Pennsylvania Firearm Owners Association
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  1. #61
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    Default Re: Post your Preps/Tips and ideas.

    Quote Originally Posted by Walleye Hunter View Post
    That's right, I don't need my own if I know where to go and get it.
    Just remember, you might not survive the ring of claymores.
    Rules are written in the stone,
    Break the rules and you get no bones,
    all you get is ridicule, laughter,
    and a trip to the house of pain.

  2. #62
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    Default Re: Post your Preps/Tips and ideas.

    Quote Originally Posted by streaker69 View Post
    Just remember, you might not survive the ring of claymores.
    Is someone making a trip to Switzerland? (Besides me).
    Gender confusion is a mental illness

  3. #63
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    Default Re: Post your Preps/Tips and ideas.

    Quote Originally Posted by mikelets456 View Post
    It's easier to use wipes----only need one each crap and a lot easier to carry around. They could also be used to keep your hands, face and other body parts cleaned.
    Mikelets must shit chicklets. 1. Video or it didn't happen. Hamsters maybe.
    The Gun is the Badge of a Free Man

  4. #64
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    Default Re: Post your Preps/Tips and ideas.

    Quote Originally Posted by PAMedic=F|A= View Post
    It can be a good start. Although there is no reason to rotated your canned goods. Properly canned food does not expire, although after decades it starts to loose trace vitamins and minerals, it will always provide calories. 50 years old, 100, or more is perfectly safe.

    The only caveat to that would be high acid foods stored in metal cans. Tomato products for example.

    If you buy commercially made camping/prepping food stick with mountain house or augason farms. They’ve been on the market decades, and have a solid reputation. They’re products have been tested and depended on by thousands.
    Don’t touch wise products with a 10 ft pole, they’ve been publicly called out for lying about their preservation methods, and ran away instead of defending themselves. Likewise, I’d avoid any other fly by night companies.


    If you’re trying to get bang for for buck, bulk white rice (not brown, to oily), beans, lentils & corn stored in Mylar with an oxygen absorber. You won’t get more calories and protein any other way.

    Personally the bulk Mylar is the way I would go, and pick of cans whenever you see stuff on sale. Fats traditionally have been hard to get, and store, so something like sardines (gross imo but I have them) is worth stocking up on.
    YouTube has videos of old ww2 cans being opened. Not good. Metal leaching and just plain nastiness.
    The Gun is the Badge of a Free Man

  5. #65
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    Default Re: Post your Preps/Tips and ideas.

    Anybody looking at those home freeze dryers?
    The Gun is the Badge of a Free Man

  6. #66
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    Default Re: Post your Preps/Tips and ideas.

    Quote Originally Posted by Gunsnwater View Post
    YouTube has videos of old ww2 cans being opened. Not good. Metal leaching and just plain nastiness.
    I addressed high acid foods & their problems.

    Quite simply, those YouTubrs are full of crap, and the FDA & universities have run tests to prove it.



    Canned Food Study Two
    A canned food shelf life study conducted by the U.S. Army revealed that canned meats, vegetables, and jam were in an excellent state of preservation after 46 years. The Washington State University summary article can be read at: http://www.whatcom.wsu.edu/family/facts/shelflif.htm

    https://www.survivalistboards.com/sh...t=180585&amp=1

    The Canning Process: Old Preservation Technique Goes Modern (September 1990)

    The Canning Process:
    Old Preservation Technique Goes Modern
    by Dale Blumenthal

    The steamboat Bertrand was heavily laden with provisions when it set out on
    the Missouri River in 1865, destined for the gold mining camps in Fort
    Benton, Mont. The boat snagged and swamped under the weight, sinking to the
    bottom of the river. It was found a century later, under 30 feet of silt a
    little north of Omaha, Neb.

    Among the canned food items retrieved from the Bertrand in 1968 were brandied
    peaches, oysters, plum tomatoes, honey, and mixed vegetables. In 1974,
    chemists at the National Food Processors Association (NFPA) analyzed the
    products for bacterial contamination and nutrient value. Although the food
    had lost its fresh smell and appearance, the NFPA chemists detected no
    microbial growth and determined that the foods were as safe to eat as they
    had been when canned more than 100 years earlier.

