Author Topic: The Prepper Chef  (Read 2681 times)

Offline thedigininja

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The Prepper Chef
« on: August 21, 2014, 11:08:15 AM »
Being a chef by trade one of my great fears if the SHTF is getting stuck eating bags of freeze dried slop so I'm constantly experimenting with food storage and cooking with processed foods. I'm not sure how much interest this topic would generate and I know that much of what I post could have been covered in other threads but I wanted to keep it all together here and hopefully some of what I'll post could be useful to others.
« Last Edit: August 21, 2014, 11:10:17 AM by thedigininja »
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Offline thatGuy

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Re: The Prepper Chef
« Reply #1 on: August 21, 2014, 11:20:05 AM »
I love it! I am super interested.

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Re: The Prepper Chef
« Reply #2 on: August 21, 2014, 01:34:53 PM »
A South African gun loving prepper cheff topic?
why is this a question?

Offline thedigininja

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Re: The Prepper Chef
« Reply #3 on: August 21, 2014, 07:13:19 PM »
Jmac asked for my sauerkraut recipe so I'll start with that. This one is ridiculously easy, brilliant and versatile. I also got this one in metric and never bothered converting it so that is a bonus for you guys. I do it straight in the jar but you can do larger batches in an earthenware or crock pot and repack it later.

3 pounds of cabbage ( about the size of your head )
1.2 Table spoons of kosher salt ( or 1.25 Table spoons of fine iodine free salt)
That's it.
Remove the thick white veins in the cabbage and keep part of one of the outer leaves ( slightly larger than the jar you'll be using ) and shred what's left of the cabbage. In a glass / earthenware ( plastic if you must but not metal every time I used metal it failed ) bowl sprinkle the salt over the shredded cabbage and rub it in. The cabbage will eventually become soft and soggy. Place the salted cabbage and any fluid it generated in to a jar (a 2 quart canning or mason jar should be perfect) Pack it down and cover it with the leaf you kept and weigh it down with something ( I have a number of drinking glasses that fit perfectly in the mouth of my jars but you can use a bag made from plastic wrap filled with marbles / stones / bearings ). Cover the mouth of the jar with cloth and keep it in place with an elastic band. Keep it in a cool, dark, dry place (I find the back of a cupboard is perfect, don't refrigerate yet).
Keep an eye on it for the next three days, making sure it's all covered with the fluid. If it is a bit dry then make a brine with 1 teaspoon of the same salt in half a cup of hot water, let it cool and pour it over the cabbage. If you find any foam or scum forming on top it's perfectly natural just scrape it off (any white mould needs to be removed immediately).
After 3 days you can remove the weight seal the jar and store it in your fridge or cellar. It should keep for 3 or 4 months. If you have a canner you can use that and it should last for a year or even more.

A few things you need to remember to prevent rot.
1. Everything needs to be sterile.
2. Iodine kills the bacteria that allows the kraut to ferment. fermentation is what preserves it so make sure your salt has no iodine.
3. The kraut needs to be covered with the fluid at all times.

After the initial 3 days you can flavour the kraut. I like peppercorns, coriander seeds and cumin. The kraut will also help to preserve most other fruit or veg. Mixing in grated apple or thinly sliced carrots and whole cranberries are both awesome.
« Last Edit: August 21, 2014, 07:19:43 PM by thedigininja »
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Offline Well-Prepared Witch

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Re: The Prepper Chef
« Reply #4 on: August 21, 2014, 08:37:14 PM »
I like the idea of "preserve what you eat and eat what you preserve".  Last weekend I put up about 14 jars of marinara and 18 jars of green beans.  It was my first time using a pressure canner, and generally speaking I enjoyed it.  It's a bit more tricky to get the temperature right, but other than that not much more difficult than water bath canning.
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Offline JohnyMac

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Re: The Prepper Chef
« Reply #5 on: August 21, 2014, 09:05:49 PM »
Great and simple recipe the digininja!

Wellie, I have been canning my butt off too.

