone is doing. One woman thought the challenge started at the last challenge (making something creative out of your food supplies) so she's been doing it for three weeks! WOW! No one has dropped out yet, but I think on average, people can survive one week, especially if they have running water, electric, sanitation etc. It's this next week which will be telling.
This woman's family ran out of milk, so they went to their powdered milk storage, which her husband refused to drink. So she responded that he was doing without. Oddly enough, his skin issues he has always had have cleared up by not drinking pasteurized milk. Hmmm...
DD19 has learned this week that certain items will be staples in her food storage. For example, one of her favorites is lemon orzo soup. We had all the ingredients and it is a hearty meal which can be eaten vegan (normally what we do) or you can throw in a pint of chicken if you've got it. Orzo (a pasta which looks like rice) is not on anyone's "staple list", but this experiment has taught DD19 that home storage needs to be customized to your needs, not someone else's. She was also craving sweets really badly. We had run out of sugar in the kitchen, and she was desperately debating whether she should break the ban or live without. She had the thought to look in the garage--perhaps we had a #10 can of sugar? And surprise, we did! The day was saved, and DD19 saw the importance of having a stockpile.
I continue to organize our storage and jettison household items we no longer need. During the re-org we uncovered 12 cans of kidney beans, 24 cans of diced tomatoes, and wonder of wonders: my Tattler reusable canning lids and seals! So excited! So now we will be able to can up some pinto beans for DD19, and once the ban is lifted, buy a bunch of chickpeas and can those up as well. Chickpeas are fast becoming a pantry staple for us: high in protein, good flavor, add a lot of heft to a meal.
Lemon Orzo Soup (the original recipe)
2 T olive oil, divided
Kosher salt and freshly ground pepper (obviously regular table will do)
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 onion, diced
3 carrots, peeled and diced
2 stalks celery, diced
1/2 teas dried thyme
5 cups vegetable stock
2 bay leaves
3/4 cup uncooked orzo pasta
1 sprig rosemary
juice of 1 lemon
2 T chopped fresh parsley leaves
optional: 1 can chickpeas, 1 pint/small can cooked chicken
Instructions: Add 1 T oil to stockpot, add garlic, onion, carrots, celery. Cook stirring occasionally until tender about 3-4 minutes. Stir in thyme until fragrant about 1 minute.
Whisk in vegetable stock, bay leaves and 1 cup water bring to a boil. Stir in orzo, rosemary, (chicken and/or chickpeas) reduce heat and simmer until orzo is tender, about 10-12 minutes. Stir in lemon juice and parsley, season with salt and pepper to taste. **Can also pressure cook 1-2 minutes after coming to pressure in lieu of stovetop cooking.
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What we changed: We substituted THRIVE FD celery and carrots about a half cup of each, and a 1/3 cup of FD onion. I have a #10 can of dehydrated carrots (a whole case in fact) but I've used them before and I'm not a fan of the taste; I don't know if it's the dehydrating process they use or that it has absorbed that tin can smell, but I'm not a fan. DD19 pressure cooked it rather than stovetop simmer; we've found we get more consistent results that way.
Life Lesson Days 7 and 8: At the end of the day, someone else's list is a guideline, not the gospel. You have to store what is right for your family, not someone else's. We have good friends of ours whose son has Celiac disease and is gluten intolerant. What's the point of them solely storing 1000 pounds of wheat vs 1000 pounds of corn and rice? We found out through personal experience our family needs a 1000ct roll of toilet paper a day; no one's list could tell us that.
Most importantly: do something now. Find the meals which your family likes and start gathering those ingredients now.
Vaya con Dios.