Friday, August 31, 2012
Wind Forecast! Great Tool For Boaters ETC!
This has got to be one of the greatest thing that I have ever seen. Anyone who spends time on a boat has got to get this wind forecast! They have online weather routing and alerts. You can also get Live wind observations from 15,000 live stations from around the world. With their outstanding accuracy you can be confident in your forecast. Your boating trip will be safer and you will have more fun knowing that your getting a reliable weather forecast. You can easily plan your boating or kayaking trip with this wind forecast. Plan out a safe and quick route. You can over to the website and get a free forecast really easy and see how detailed it is for yourself. You will be hooked. It is so easy to use and you can plan your trips now a day or so out and be safer knowing what the weather is going to be like. No more getting stuck out in inclement weather. It doesn't matter if you Yacht or just day fish, you can use this. Windsurfers and Kayaking even can use this tool with ease. Anyone who spends any time on the water has got to get this tool and use it. The pricing isn't too bad either, they have a basic package on up to a professional. You will find the right one for you. Get on over there and try out the free wind forecast.
Food Storage Recipe - Chicken & Broccoli Manicotti
Eating out of your food storage doesn't have to be boring and only beans! I try to show on this blog that you can be frugal and still eat great food out of your food stockpile. You just have to know how to put the stuff together and not just eat the same things all of the time. This is one of those recipes that uses what you already have in your stockpile.
Chicken & Broccoli Manicotti
You NEED:
1 can condensed cream of chicken soup
1-1/2 cups water
1/4 lb. (4 oz.) VELVEETA® cheese, cut into 1/2-inch cubes
2 cups frozen broccoli florets
12 manicotti shells, uncooked
16ozs of canned chicken , drained. I use my favorite - The Keystone All Natural Canned Chicken! I love this stuff - I use it and the beef in everything. Great in soups, recipes, and even just heat up with BBQ sauce and have sandwiches.
1/4 cup Grated Parmesan Cheese
HEAT oven to 400ºF. Microwave soup, water and VELVEETA in microwaveable bowl on HIGH 3 min. or until VELVEETA is melted and mixture is well blended, stirring after 2 min.; pour 1/3 into 13x9-inch baking dish. Set aside. Add broccoli to remaining soup mixture.
STUFF manicotti with chicken; place in baking dish. Top with remaining soup mixture and Parmesan; cover with foil.
BAKE 45 to 50 min. or until manicotti is tender! This is a great meal. Serve it with garlic bread and a salad. Easy and frugal.
Free Solar Book
The Prepper's Pocket Guide: 101 Easy Things You Can Do to Ready Your Home for a Disaster
Ultimate Family Preparedness Pak
120 Serving Breakfast Only @ $198 (120 Servings breakfast assortment. No entrees) - Order Now!
Chicken & Broccoli Manicotti
You NEED:
1 can condensed cream of chicken soup
1-1/2 cups water
1/4 lb. (4 oz.) VELVEETA® cheese, cut into 1/2-inch cubes
2 cups frozen broccoli florets
12 manicotti shells, uncooked
16ozs of canned chicken , drained. I use my favorite - The Keystone All Natural Canned Chicken! I love this stuff - I use it and the beef in everything. Great in soups, recipes, and even just heat up with BBQ sauce and have sandwiches.
1/4 cup Grated Parmesan Cheese
HEAT oven to 400ºF. Microwave soup, water and VELVEETA in microwaveable bowl on HIGH 3 min. or until VELVEETA is melted and mixture is well blended, stirring after 2 min.; pour 1/3 into 13x9-inch baking dish. Set aside. Add broccoli to remaining soup mixture.
STUFF manicotti with chicken; place in baking dish. Top with remaining soup mixture and Parmesan; cover with foil.
BAKE 45 to 50 min. or until manicotti is tender! This is a great meal. Serve it with garlic bread and a salad. Easy and frugal.
Free Solar Book
The Prepper's Pocket Guide: 101 Easy Things You Can Do to Ready Your Home for a Disaster
Ultimate Family Preparedness Pak
120 Serving Breakfast Only @ $198 (120 Servings breakfast assortment. No entrees) - Order Now!
Thursday, August 30, 2012
Dehydrating Tomatoes
Dehydrating Tomatoes
Woke up this morning dry, crisp tomatoes. So , put them into the Magic Bullet and ground them up into a nice, fine powder. Added it to my jar of tomato powder. Now, when I need something with tomatoes in it , like soups, etc I will have it. Great tasting! Fresh from the garden.