6, 8oz of blueberry jam with no sugar, used no sugar Pectim and Splenda (remember MrsMac is a diabetic)
6, 8oz of peach jam with no sugar
20, pints of peaches with VERY light syrup
12 Qts of dill & garlic gherkins
5, pints of bush beans from our garden.

Tomatoes are poor this year so I am going to have to buy some. I found a place that is selling them at 50¢ a pound. My mom found my grandmothers basic spaghetti recipe and I am going to make that and can it. I can't wait as I remember how good it was.

When our cabbage comes in I am going to try thedigininja sauerkraut recipe.

When the corn comes in and towards the end of the season, I will cut-off the kernels after the cobs have been in boiling water for 60 seconds and put into a cold bath. Bag the kernels, 1 pint to a bag and freeze.

It looks like it is going to be a poor apple season up here on the mountain this year. As I type that observation, I am sipping my hard cider from last year and wondering if cider will be more expensive then last year.  :what:

So much to can and recipe's to make/try before the snow starts to fall.  ;)

Thanks thedigininja for starting this topic. 
 
 
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Offline thedigininja

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Re: The Prepper Chef
« Reply #6 on: August 22, 2014, 09:02:41 AM »
I've never actually had the chance to use a pressure canner but I'm told that it's easier and contains better allowing for longer preservation. I pretty much dry everything I get my hands on but there are exceptions. The main reason I started with fermentation is s because it's a great way to store spinach if you shed it and mix 50/50 with the kraut. I use sauerkraut for the basis of all my fermenting because it's so quick and simple to get started.
I'd rather be crazy than dead.

The imperial system is a tool of the devil.
http://www.metric-conversions.org/measurement-conversions.htm

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Offline thedigininja

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Re: The Prepper Chef
« Reply #7 on: September 02, 2014, 07:21:06 AM »
Many people advised me against drying pork so I'll give you the same advice. However I have done it, I have eaten it and I am fine. Plus the Europeans have been doing for centuries. Anyway,  this is the technique I used and the science is sound.

1kg pork rashers (or belly sliced into 5mm sections)
hot water
2 whole large chillies sliced
1tspn potassium nitrate
2tspn table salt
ground black pepper
2 medium sticks of celery thinly sliced
celery salt
ground dried chilli
brown spirit vinegar


Make a brine with 50ml hot water and the salt. add the potassium nitrate. in a non metal dish pack the pork flat with all remaining ingredients except the last 3.
pour over the brine and add enough of the vinegar to cover completely. Allow to cure in the fridge for 2-3 days. drain and return to the fridge for another day. lightly coat the pork with a mix (1 part celery salt to 3 parts dry chilli). Hang in a food drier in a cool place for 5-7 days (until completely dry).
I'd rather be crazy than dead.

The imperial system is a tool of the devil.
http://www.metric-conversions.org/measurement-conversions.htm

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Offline thedigininja

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Re: The Prepper Chef
« Reply #8 on: September 02, 2014, 08:06:07 AM »
1Tblspn of sugar/honey added to the brine will mellow out the flavour a bit.

Celery is full of nitrites which are essential natural preservatives.

Watch carefully while drying. If you see any sign of mould rinse off immediately with vinegar. Also look carefully because occasionally the salt will form crystals on the meats surface which some might mistake for mould.

Before curing in the brine I always rinse my meat with clean, cold water as an extra precaution.
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The imperial system is a tool of the devil.
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Offline JohnyMac

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Re: The Prepper Chef
« Reply #9 on: September 02, 2014, 10:44:31 AM »
thedigininja, my neighbor dehydrates a lot of what she grows. My grandmother use to dehydrate things in the oven with only the heat from the gas pilot light. She would put veggies and fruits on a framed screen my grandad made for her. She would take a wooden spoon to keep the oven door open a tad.

I have not tried that though even though our gas stove at the cabin does have a pilot light.

