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Thursday, March 19, 2026

The Lost Book of Herbal Remedies II: Book Review

When something goes wrong and help is far away, even a simple problem can become serious. A deep cut that won’t stop bleeding. A fever that keeps climbing. An infection that starts small and gets worse overnight. Most people try to solve that problem by stockpiling supplies. Bandages, medicines, antibiotics if they can find them. […]

The post The Lost Book of Herbal Remedies II: Book Review appeared first on Ask a Prepper.



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50+ Frugal Gardening Tips That Will Save You a Bundle

Estimated reading time: 15 minutes

50+ Frugal Gardening Tips That Will Save You a Bundle

Perhaps you’ve heard of The $64 Tomato by William Alexander. In it, he shares the details of just how expensive gardening can be when you are trying to create the perfect garden with the ideal produce.

However, the problem is that this kind of gardening isn’t sustainable. It isn’t enough to get you through any type of crisis, it won’t really feed your family, and it isn’t sustainable gardening. But don’t worry, there’s a solution for that! 

In this article, we’re going to give you plenty of ways to garden frugally and save money. Gardening frugally is about spending as little money as possible while maximizing as much yield as possible. Growing healthy, productive plants for less money is the goal of a frugal gardener. 

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Choose The Right Plants

Don’t fight your hardiness zone and climate

Instead, choose plants that will do well in your hardiness zone, climate, and type of soil. Otherwise, it will be too hard for them to grow, and they’ll be more likely to die and need to be replaced. You can find your hardiness zone here.

Then, try purchasing plants from the closest nursery so that they are well-suited to your local climate, and avoid buying exotic varieties that are expensive and difficult to grow. This way, you won’t waste money on plants that just won’t grow or produce for you. 

Choose types of vegetables that are expensive to purchase at the grocery store or that don’t last long in storage

For example, lettuce, leafy greens, and leafy herbs are expensive to purchase per pound, and they go bad quickly once you bring them home. However, they grow easily and don’t take up a lot of space in your garden. As a result, you’ll save the most money growing these types of veggies rather than other, more challenging to grow varieties. 

Choose quick-growing plants that you can grow again and again throughout the season

You’ll get more bang for your buck from vegetables that go from seed to harvest quickly, such as radishes, lettuce, and beets. Then, as soon as you harvest them, you can replant them. Or succession plant for a steady stream of produce. 

Choose high-producing plants

Some plants just naturally produce a lot of fruit. Plants such as squash, zucchini, and tomatoes can easily produce more fruit than you need. Make sure to harvest early and often for the most tender squash. 

Choose high-calorie, nutrient-dense plants to fill up your family

Higher calorie vegetables will give you a fuller stomach, such as potatoes and sweet potatoes. 

Choose perennial plants that you only need to plant once

Perennials may cost a little more upfront, such as mint, berry bushes, or fruit trees, but they will provide you with fruit or herbs for years to come, making them worth the investment. 

How to Save Money on Your Garden Bed

Try double-digging vegetable rows

You don’t need to create fancy fences or hire a crew to till for you. Instead, you can have loose garden soil with a little effort by double digging your garden beds. Only do as much as you need to save on effort. 

Build raised beds with materials you already have or can get for free

Raised beds don’t have to be fancy. You can use whatever items you have lying around. For example, spare tires and old plastic baby pools can be filled with dirt to make free raised beds.

You could also build them with old, free lumber or piles of rocks for edges. I edged my raised beds with extra firewood logs for a cute, rustic look. It keeps the soil contained but didn’t cost me anything extra. 

Don’t use raised beds at all

You really don’t need raised beds to grow food. As long as you can clear the weeds and grass from the soil, you can grow there. Of course, you can always create hills, mounds, or rows in your garden. 

How to Save Money on Garden Tools 

Gardening Tools and Supplies on Table

Shop smart

Try yard sales, thrift stores, and even the dollar store to find inexpensive garden tools. Dollar stores often sell garden gloves, hand trowels, small pots, and watering cans to get you started. 

Borrow from a friend

If you can’t afford a tiller, ask if you can use a friend’s or rent one from your local small engine shop. Or offer to trade with someone on Craigslist – perhaps you can mow their yard while they till your garden for you. 

Use the lasagna method

The lasagna method is a way of layering cardboard and yard waste to provide a weed-free, nutrient-dense way of gardening. You won’t need to till or dig so your smaller, inexpensive tools will work. You can probably get the materials for the lasagna garden for free. Find out how to make a lasagna garden here

Save money on containers

Container gardening is a great way to maximize a small space. You don’t have to purchase expensive containers, though. Instead, you can garden in five-gallon buckets, old pots, baby pools, or whatever old pots and containers you can get at yard sales or find for free. Sometimes, bakeries will give away food-grade five gallon buckets for free or cheap. 