Free Solar Book
The Prepper's Pocket Guide: 101 Easy Things You Can Do to Ready Your Home for a Disaster
Ultimate Family Preparedness Pak
120 Serving Breakfast Only @ $198 (120 Servings breakfast assortment. No entrees) - Order Now!
Woke up this morning dry, crisp tomatoes. So , put them into the Magic Bullet and ground them up into a nice, fine powder. Added it to my jar of tomato powder. Now, when I need something with tomatoes in it , like soups, etc I will have it. Great tasting! Fresh from the garden.
Free Solar Book
The Prepper's Pocket Guide: 101 Easy Things You Can Do to Ready Your Home for a Disaster
Ultimate Family Preparedness Pak
120 Serving Breakfast Only @ $198 (120 Servings breakfast assortment. No entrees) - Order Now!
DIY Food Dehydrating (guest post)
You can save money and space by learning DIY food dehydrating techniques.Not only will this knowledge save you money, but you will have the assurance of knowing exactly what your dehydrated meals contain.
Water in fruits and vegetables, and meat causes rapid ripening and eventual decay due to the enzymes and bacteria. When you remove the water through dehydration or circulating dry, hot air through the food item it shrinks it down in size and decay causing moisture is eliminated.
Food Dehydrating Benefits
Once canned food is open it will spoil fairly fast. Dehydrated food containers can be opened and reopened without causing the food within to spoil because there is no moisture present.
Garden-grown food can also be dehydrated. It's a great way to provide nutritious food for your family during a survival scenario.
Rather than purchasing small amounts of perishable food when it's on sale, you can take advantage of sales by purchasing large amounts and dehydrating it before it spoils.
You can save space in your pantry by dehydrating bulky fruits and vegetables like peppers and apples. One quart jar will hold 25 dried apples.
DIY food dehydrating techniques have very little effect on the vitamin and mineral content in foods when performed at home. Dehydrating foods is healthier than freezing or canning because most vitamins are retained in the dehydration process.
All dehydrated fruits and vegetables keep their carbohydrate and fiber content.
Dehydrated foods are lightweight and space saving; great for survival backpacks.
Pre-Treating Foods
You don't need to pre-treat foods before DIY food dehydrating, although doing things like marinating, dipping, and blanching will enhance flavor and color in some foods. You can inhibit mold or yeast growth by causing a chemical reaction that is a result of pre-treating foods.
Using a commercial product like Fruit Fresh is one way to pre-treat, but you can also just dip the items in a mixture of lemon juice and water.
The dehydration process can change the color of some foods which makes them look a bit less appetizing. Pre-treatment is usually used when DIY food dehydrating outdoors using the sun and wind.
Food Dehydrators
One way to dehydrate foods is by using a chamber that forces air through food which dries and preserves it. You don't have to buy a dehydrator; homemade techniques work quite well.
An electric dehydrator should have a temperature control, trays with lots of ventilation, and a fan to circulate the air. Some units have an on and off switch while others need to be unplugged. Prices run from about $50 for an American Harvest brand to several hundred dollars for the best of the best, the Excalibur.
With a little luck you might pick up one at a garage sale for $10.
Solar Food Dehydration
A DIY food dehydration system uses the sun's heat and consists of a wooden box fitted with a glass top that traps heat inside. This type of unit can have a heat-absorbing plate inside that produces an air convection current that goes through a vent at the bottom of the box. Your food is dried out as the hot air takes the moisture out of the box.
Drying food outdoors in the sun has a number of benefits:
Depending on the outside humidity, it may dehydrate faster than when using an electric dehydrating unit
Easy to set up, use and clean - can be portable
Keeps food dry when it rains
Air-tight construction prevents insects from getting in
Does not contribute to energy costs
Dehydrating can start in the spring as soon as early season crops such as strawberries, peas and other berries are ripe
DIY Food Dehydrating in the Oven
Using your oven is a good way of DIY food dehydrating and works well with foods like banana chips and jerky.
Oven drying takes longer than the sun or an electric dehydrator and cannot be used if your oven cannot heat at temps below 140° Fahrenheit. If your oven won't go below 140° it may cook the food instead of dehydrating it.
When you're drying food, put trays on oven racks that are two-inches apart to allow proper air circulation.
DIY Food Dehydrating in Your Car
Other than solar food dehydration, the above methods need access to power. During an apocalyptic event you may not have access to power. In the summer you can turn any vehicle, which may not be drivable due to lack of gas, into a huge dehydrator. Window screens make great trays and you can load them up with thin slices of things like meat, vegetables, and fruit. Put them in your car or truck and crack the windows to allow the air to circulate.
Depending on where you are living and the amount of humidity in the air, most things will be completely dehydrated by the end of the day. Things that are not dry can be left in overnight as long as you roll up the windows to prevent moisture.
C.L. Hendricks has been a Jill-of-all-trades and become an expert in some, including active participation in the preparedness movement. It is with personal knowledge and experience that she writes for such websites as Apocalypse Survival and Real Survival Skills.
