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Julie
08-26-2008, 07:22 AM
Food storage means putting your grocery store in your home
By Rodger Hardy
Deseret News
Published: Monday, Aug. 25, 2008

PROVO, Utah -- The concept behind Marie Ricks' food-storage system is simple: Put your grocery store in your home, not down the hill in the store.

The method, however, takes research, planning and a system to get a year's supply of food as taught by leaders in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Ricks presented her ideas during Campus Education Week at Brigham Young University under the heading "Home Organization: The Better Way to Live -- Organizing, Housecleaning and Food Storage." A professional home organizer, author and motivational speaker, Ricks is also a homemaker, teacher, newspaper columnist and former radio-show host.

The key to living the principle of food storage is to first decide to live it, she said. Getting started is really not that difficult.

"Always buy double," she said. "If you need one, buy two. If you need two, buy four, if you need four, buy more."

Ricks eschews buying food family members won't eat and jokes about the plethora of wheat stored in many Mormon homes.

"Eat what you store and store what you eat," she said.

She also advises against storing food or other items that produce mold or dies. As for milk, that's not a part of the food-storage ritual. If folks want to store powdered milk she suggests using it just for cooking.

The first step in getting started with a food-storage project is to inventory all food items in the home. Then review shopping receipts over the next four weeks to get an idea of what the family will need for a year, and anticipate other needs, she suggests.

Once the inventory list is complete, determine what each item costs, then decide how fast you can purchase the items until you have a year's supply, she said.

As items come home from the store, date stamp everything with permanent ink, then decide where to put it. Some people hold off starting their food storage because they don't know where to store it, she said.

She doesn't accept that.

Some ideas: Replace the box springs and bed frames with storage boxes for bulk items; use the back six inches of the cupboard where items get shoved back and forgotten.

"Buy first and worry about where to put it later," she said.

She also suggests putting bulk items, such as rice and wheat, in 4.25-gallon round containers. The lids seal better, and they are not too heavy for the average woman to lift.

She also suggests doing food-storage shopping twice a year.

"It takes only three rotten days two times a year," Ricks quipped. "It's good to do this before your husband knows the money's gone."

She suggests "cherry picking" with three favorite stores.

On day one take your inventory list to the stores and price the items. On the second day, after evaluating prices, go back and buy the items. On the third day, put it away.

Don't worry about sales, Ricks said. Although sales save money, the time, struggle and gas can make them irrelevant.

Some folks watch sales for a month, then buy and get it over with for the next six months, she said.

Some other tips:

* Use care in shopping. "Too much choice destroys us."

* How to get teenagers to stay out of the food storage: "We have a two-letter word -- no." To keep husbands out, "put it under lock and key."

* Potatoes and onions store best in a container with slightly moist sand.

* Food that becomes questionable: put in a bucket and label "do not eat unless you are dying."

* Don't worry about bugs, she said, because you're storing only for a year.

For nonfood items, Ricks suggests the same method: inventorying first, then "guesstimate" what you'll need for a year, research prices, then buy.

She suggests an ample supply of toilet paper.

"It is the most secure thing you will ever buy. No TP is miserable," she said.

Finally, keeping the commandment of having a year's supply on hand will reap blessings, she said.

KF7EEC
08-26-2008, 10:37 PM
"Eat what you store and store what you eat," she said.

Doesn't the Church tell us not to teach this?

prairiemom
08-27-2008, 08:22 AM
Not to teach what? Because this just sounds very much like having our 3-month supply. She's using the sam principles: inventory what you use and buy extras.

MAAD
08-27-2008, 09:50 AM
There is a very good and specific reason the church stores and sells a whole lot of wheat. Why? They have been commended by the Lord to do so? We too have been commanded to do so. Anyone who says otherwise, I think is not on a solid ground.

goldilocks
08-27-2008, 10:07 AM
The Church gives guidelines and tells the recommended amounts for survival of basic neccessities. They do not command what we should get . I haver never see it commanded anyway in all my years as to what we must store just guidelines and recommended amounts. If you have a written command by one of the prophets please share.The church wants us to have storage period. Who cares what as along as its nutricious and can sustain us. We have wheat like the article says and use to use it when the kids were younger but not as much anymore as they are all married and not with us a any longer. We have it because we were told way back when to store it. many people use wheat and store it and the church supplies the demand for it .The church also said to store what you eat and to rotate it after you had obtained the basics way back when . Not so sure its that way anymore they just say get food and store it . 3 months a year or more . The young people of today live a different lifestyle and the church has recognized that as well.
If a person has always eaten white bread and flour like my son in law . He won't eat wheat and so my daughter sees no reason to try to store it. Although we have given her some I doubt it will ever be usued. I tend to agree with her. They need to store what they will eat.
I don't think we should condem those who don't store what we think is appropriate . If they store anything they are following the guidlines to a degree and anything will be better then nothing IMO.

mirkwood
08-27-2008, 11:57 AM
We store wheat because we use it. If we go into a famine we will use a lot more of it. I've taught families that don't eat/like wheat and I have suggested to them to store a grain that they do like instead. I do still suggest that they store a small amount of wheat as the church has always reccomended wheat.

MAAD
08-27-2008, 03:26 PM
The Church gives guidelines and tells the recommended amounts for survival of basic neccessities. They do not command what we should get . I haver never see it commanded anyway in all my years as to what we must store just guidelines and recommended amounts. If you have a written command by one of the prophets please share.

Goldilocks,
Thanks for your post. Let me clarify. I recognize that the church does not command anyone to do anything. The Lord is the one that commands. We have been counseled by the brethren for many years to have long term and recently also to have short term (everyday food that we normally eat) storage. There have been many talks given by many prophets about the need to have food storage. To my knowledge they have never used the verbage "thou shalt" but have repeatedly given the counsel. They have also given many warnings to those who don't heed the counsel.

In D&C the Lord also says "whether by mine own voice or the voice of my servant it is the same."

In D&C89 we are told by the Lord that Wheat is the staff of life. He knows why even if we don't. He has a specific reason for that. There are people who don't like wheat, there are those that are allergic to it, and still there are those who say they don't like it because in my opinion they haven't had it prepared properly.

I guess I was strong in my first post for which I appologize, but I just worry that some people to quickly dismiss what the Lord has said.

I have attached a good document that has many quotes on this subject. I am not sure where I got it, or who the author was, but you might find it interesting.

KF7EEC
08-27-2008, 10:53 PM
"For longer-term storage, avoid teaching people to ?store what you eat, and eat what you store.?

http://www.providentliving.org/pfw/multimedia/files/pfw/pdf/113828_HSOrderForm_CAN_JUL_08_pdf.pdf