On another note: Just canned 11 pints of basic spaghetti sauce from 20#'s of a neighbors tomatoes he gave us. My basic (Actually it is my grandmothers recipe) spaghetti recipe goes like this:

20 #'s of ripe tomatoes            5-6 cloves of thinly sliced garlic        1/4-1/2 C sugar to taste
1-4 Tsp to taste                      1 C Shopped onions                         1 C sweet pepper
1 fist of dried parsley               2 Tbsp Dried Oregano                      2 Tsp ground Black Pepper
1 Fist of fresh Basil                  2 Tbsp Olive Oil                              1 C White raisins (Optional)

Wash tomatoes. In a large hotel pot add a dozen or so crushed tomatoes, turn heat to medium and crush tomatoes. Once crushed tomatoes heat up start to clean and quarter the other tomatoes. Add to pot tomatoes till all 20#'s are in the pot. Cook till they all disintegrate. About 1 hr. Then cool down to 100 - 115F degrees to be able to handle easier.

While your tomatoes are cooling, in a large frying pan put OO and saute onion, garlic, pepper, parsley, oregano and pepper*. Once the onions are translucent throw in the fresh cut basil and stir.

In another pot set up your hand crank miller set to puree mode. Ladle your cooked tomatoes into the mill and grind away. Periodically take out seeds and skins from the mill. Once all tomatoes and sauce are pureed turn on heat to medium. Once you start to get a boil turn heat down so you just get a slow "blurp...Blurp". Slow boil. Stir every 15 minutes as it will burn a small amount on the bottom of the pot. Cook until 50% reduced - 6 or so hours. The last 1/2 hour of cooking add sugar and salt to the sweetness you are looking for. (Salt enhances sweetness). When done add the raisins. I had a Italian mother who always added white raisins. It adds a different layer of taste.

Up into hot and sanitized pint or quart canning jars. Wipe jar lids and apply lids that had been thrown into 180F degree water. Fasten scre tops to only finger tight. Cook in pressure cooker for 15 minutes at @ 11 pounds of pressure.

This is the basic spaghetti sauce that my grandmother use to make. Now you have the basis on those cold wintery days for many Italian favorites.

* I always de-skin the pepper by roasting on a open stove top flame and then wrapping in news paper -
   Let stand 15 minutes. Then unwrap, skin, de-seed and cut up into cubes. You DO NOT need to do this!
   I do it just because I am anal.  :facepalm:
 
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Offline thedigininja

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Re: The Prepper Chef
« Reply #10 on: September 02, 2014, 04:37:46 PM »
I'm a dehydration freak.

The last dish I made with the pork was;
equal volumes-dried pork
                          -dried tomatoes
                           -dried leek
                           -dried mix berries
                           -beer (a nice home brew)
Heat all dry ingredients in a dry pan. add enough beer to half cover. Simmer slowly until all ingredients plump and soften up a bit. add more beer if it looks too dry for you. serve this with a nice rustic artisan bread.
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Offline JohnyMac

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Re: The Prepper Chef
« Reply #11 on: September 02, 2014, 05:37:24 PM »
Sounds good thedig!
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Offline thedigininja

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Re: The Prepper Chef
« Reply #12 on: September 24, 2014, 04:42:41 AM »
PESTICIDE

Okay, so this one is a little bit different in the sense that it's a recipe that's not meant for eating (although, if you reduce the water to 1 cup and only let it steep for about 10 to 15 minutes, it would work amazingly with fresh fish). But sometimes we just need a little help getting the food to the kitchen.

1\2 cup fresh, hot chillies
1\2 cup whole garlic cloves
2 cups citrus peel (orange, lemon etc)
5 cups water

Bring the water to a boil. Remove from heat and add the remaining ingredients. Allow to steep for 12 to 24 hours. Strain and decant into spray bottles.

Spray over leaves and at the base of the plant.

This pesticide is great for food bearing plants and works best against flies, aphids and most "sucking" insects.
I'd rather be crazy than dead.

The imperial system is a tool of the devil.
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Offline JohnyMac

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Re: The Prepper Chef
« Reply #13 on: September 29, 2014, 10:37:26 AM »
thedigininja, I am sorry that I am getting around to commenting on your post - Too freaken cool! Thanks for posting it. I will be making this next year.