    The nutrient values varied depending upon the product and nutrient. NFPA
    chemists Janet Dudek and Edgar Elkins report that significant amounts of
    vitamins C and A were lost. But protein levels remained high, and all calcium
    values "were comparable to today's products."

    NFPA chemists also analyzed a 40-year-old can of corn found in the basement
    of a home in California. Again, the canning process had kept the corn safe
    from contaminants and from much nutrient loss. In addition, Dudek says, the
    kernels looked and smelled like recently canned corn.

    The canning process is a product of the Napoleonic wars. Malnutrition was
    rampant among the 18th century French armed forces. As Napoleon prepared for
    his Russian campaign, he searched for a new and better means of preserving
    food for his troops and offered a prize of 12,000 francs to anyone who could
    find one. Nicolas Appert, a Parisian candy maker, was awarded the prize in
    1809.

    Although the causes of food spoilage were unknown at the time, Appert was an
    astute experimenter and observer. For instance, after noting that storing
    wine in airtight bottles kept it from spoiling, he filled widemouth glass
    bottles with food, carefully corked them, and heated them in boiling water.

    The durable tin can--and the use of pottery and other metals--followed
    shortly afterwards, a notion of Englishman Peter Durand. Soon, these "tinned"
    foods were used to feed the British army and navy.

    21 Billion Cans a Year

    Canned foods are more than a relic dug from the past. They make up 12 percent
    of grocery sales in the United States. More than 1,500 food products are
    canned--including many that aren't available fresh in most areas, such as
    elderberry, guava, mango, and about 75 different juice drinks. Consumers can
    buy at least 130 different canned vegetable products--from artichokes and
    asparagus to turnips and zucchini. More than a dozen kinds of beef are
    canned, including beef burgers and chopped, corned and barbecued beef.

    According to a recent study cosponsored by the U.S. Department of Agriculture
    and NFPA, canned foods provide the same nutritional value as fresh grocery
    produce and their frozen counterparts when prepared for the table. NFPA
    researchers compared six vegetables in three forms: home-cooked fresh, warmed
    canned, and prepared frozen.

    "Levels of 13 minerals, eight vitamins, and fiber in the foods were similar,"
    says Dudek. In fact, in some cases the canned product contained high levels
    of some vitamins that in fresh produce are destroyed by light or exposure to
    air.

    The Canning Process

    Food-spoiling bacteria, yeasts and molds are naturally present in foods. To
    grow, these microorganisms need moisture, a low-acid environment (acid
    prevents bacterial growth), nutrients, and an appropriate (usually room)
    temperature.

    Dennis Dignan, Ph.D., chief of FDA's food processing section, explains that
    foods are preserved from food spoilage by controlling one or more of the
    above factors. For instance, frozen foods are stored at temperatures too low
    for microorganisms (bacteria, yeasts and molds) to grow. When foods are
    dried, sufficient moisture is not available to promote growth.

    It is the preservation process that distinguishes canned from other packaged
    foods. During canning, the food is placed in an airtight (hermetically
    sealed) container and heated to destroy microorganisms. The hermetic seal is
    essential to ensure that microorganisms do not contaminate the product after
    it is sterilized through heating, says Dignan. Properly canned foods can be
    stored unrefrigerated indefinitely without fear of their spoiling or becoming
    toxic.

    Canning for a New Age

    Dignan also notes that foods packaged in materials other than metal cans are
    considered "canned" by food processing specialists if the food undergoes the
    canning preservation process. Thus, today a canned food may be packaged in a
    number of other types of containers, such as glass jars, paperboard cans, and
    plastics that can be formed into anything from pouches to soup bowls to
    serving trays.

    For example, FDA consumer safety officer Tom Gardine, holding up a small,
    plastic container of half-and-half for his morning coffee, says, "This is a
    canned food." He explains that the coffee creamer was heated to destroy
    bacteria and sealed to prevent microorganisms from entering the sterile
    container. Until it is opened, the creamer is intended to be stored on the
    shelf, not in the refrigerator.

    Meals for today's U.S. military come in plastic pouches--a new version of the
    heavier C-rations in metal cans. Such flexible pouches aren't as popular with
    American civilians as they are with Europeans. Many Americans, instead, are
    buying their canned foods in plastic containers that come with a peel-off
    metal top and plastic lid--ready for the microwave. Barriers (made of
    sophisticated synthetic materials) that provide an airtight seal are
    sandwiched in these plastic layered containers. They are used for applesauce,
    pudding, and other foods that can be stored on supermarket or home shelves
    for years.

    Then there are containers made of new transparent plastic materials like
    polyethylene terephthalate--used for peanut butter and catsup. Packages made
    of paperboard layers have been designed in the shape of boxes to contain such
    foods as fruit juices, tomato sauce, and even milk.

    Even the tin can is changing. For years, the three-piece can (made from a
    top, a bottom, and a body formed from a plate soldered into a cylinder) was
    the only can around. Now there are two-piece cans, which eliminate the side
    seam and one seamed end. These cans are made by feeding metal into a press
    that forms the can body and one end into a single piece.

    In the traditional three-piece cans, a welded side seam has replaced the
    lead-soldered side seam in all but 3.7 percent of American cans, says NFPA
    official Roger Coleman. The welding process uses electrodes that apply
    pressure and electric current to overlapping edges at the side seam. These
    new seams eliminate concern about lead leaching into metal canned foods. In
    the 3.7 percent of U.S. cans where lead still is used, it is often for dry
    foods (such as coffee) packaged in cans, according to Coleman. Leaching is
    not a concern here.

    Many imported cans, however, still bear lead-soldered side seams. To tell
    whether a can has been soldered with lead, first peel back the label to
    expose the seam. The edges along the joint of a lead-soldered seam will be
    folded over. Silver-gray metal will be smeared on the outside of the seam. A
    welded seam is flat, with a thin, dark, sharply defined line along the joint.

    Turning Up the Heat

    Foods with a naturally high acid content--such as tomatoes, citrus juices,
    pears, and other fruits--will not support the growth of food poisoning
    bacteria. In tests, when large numbers of food poisoning bacteria are added
    to these foods, the bacteria die within a day. (The exact amount of time
    depends upon the bacteria and amount of acidity.) Foods that have a high acid
    content, therefore, do not receive as extreme a heat treatment as low-acid
    foods. They are heated sufficiently to destroy bacteria, yeasts and molds
    that could cause food to spoil.

    Canners and food safety regulators are most concerned about foods with low
    acid content, such as mushrooms, green beans, corn, and meats. The deadly
    Clostridium botulinum bacterium, which causes botulism poisoning, produces a
    toxin in these foods that is highly heat-resistant. The sterilization process
    that destroys this bacteria also kills other bacteria that may poison or
    spoil food.

    Low-acid canned foods receive a high dose of heat--usually 107 degrees
    Celsius (250 degrees Farenheit) for at least three minutes. (The amount of
    time the food is heated, though, depends upon the size of the container and
    the product.) The canned food is heated in a retort, a kind of pressure
    cooker.

    The coffee creamer on Gardine's desk, however, was packaged differently.
    Although both the half-and-half and plastic container were sterilized with
    heat, they were heated separately and then brought together in a sterile
    environment where the container was filled and sealed. The advantage of this
    "aseptic processing," a type of canning, is that higher temperatures with
    reduced heating times prevent deterioration in the quality of the food.

    Aseptic processing is the "wave of the present and the future," says Gardine.
    It is now used for liquids, and scientists are on the way to perfecting the
    method for canning stews and chowders. However, says Gardine, because solid
    foods may be more difficult to keep sterile during the filling and sealing
    period, FDA is being especially cautious in approving uses for aseptic
    processing.

    Finessing the Attack on Food Spoilers

    Another critical element in the canned food process is sealing products in
    air-tight containers. It is essential that air be removed from the container
    before sealing. Air could cause the can to expand during heating, perhaps
    damaging the seals or seams of the container.

    A telltale sign of loss of this vacuum--and a possibly contaminated
    product--is a can with bulging ends. (See accompanying article.) If a seal is
    not airtight, bacteria may enter the can, multiply, and contaminate the
    product.

    The hermetic seal finesses the canning process. The bacteria in a food and
    container are killed through heating, and at the same time new bacteria are
    kept from contaminating the food.

    The distinction between the canning process and food handling before
    processing is an important one for food processors and regulators. Last
    February, 22 students at Mississippi State University became ill after eating
    omelets made with canned mushrooms imported from China. Similar outbreaks
    followed in New York and Pennsylvania, affecting more than 100 people. FDA
    identified the culprit as staphylococcal enterotoxin, a poison produced by
    the bacteria Staphylococcus aureus.

    FDA's investigation suggests that poor sanitation caused the problem, and
    that the mushrooms were contaminated with staphylococcal enterotoxin even
    before they were canned. The canning process did not destroy the substance
    because food preservation processes are not normally designed to destroy
    staphylococcal enterotoxin, a highly heat-resistant toxin.

    Since this incident, FDA and the Peoples Republic of China have been working
    together to determine the source of the contamination. However, FDA
    authorities still are preventing mushrooms canned in China from entering the
    United States. And, says Gardine, FDA is focusing attention on sanitation
    procedures in imported foods.

    Surpassing Napoleon

    The canned food principle that won Nicolas Appert his prize of 12,000 francs
    has endured over the years. What might surprise Appert, however, is how his
    discovery is making food shopping and storing easier for the 20th century
    consumer.

    Those who order coffee at fast food restaurants now also are served canned
    half-and-half, which has been transported and stored without concern about
    refrigeration. Hikers can take flexible pouches of canned food on backpacking
    trips without having to worry about saving water to reconstitute freeze-dried
    meals. And, in this society of microwave owners, Americans who don't have
    time to prepare a well-balanced meal can pick up a plastic container filled
    with a canned, nutritious dinner.

    Dale Blumenthal is a staff writer for FDA Consumer.

    How to Recognize Can Defects

    "Never eat food from a tin can with bulging ends" was a maxim many grew up
    with. Bulging was one of several clues that might indicate contamination of
    food packaged in metal cans. Guidelines have been adapted for recognizing
    defects in cans made of plastic and other materials, as well. The guidelines
    are:

    Metal Cans

    * an obvious opening underneath the double seam on the top or bottom of the
    can
    * a can with bulging ends
    * a fracture in the double seam
    * a pinhole or puncture in the body of the can
    * an unwelded portion of the side seam
    * a leak from anywhere in the can

    Plastic Cans

    * any opening or non-bonding in the seal
    * a break in the plastic
    * a fractured lid
    * a swollen package

    Paperboard Cans

    * a patch in the seal where bonding or adhesive is missing
    * a slash or slice in the package
    * a leak in a corner of the package
    * a swollen package

    Glass Jars

    * a pop-top that does not pop when opened (indicating loss of the vacuum)
    * a damaged seal
    * a crack in the glass of the jar

    Flexible Pouches

    * a break in the adhesive across the width of the seal
    * a slash or break in the package
    * a leak at a manufactured notch used for easy opening
    * a swollen package

    (Taken from a chart for retailers developed by FDA and NFPA and published by
    the Association of Official Analytical Chemists.

    http://web.archive.org/web/200705091.../CON00043.html
    Last edited by PAMedic=F|A=; February 28th, 2020 at 08:08 PM.
    "Cives Arma Ferant"

    "I know I'm not James Bond, that's why I don't keep a loaded gun under the pillow, or bang Russian spies on a regular basis." - GunLawyer001

  7. #67
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    Default Re: Post your Preps/Tips and ideas.

    I've eaten some old stuff, might not have tasted as good but I didn't get sick. If canned foods go bad from bacteria they would bloat and/or explode. I had some hot sauce 'canned' in Ball canning jars and after a few years the lids rusted through from the inside.
    Gender confusion is a mental illness

  8. #68
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    Default Re: Post your Preps/Tips and ideas.

    Buried deep in that post is how to know when it's bad, bulging.
    Life has a melody. Not great, not terrible.

  9. #69
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    Default Re: Post your Preps/Tips and ideas.

    Quote Originally Posted by JustinHEMI View Post
    Buried deep in that post is how to know when it's bad, bulging.
    Bulging it late stage nastiness. The food could be bad without bulging of the seal is slightly broken. If you open a can, and you don't hear the air rushing in when the seal is broken throw it the fuck away.
    Rules are written in the stone,
    Break the rules and you get no bones,
    all you get is ridicule, laughter,
    and a trip to the house of pain.

  10. #70
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    Default Re: Post your Preps/Tips and ideas.

    Using Clorox bleach to treat water for drinking:

    There is a table in the link

    https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&sour...F_lOeVkv5NpP8g

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