How to Save Money on Seeds and Plants

Dollar Store seeds

You might be surprised that the dollar store sells seed packets. Their inexpensive seeds may have a slightly lower germination rate, but they will grow!  

Find a seed swap

Seed swaps are a great way to save money on seeds. Basically, anyone participating in the swap sends their seeds to the host. The host then divides them up and sends them to whoever wants them. These are a great way to get local seeds, rare seeds, or just share extras. You can find some great seed exchanges here

Shop the grocery store for seeds

This might be my favorite way to spend money on gardening! There are lots of things you can grow right from the grocery store. For example, you can purchase 2 pounds of dried beans for just a couple of dollars, and you can plant them!

Seeds from squash and zucchini, plain sunflower seeds, and even tomatoes are just a few plants that you might be able to grow. You can also grow ginger, Jerusalem artichokes, and other tubers. 

Save seeds

If you’ve had a garden in the past, you can save your own seeds to use in the next year's garden. Seed saving takes a little practice, but it can save you a lot of money! Check out this article on how to harvest your own seeds. 

Grow your volunteers

If you have a compost pile, you’ll likely get a bunch of volunteer plants sprouting in the compost. This happens to me every year! If you are careful, you can transplant those volunteers right from the compost pile and into your garden.

Over the winter, I toss leftover veggies into my raised bed to create compost. Then, in the spring, I always get a few volunteers – usually tomato and squash plants – that give me healthy plants and great produce. 

Plant from your kitchen

Did your potatoes sprout by mistake? Don’t worry, just plant them! Have a few too many sweet potatoes? Let them sprout and make your own slips. Did your onion sprout? It won’t grow more onion bulbs, but it will grow more onion tops, which are edible. 

Split perennials before planting

If you purchase perennials to grow, see if you can split them (without doing damage). This will give you two plants for the price of one. 

Cut potatoes in half before planting

If you buy seed potatoes, cut them in half before you plant them. Just make sure both halves have eyes. 

Purchase bare root plants

Strawberry plants, blueberries, and other types of plants can be very expensive. However, you can save money by purchasing bare root plants in early spring. They’ll just take a little bit longer to get established. 

Avoid organic, if necessary

If money is really tight, don’t buy organic seeds. You can still grow them organically if that’s what you prefer, but seeds labeled as organic are more expensive than non-organic seeds. 

Ask friends for extras

People often don’t plant an entire packet of seeds, so don’t be afraid to ask your friends for their leftovers. They’ll probably be happy to share!  

Start your own seeds instead of buying plants

Buying starter plants is expensive, but you can start your own seeds very inexpensively. Roots and Refuge Farm provides a tutorial on how to start seeds in red solo cups. 

Look for sales

Watch for sales and great deals. For example, nurseries and big box stores often discount vegetable plants when they’re ready to bring in fall-oriented flowers.  

Use EBT/SNAP

In many states, you can use your SNAP benefits (formerly known as food stamps) to purchase seeds or plants that will grow food as long as the retailer accepts food stamps. 

How to Save Money on Mulch and Fertilizer 

Ask for free or cheap mulch

Local arborists may be looking to unload mulch. Try getchipdrop.com to see if the program is available where you live. Also, check with your local township. Sometimes they have free piles of mulch and compost that they have collected as yard waste. All you have to do is pick it up. 

Use chop and drop weeds instead of mulch

You don’t actually have to use mulch. You can chop and drop weeds, cover crops, and spent vegetable plants as long as you cut them down before they go to seed. Just chop them and leave them right where they are. Then, push them aside to plant, just like you would with mulch.  

Plant close together

You can plant some vegetables close together to prevent weeds from popping up. For example, lettuces and salad vegetables do well when closely planted as long as they get enough water and nutrients.  

Use companion planting, so you don’t need mulch

Companion planting works well in place of mulch. For example, a three-sisters garden involves planting corn, squash, and beans together. The beans grow on the corn stalks while improving the soil. The squash shades out weeds, saving you on mulch. 

Create your own compost

Compost Bin in Garden

If you don’t compost, you’re missing out on a wealth of free fertilizer. You don’t need fancy compost bins to accomplish this.

Instead, you can just create a compost pile. Better yet, put the pile where your chickens can access it. Then, they’ll turn it and fertilize it for you! We have a detailed article on making compost right here.

Make compost tea

You don’t have to pay for expensive fertilizer if you make your own compost tea. Here's how.

Save your urine

If you’re really into sustainability, you might be looking for ways to deal with human waste as well as gardening. Well, you’re in luck because human urine also makes fertilizer. Check out this article for details.

Consider raising a couple of rabbits or goats for their manure

If you have a pet bunny, you have the best kind of natural fertilizer. In the winter, I put my outdoor rabbit hutch over top of one of my raised beds near the house. The poo falls down to the dirt, and in the spring, I mix it in.