Free Solar Book
The Prepper's Pocket Guide: 101 Easy Things You Can Do to Ready Your Home for a Disaster
Ultimate Family Preparedness Pak
120 Serving Breakfast Only @ $198 (120 Servings breakfast assortment. No entrees) - Order Now!
Water in fruits and vegetables, and meat causes rapid ripening and eventual decay due to the enzymes and bacteria. When you remove the water through dehydration or circulating dry, hot air through the food item it shrinks it down in size and decay causing moisture is eliminated.
Food Dehydrating Benefits
Once canned food is open it will spoil fairly fast. Dehydrated food containers can be opened and reopened without causing the food within to spoil because there is no moisture present.
Garden-grown food can also be dehydrated. It's a great way to provide nutritious food for your family during a survival scenario.
Rather than purchasing small amounts of perishable food when it's on sale, you can take advantage of sales by purchasing large amounts and dehydrating it before it spoils.
You can save space in your pantry by dehydrating bulky fruits and vegetables like peppers and apples. One quart jar will hold 25 dried apples.
DIY food dehydrating techniques have very little effect on the vitamin and mineral content in foods when performed at home. Dehydrating foods is healthier than freezing or canning because most vitamins are retained in the dehydration process.
All dehydrated fruits and vegetables keep their carbohydrate and fiber content.
Dehydrated foods are lightweight and space saving; great for survival backpacks.
Pre-Treating Foods
You don't need to pre-treat foods before DIY food dehydrating, although doing things like marinating, dipping, and blanching will enhance flavor and color in some foods. You can inhibit mold or yeast growth by causing a chemical reaction that is a result of pre-treating foods.
Using a commercial product like Fruit Fresh is one way to pre-treat, but you can also just dip the items in a mixture of lemon juice and water.
The dehydration process can change the color of some foods which makes them look a bit less appetizing. Pre-treatment is usually used when DIY food dehydrating outdoors using the sun and wind.
Food Dehydrators
One way to dehydrate foods is by using a chamber that forces air through food which dries and preserves it. You don't have to buy a dehydrator; homemade techniques work quite well.
An electric dehydrator should have a temperature control, trays with lots of ventilation, and a fan to circulate the air. Some units have an on and off switch while others need to be unplugged. Prices run from about $50 for an American Harvest brand to several hundred dollars for the best of the best, the Excalibur.
With a little luck you might pick up one at a garage sale for $10.
Solar Food Dehydration
A DIY food dehydration system uses the sun's heat and consists of a wooden box fitted with a glass top that traps heat inside. This type of unit can have a heat-absorbing plate inside that produces an air convection current that goes through a vent at the bottom of the box. Your food is dried out as the hot air takes the moisture out of the box.
Drying food outdoors in the sun has a number of benefits:
Depending on the outside humidity, it may dehydrate faster than when using an electric dehydrating unit
Easy to set up, use and clean - can be portable
Keeps food dry when it rains
Air-tight construction prevents insects from getting in
Does not contribute to energy costs
Dehydrating can start in the spring as soon as early season crops such as strawberries, peas and other berries are ripe
DIY Food Dehydrating in the Oven
Using your oven is a good way of DIY food dehydrating and works well with foods like banana chips and jerky.
Oven drying takes longer than the sun or an electric dehydrator and cannot be used if your oven cannot heat at temps below 140° Fahrenheit. If your oven won't go below 140° it may cook the food instead of dehydrating it.
When you're drying food, put trays on oven racks that are two-inches apart to allow proper air circulation.
DIY Food Dehydrating in Your Car
Other than solar food dehydration, the above methods need access to power. During an apocalyptic event you may not have access to power. In the summer you can turn any vehicle, which may not be drivable due to lack of gas, into a huge dehydrator. Window screens make great trays and you can load them up with thin slices of things like meat, vegetables, and fruit. Put them in your car or truck and crack the windows to allow the air to circulate.
Depending on where you are living and the amount of humidity in the air, most things will be completely dehydrated by the end of the day. Things that are not dry can be left in overnight as long as you roll up the windows to prevent moisture.
C.L. Hendricks has been a Jill-of-all-trades and become an expert in some, including active participation in the preparedness movement. It is with personal knowledge and experience that she writes for such websites as Apocalypse Survival and Real Survival Skills.
Free Solar Book
The Prepper's Pocket Guide: 101 Easy Things You Can Do to Ready Your Home for a Disaster
Ultimate Family Preparedness Pak
120 Serving Breakfast Only @ $198 (120 Servings breakfast assortment. No entrees) - Order Now!
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
7 DIY Pop Can Solar Heaters
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