Showing posts with label Pantry Meals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pantry Meals. Show all posts

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Pantry stable milk

In my opinion, this is a very important food storage and emergency preparation product.  However, as with all storage,  use what you store and store what you use.

Of course our family stores non-fat, instant dry milk powder.  However, the kids are not quiet about their distaste for the flavor. I use it when absolutely necessary as a substitute for our regular milk for drinking just often enough so that if we had to rely on it, the children would be accustomed to the taste.  It works great in bread recipes.  I am also relieved to know that recent studies indicate that the shelf life of stored milk for "life sustaining" (aka edible in an emergency) can be up to 20 years if stored at the appropriate temperature, and containers.  Our dry milk powder is sealed in #10 cans with oxygen absorbers.  Because it is warmer in California, my milk will probably not last 20 years.  However, that is why we use what we store and store what we use to rotate our supply and keep it fresh.

I also have canned evaporated milk in my pantry which gets more frequent use. It works well in recipes especially casseroles and breads.  If I don't use it to make Mexican hot chocolate, my husband notices the difference.  It provides the perfect creaminess to the hot chocolate.  The shelf life is about 1 to 2 years.

I've even mixed canned evaporated milk and non-fat, instant dry powdered milk to produce a palatable regular milk replacement.  I'm still working on the right amounts for the ideal flavor.  It seems to work best when we make a flavored milk as the evaporated milk adds a smoother richer texture and the flavor masks any indication that it started out powdered.

However, our family's preferred refrigerated milk substitute is shelf-stable fluid milk.  As I understand it, ordinary milk is heated to 161 degrees during the pasteurization process.  Shelf stable milk (aka U.H.T.) is heated to 282 degrees which eliminates all bacteria and is then packaged in containers that seal out light and air.  It is shelf stable for several months as it requires no refrigeration until after opening.  The best part is that the taste, consistency, color, and nutritional value stay the same as the milk you buy in the dairy section of your grocery store.  This is an item that we use and replace easily.  Instead of running out to the grocery store immediately when I realize we're out of milk, I can just pull a couple of containers of this milk out of the pantry instead.  Then, when I'm at the store, I'll buy twice as many as I used which continues to gradually increase my storage.

Here are some of the brands of U.H.T. milk we've tried and loved:
Shelf-Stable, Whole Milk, 1 LitreBorden Shelf Stable 2% White Milk 32oz. - 6 Unit Pack


The Parmalat is sold at our local Walmart for about $2.00 a quart so it is much pricier than a regular gallon of milk.  This is not a frugal minded pantry product, but if the electricity goes out again like it did last summer, the kids can still have cereal with tasty shelf-stable milk while they tell ghost stories.  More about that power outage another time.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Baked Oatmeal - Shelf Stable aka pantry meal

This is my first attempt at a shelf stable baked oatmeal recipe.  My kids like it sweet, so it is likely not going to win any contests for low sugar content.


2 cups oatmeal
3/4 cups raisins
3/4 cups chocolate chips
1 cup brown sugar packed
1 tsp baking powder
1 TBS pumpkin pie spice
1 cup canned pumpkin
1/4 cup of butter melted (use Red Feather canned butter or appropriate amount of powdered butter)
1 egg (use appropriate amount of dried egg powder and water to equal 1 whole egg)
1/2 cup of milk (canned, powered & reconstituted, or regular)


Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. Combine the first six ingredients in a medium bowl.  Combine the milk, pumpkin, melted butter, and egg in a separate bowl. Add wet mixture to dry ingredients; stir well. Pour into a greased 11" x 7" rectangular baking dish. Bake for 20-25 minutes or until just set.  Let cool for at least one hour for firmer consistency.  Even better the next day.


It was a total success in our house.  

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