Kudos coming your way :cheers:
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Offline thedigininja

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Re: The Prepper Chef
« Reply #14 on: October 02, 2014, 08:30:13 AM »
Always glad to be of service, Jmac.

BILTONG
So I was having a look at beef jerky and it looks like a pain in the ass to make so here's preserved meat the South African way.

2kg Silverside\Topside
200ml Brown spirit or red wine vinegar
60ml Worcester sauce
2 Tbspn Coarse ground coriander seeds
1 Tbspn Coarse ground black pepper
350g Fine salt (iodated or iodine free)
½ tspn Potassium nitrate
½ tspn Celery salt
150g Treacle or brown sugar

There are different techniques for the "curing" process. I'll give you my adapted version because it's the least labour intensive. If you're interested in a more common\traditional method just let me know.

Cut the meat against the grain into 3-4cm thick "steaks".
Thoroughly mix the dry ingredients together and liberally coat the meat with the dry mixture.
tightly pack the meat in a non metal, dish.
Mix the wet ingredients and just pour enough into the dish to coat the meat.
Let it stand for 3-4 hours (I often refrigerate overnight).
Hang in a cool but not cold place and wait.
Most people eat it "wet" (after a day or 2 of hanging) but for long term storage it can hang for up to 3 weeks until it almost resembles bark.

I've kept 1 piece for over 3 years and there still isn't any sign of spoilage.
I'd rather be crazy than dead.

The imperial system is a tool of the devil.
http://www.metric-conversions.org/measurement-conversions.htm

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Offline thedigininja

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Re: The Prepper Chef
« Reply #15 on: October 02, 2014, 08:43:16 AM »
BILTONG

A few side notes.

This can be done with any cut of meat for preservation but to eat as is it's best to use a "meaty" cut. (silverside topside rump fillet aitchbone ribeye). And a nice piece of fat on the edge is never discouraged.

Although we generally use the rule of thumb that "you can biltong any meat that can be served rare" it's not unheard of that people do it with pork or chicken.

To reduce drying time you can easily rig a dry box using any crate, box, cupboard with ventilation and wiring up some computer fans\an old radiator fan at the top.

Potassium nitrate and celery salt (high in nitrites) aren't necessary, I just use them as a precautionary measure.
« Last Edit: October 02, 2014, 08:45:47 AM by thedigininja »
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Offline JohnyMac

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Re: The Prepper Chef
« Reply #16 on: October 02, 2014, 09:05:49 AM »
Sounds good the digininja! I will try some with this years deer.  :thumbsUp:
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Offline thedigininja

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Re: The Prepper Chef
« Reply #17 on: October 02, 2014, 10:50:25 AM »
Oh yes. Game meat is arguably the best. :thumbsUp:
I'd rather be crazy than dead.

The imperial system is a tool of the devil.
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http://www.xe.com/currencyconverter/

Offline thedigininja

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Re: The Prepper Chef
« Reply #18 on: November 19, 2016, 04:55:29 PM »
So our economy is in the tank, severe drought and a handful of our farmers are being murdered every single day. The price on 'tatoes is ludicrous, it's quadrupled in the last year. So a while back when I discovered a source for buying bulk and saving a considerable deal I started looking into ways of preserving them. I hate canned potatoes. Never tasted any that I could get down, tried it myself and it was still foul. So back to my old faithful technique, dehydration.  After checking online it appears that potatoes flakes are quite common in the UK and States but it's not really something that we're familiar with here down here. You can get this weird powdered stuff with the consistency of corn flour which is ok in a pinch but I'm not a huge fan.  I also wanted to try making potato yeast, which failed miserably. Trying to find what I did wrong led me to an awesome website so I decided that instead of posting my own technique for homemade potato flakes I would share a link to hers. Honestly, simply by sharing this link I'm likely making this thread redundant.

http://readynutrition.com/resources/diy-potato-flakes-from-scratch_20062013/

« Last Edit: November 19, 2016, 04:57:21 PM by thedigininja »
I'd rather be crazy than dead.

The imperial system is a tool of the devil.
http://www.metric-conversions.org/measurement-conversions.htm

http://www.xe.com/currencyconverter/