Shelves are emptying and now prices are about to jump again. This is the moment your crazy prepper friends tried to warn you about. This is your last chance to prepare for the worst.
Guns and ammo: doesn't have to be fancy. Get something you are comfortable hunting and defending yourself with.
Food: canned goods. Anything that has a shelf life longer than 6 months. Hopefully this won't last longer than a few weeks, but hope is not a game plan. Anticipating the worst is.
Warm clothing and blankets: remember the Texas deep freeze? Plan for that times 10 if you want to make it.
That's all basic stuff you can and should get right now... God bless and protect, Frens... We'll make it.
Because sausage doesn't keep more than a couple months in the freezer without starting to get a stale flavor, I make big batches of this beans and sausage dish that lasts forever in the freezer. One recipe makes 5 or 6 very generous helpings and the whole thing costs $10, or about $2 a serving (even cheaper if you are not a hearty eater or serve with rice)
1.5 lbs dry beans - 1 lb dark kidney and can be mixed with pinto (cheaper) or other beans for variety 1 lb hot italian sausage 1 medium onion, chopped roughly 1 clove garlic, minced 1 large can diced tomatoes chili powder cumin crushed red pepper (opt) salt + pepper
soak beans overnight in a big pot of salted water, then the next day, boil for 1.5 hours or until tender.
Slice sausage links into 6 pieces then cook in heavy cast iron pot in some oil with the garlic. Just until the pink is gone - no need to brown or overcook. They'll cook some more once all the ingredients are in, so they'll get done and if you don't overcook in the beginning, they'll stay tender.
Once sausage is no longer pink, add the chopped onion and the diced tomatoes. Stir, then add 2-3 TBS of chili powder and 2 TBS of cumin (more or less according to your taste, but this is a good starting point). Add 1 TBS of crushed red pepper if you like a little zing. Salt and pepper. Cook and stir for a while, then start adding the beans, moving from the bean pot to the sausage pot with a strainer utensil. Once the beans are all in, stir it up and add water from the bean pot to bring liquid close to top of beans.
Simmer15 or 20 mins. Don't overcook it, because the sausage will lose its flavor and texture.
When serving, sour cream or shredded cheese can be added.
Keeps very well in fridge for a week, and freezes easily, lasting many months without a bad taste if you squeeze all the air out.
This is a very easy pot of food to make for a very reasonable price. I'm doing up a lot of batches which sausage is still around $4 a pound. It's very hearty and filling, even moreso if served over rice.
Be on the lookout for an older freezer with manual defrost. The auto defrost really shortens the edible lifespan of frozen foods. I have my grandparents Coldspot they bought new in 1968.
Good point. I had four old ones I got second hand years ago. Two of them shit the bed this past year, and it's impossible to find used freezers anymore. I have a guy who deals in second hand appliances (saves a fortune - perfectly good dryer cost $100 and has lasted 12 years so far) and he said last year with the lockdown, everybody was buying freezers and he can't find them anymore.
I've never noticed any change in the taste of our sausage even after a couple of years.
We buy bulk, custom blended sausage from an old-time country store in the area. We make patties, spread them on parchment and sheet pans to freeze. After they are frozen, we use the Fresh Saver to vacuum seal them in meal-sized packs.
Vacuum sealing makes all the difference. The packaged bacon I get from the grocery store is vacuum sealed and lasts indefinitely in the freezer. But the sausage is not and I don't have a vacuum sealer, so I cook it into a recipe because it starts to taste a little off after a couple months.
The vacuum sealer is a very good investment. Our current one is a good number of years old. We wore out the previous one.
We had pork chops a couple of days ago that we packaged a year ago. They tasted brand new.
Make sure to drain your beans before cooking after soaking them overnight. They leech toxins (phytohaemagglutinin) and draining will get rid of those.
The toxins also are what cause the gas many associate with bean eating.
What happens if the freezer stops working? How long does it take to reheat?
If you freeze it in quart bags, which is big enough for 1 or 2 servings, it thaws quite easily in a bowl of warm water.