Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Knorr Side + Canned chicken + veg
I like creamy chicken rice and mushroom. (If you're willing to stock the freezer, cheddar broccoli rice and frozen broccoli is good too.)
Pastas, sauces, canned meats, vegetables, and fruits all store well. Lots of canned meals - soups, stews, chilli, etc.
You can get shelf-stable bacon. Summer sausage, pepperonis, etc., are also shelf stable. I think you can get cured hams that don't need refrigeration.
Beans, either canned or dried last a long time.
You can stock up on powdered/canned/ boxed milk. Bisquick can be used for many things.
If you get really ambitious, I've seen YouTube videos on preserving eggs, but I'm not sure how trustworthy they are. You might be better off with powdered.
Potatoes and onions will keep for months if stored correctly.
How do you store your potatoes and onions?
Pp here - ideally they should be stored in a cool, dark place. I don't worry about ideal conditions and probably lose some storage time as a consequence. I do try to keep them in the dark.
Storing potatoes:
https://www.thespruceeats.com/how-to-store-potatoes-1389145
https://www.thespruceeats.com/how-to-store-onions-1389144
They should also be stored separately, meaning potatoes in one cool, dark place and onions in another.
I have bad luck with both. Stored separately in cool, dark, ventilated areas. All sprout within a week or two.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I host a lot of parties and cook in bulk. A lot of the foods I typically make (North Indian) lends very well to being frozen. So unless we are talking zombie apocalypse and survival cooking, my party food prep will also work for any quarantine.
Here is what I have cooked in last two weeks for my freezers -
Multiple trays of lasagna
Chilli
Spinach-Paneer saag (paneer is seperate), Kadhi with spinach.
Daal Makhani
Chicken meatballs
Tomato soup, Gravy for butter chicken, butter paneer
Indian masala - several pounds of onions-tomato-ginger-garlic-cilantro-green chilli masala.
Badas (for dahi bade), pakodas (for kadhi)
Beans tamale, paneer-veg tamale.
Lots of chicken stock for thai chicken soup (Tom Yum gai)
Chicken kebabs and tuna kebabs.
Roasted eggplants for baingan bharta and baba ghanoush
Barbeque pulled pork
Lots of homemade paneer.
I have also paid for a small baby goat, so I will get packets of cubes, chops and liver on Saturday to freeze.
What part of India are you from? Fellow Indian here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone ferment food?
I have fermented cabbage, made siracha, yoghurt and even fermented onions
Fermenting is an ancient way to preserve food, the process makes the food sterile
Did you use whey to ferment?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Knorr Side + Canned chicken + veg
I like creamy chicken rice and mushroom. (If you're willing to stock the freezer, cheddar broccoli rice and frozen broccoli is good too.)
Pastas, sauces, canned meats, vegetables, and fruits all store well. Lots of canned meals - soups, stews, chilli, etc.
You can get shelf-stable bacon. Summer sausage, pepperonis, etc., are also shelf stable. I think you can get cured hams that don't need refrigeration.
Beans, either canned or dried last a long time.
You can stock up on powdered/canned/ boxed milk. Bisquick can be used for many things.
If you get really ambitious, I've seen YouTube videos on preserving eggs, but I'm not sure how trustworthy they are. You might be better off with powdered.
Potatoes and onions will keep for months if stored correctly.
How do you store your potatoes and onions?
Pp here - ideally they should be stored in a cool, dark place. I don't worry about ideal conditions and probably lose some storage time as a consequence. I do try to keep them in the dark.
Storing potatoes:
https://www.thespruceeats.com/how-to-store-potatoes-1389145
https://www.thespruceeats.com/how-to-store-onions-1389144
They should also be stored separately, meaning potatoes in one cool, dark place and onions in another.
I have bad luck with both. Stored separately in cool, dark, ventilated areas. All sprout within a week or two.
Put apples on top of the potatoes. Apples release a gas that makes other fruits go bad, but it keeps potatoes from sprouting.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone ferment food?
I have fermented cabbage, made siracha, yoghurt and even fermented onions
Fermenting is an ancient way to preserve food, the process makes the food sterile
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Knorr Side + Canned chicken + veg
I like creamy chicken rice and mushroom. (If you're willing to stock the freezer, cheddar broccoli rice and frozen broccoli is good too.)
Pastas, sauces, canned meats, vegetables, and fruits all store well. Lots of canned meals - soups, stews, chilli, etc.
You can get shelf-stable bacon. Summer sausage, pepperonis, etc., are also shelf stable. I think you can get cured hams that don't need refrigeration.
Beans, either canned or dried last a long time.
You can stock up on powdered/canned/ boxed milk. Bisquick can be used for many things.
If you get really ambitious, I've seen YouTube videos on preserving eggs, but I'm not sure how trustworthy they are. You might be better off with powdered.
Potatoes and onions will keep for months if stored correctly.
How do you store your potatoes and onions?
Pp here - ideally they should be stored in a cool, dark place. I don't worry about ideal conditions and probably lose some storage time as a consequence. I do try to keep them in the dark.
Storing potatoes:
https://www.thespruceeats.com/how-to-store-potatoes-1389145
https://www.thespruceeats.com/how-to-store-onions-1389144
They should also be stored separately, meaning potatoes in one cool, dark place and onions in another.
I have bad luck with both. Stored separately in cool, dark, ventilated areas. All sprout within a week or two.
Anonymous wrote:This couple is (was?) in a quarantined area and they've been writing about what they are cooking:
https://www.instagram.com/chinesecookingdemystified/?hl=en
Anonymous wrote:I have whole chickens for a roast with veggies and then chicken soup. Have not had luck finding good shelf stable milk. Suggestions?