Rabbit manure and goat manure aren’t ‘hot’ like chicken manure, so you don’t have to worry about them burning your plants. Rabbit manure is well worth the cost of feeding a rabbit! Of course, if you would prefer to use chicken manure, that’s fine, but it needs to be composted for about a year before you can put it on your plants. 

How to Save Money on Soil 

Use nitrogen fixers

Plants need nitrogen to grow. Some plants are nitrogen-fixers because they can adjust the amount of nitrogen in the soil, making it more available to plants when they need it. You can improve your soil by planting some of these plants in your garden. Here are a few examples of nitrogen fixers that you can grow. 

Mix in compost

Compost is great for the soil. It improves aeration, adds nutrients to the soil, and improves drainage. Create your own compost piles for free, then mix them into your soil when it is ready. 

Till in biomass

Biomass is just a fancy way of talking about dead plants that you can mix into your soil. So when you till or dig your garden, mix in plenty of biomass to add nutrients and drainage to your soil. This could be pine needles, old leaves, twigs, or weeds.  

Grow your own earthworms

Worm castings will make your soil rich and nutritious for your plants. You can grow your own worms in a bin for very little investment and then use the castings to sidedress and fertilize your plants.  

Fill your raised beds more cheaply

Filling raised beds with soil or topsoil can get expensive fast. But it isn’t necessary. Try a little hügelkultur. Fill the bottom of your raised bed with a layer of compost to keep down weeds, then pile in some rotted logs, twigs, or dead branches.

This will take up some room in the bed and provide nutrients for your plants. Then fill with soil. Conversely, if you don’t want to use logs, you can dig a trench in the middle of your raised bed and fill it with compost or biomass, then cover it with a layer of soil. 

How to Save Money on Watering 

Plant close together

If you keep your plants close together, they’ll shade the ground from the sun, which will slow down evaporation. As a result, you won’t need to water as frequently. 

Use mulch

Mulch – either actual wood chips or chop and drop weeds – will hold in moisture as well as prevent evaporation. Even better if you can get free mulch to do the job.  

Plant drought-hardy plants

Many types of vegetables are drought-hardy once they are established. Look for drought-hardy varieties so you can cut down on watering.  

Water plants at the base

Don’t waste water by pouring it over the leaves—instead, water at the bottom of the plant to save water. 

Collect rainwater

If it is legal to do so, set up a free or cheap rain barrel to collect water for your vegetable plants. You can even make a rain barrel from a clean trash can.  

Save Money on Trellises and Fencing 

Find Used Fences

Fencing is one of the most expensive parts of gardening. If you can’t skip the fence altogether, try looking on Craigslist or Facebook marketplace for a used fence. You may have to take it down yourself, but it will save you big bucks if you need it.  

Don’t buy expensive garden stakes – use what you have

You don’t need fancy garden stakes to stake your tomatoes or other veggies. Instead, any small pieces of lumber, PVC pipes, rebar, or old fencing can be used to tie your veggies up. 

Create a cheap trellis

If you have a cattle panel lying around (or have access to a cheap one), you can use it to create an easy trellis. Stake it upright to grow peas, beans, or tomatoes on. Or bend it in the middle to make an overhead trellis, staking each end in a raised bed. Watch MIGardener make a trellis from a $25 cattle panel.  

How to Make Your Garden More Productive 

Colorful Flower Garden

Plant pollinator plants nearby

Plant flowers near your garden to attract pollinators. The more the blossoms on your plants are pollinated, the better your harvest will be. For example, planting marigolds all around your garden will help deter pests like rabbits and caterpillars while attracting bees that will help pollinate your vegetables. 

Attract beneficial insects

Beneficial insects will help control the pests that eat your vegetable plants. You can find a list of plants that will attract these insects here. 

Companion plant

Try companion planting to increase the biodiversity (which will over pest pressure) and increase yields. Try some of these companion planting ideas

Keep your garden watered

If your garden gets too dry, it will stress your plants. Keep them well-watered so they don’t waste their energy fighting to stay alive. 

Avoid Garden Busters 

Be wary of using hay in your garden

Some hay is grown with herbicides and pesticides that will kill your garden (and the same goes for the manure of the animals that eat it).

Keep weeds under control

You don’t need to eradicate every weed in your garden, but do keep them under control, so they don’t compete with your plants for resources. This will result in spindly plants that don’t produce well. However, leaving a few weeds will increase the biodiversity in your garden, which may reduce the pest pressure on your vegetable plants.  

Don’t purchase an expensive greenhouse if a hoop house will do

Greenhouses are a great way to extend the growing season so you can grow more vegetables. However, they are pricey. With a little bit of ingenuity, you can build a cheap hoop house like this one.

It provides the same benefits at a fraction of the cost. Additionally, you may need a permit to install a permanent greenhouse, but hoop houses usually don’t require one because they aren’t permanent structures. 

Create row covers with hula hoops

If you need row covers for warmth, or shade covers to grow cool weather crops, or even netting to protect your strawberries, you can do so with cheap hula hoop row covers. Read more here.

Get creative!

You don’t need to spend lots of money on your garden, you just need to use a little creativity and some old-fashioned elbow grease to grow great vegetables with frugal gardening.

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Originally published on Homestead Survival Site.

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The post 50+ Frugal Gardening Tips That Will Save You a Bundle appeared first on Urban Survival Site.



from Urban Survival Site

Sugar Cookies (Copycat Famous Cookies)

Soft Sugar Cookies On A Plate

We moved to Northern Utah in October 2021. We had a few cookie stores down in Southern Utah, and I confess I loved their cookies! Yes, I have purchased a box or two, okay, three or more boxes! I love trying store-bought cookies and figuring out the recipe. I can’t remember the last cookie I purchased.

Do you love soft sugar cookies? This is a moist, chewy, and soft cookie. This is a recipe I have made for years. It’s very similar to cookies you might buy at a specialty cookie store, but you can make them for much less money.

I originally shared this recipe in December 2018. Things have sure changed in the last few years. I miss the people I used to deliver homemade bread and cookies to our Southern Utah neighborhood. Some have moved, and some have died. Life has changed for Mark and me; we are still adjusting to the move here.

Sugar Cookies Frosted with Cream Cheese Frosting

Use fresh Ingredients

Here’s the deal: we all know what’s in those cookies. Let’s just say real butter, good vanilla, and fresh ingredients. I usually play around with my mom’s cookie recipes, experimenting with different ingredients until I find just the right one. 

This is a great cookie to take to a church, neighborhood, or family party. There is no question that when I go to a party, I will scope out the homemade goodies. Are you like that? Maybe that sounds a bit snobby, but I don’t mean it that way. I just love to try homemade treats. THEN get the recipe!!

Kitchen Items You Will Need

Here are a cookie scoop and a tart pusher, similar to the ones I use: Cookie Scoop and a Tart Pusher

If you’ve ever bitten into one of those impossibly soft, pillowy sugar cookies from a bakery counter and thought, “I need this recipe”, you’ve come to the right place. This copycat recipe nails that signature texture: tender and melt-in-your-mouth in the center, with just enough structure to hold together beautifully.

Why This Sugar Cookie Recipe Is Different

Most sugar cookie recipes are fine. This one is famous for a reason. The secret lies in the combination of both butter and oil. Butter brings rich flavor and that irresistible aroma; oil adds moisture that keeps each cookie incredibly soft for days, not just the first hour out of the oven. Add cream of tartar to the mix, and you get a subtle tang and that classic slight chewiness that sets bakery-style cookies apart from homemade ones.

The use of white bread flour (rather than all-purpose) is another game-changer. Its higher protein content gives these cookies a slightly more substantial, satisfying bite without turning them cakey. It’s a small swap with a big payoff.

Key Ingredient Notes

Butter: No Substitutes Allowed. Margarine, coconut oil, or shortening will not produce the same result. Real, full-fat butter is responsible for the flavor, texture, and the way these cookies spread in the oven. Make sure it’s softened to room temperature (not melted), so it creams properly.

The Butter plus Oil Combination. This is the heart of the recipe. Butter alone can make cookies that firm up and dry out the next day. Adding oil keeps them soft and moist for days without making them greasy. It’s the same technique behind many beloved bakery-style cookies.

Cream of Tartar. Don’t skip it. This acidic powder, a byproduct of winemaking, reacts with baking soda to create the perfect lift. On its own, it also provides that signature subtle tanginess and contributes to a chewier, slightly denser crumb, exactly what separates a great sugar cookie from a merely good one.

White Bread Flour. Bread flour has a higher protein content than all-purpose flour (around 12–14% versus 10–12%). That extra protein develops more gluten, which gives the cookies a satisfying chewiness and prevents them from going flat. If you only have all-purpose flour, it will work in a pinch, but bread flour is worth seeking out for this recipe.

Sea Salt. A full teaspoon might sound like a lot, but in a recipe this big, it’s perfectly calibrated. Salt doesn’t make cookies salty; it makes them taste more like themselves. It enhances sweetness, rounds out the butter flavor, and keeps the overall taste from being one-dimensional.

Baker’s Tip: Pull the cookies out of the oven when the centers still look slightly underbaked and pale. They continue to bake in the hot pan for a few minutes after coming out of the oven. Waiting until they look done = overbaked cookies.

Tips for Perfect Sugar Cookies Every Time

Don’t skip the room-temperature butter. Cold butter won’t cream properly, and melted butter will make your cookies spread too thin. