Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain powdered milk? Is it for drinking - just add water?
- not a prepper but need lattes to survive
My mom used to buy this in the 1980s because, she claimed, she didn't want us to drink milk from "Chernobyl" cows. But really, she was just CHEAP. Yes. You mix it like Koolaid. Its nasty.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain powdered milk? Is it for drinking - just add water?
- not a prepper but need lattes to survive
My mom used to buy this in the 1980s because, she claimed, she didn't want us to drink milk from "Chernobyl" cows. But really, she was just CHEAP. Yes. You mix it like Koolaid. Its nasty.
Its probably more for adding to baked goods or upping the caloric content of other foods rather than drinking...
I vaguely recall tv ads in the 60s for carnation powdered milk as in drinking it. My parents went thru a stretch where they bought it in bulk and would mix it half and half with regular milk so it would taste better, has a kind of cooked milk flavor otherwise. I've used it to make homemade hot cocoa/chocolate milk mix, once on a long train trip to the west coast where I was too broke to buy food on the train for myself and my 5 yo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am delaying the purchase of frozen vegetables. We eat fresh vegetables because I hate canned and frozen. I don’t want to stock up, then end up throwing it out if we don’t get an outbreak here.
I did stock up on meats, paper products and personal care items. I need to go to the pharmacy and refill some things.
We don’t buy bottled water, and I don’t plan to start now.
I’m the quoted PP.
Not to start a panic, but toilet paper supplies at target were low today.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain powdered milk? Is it for drinking - just add water?
- not a prepper but need lattes to survive
Yes, you can use it to drink. I use it for bread making. Good item to have on hand just in case.
Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain powdered milk? Is it for drinking - just add water?
- not a prepper but need lattes to survive
Anonymous wrote:Indian-American household. We have so much rice, beans, lentils, various kinds of flour, various kinds of cooking oils, spices, salt, sugar, canned and frozen goods as a matter of routine that we can probably survive for months.
We are also cook-from-scratch kind of people - so that helps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain powdered milk? Is it for drinking - just add water?
- not a prepper but need lattes to survive
My mom used to buy this in the 1980s because, she claimed, she didn't want us to drink milk from "Chernobyl" cows. But really, she was just CHEAP. Yes. You mix it like Koolaid. Its nasty.
Its probably more for adding to baked goods or upping the caloric content of other foods rather than drinking...
Anonymous wrote:I am delaying the purchase of frozen vegetables. We eat fresh vegetables because I hate canned and frozen. I don’t want to stock up, then end up throwing it out if we don’t get an outbreak here.
I did stock up on meats, paper products and personal care items. I need to go to the pharmacy and refill some things.
We don’t buy bottled water, and I don’t plan to start now.
Anonymous wrote:lol
This title made me laugh. Of course the most obese nation in the world is worried about running out of food.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol
This title made me laugh. Of course the most obese nation in the world is worried about running out of food.
Nice catch!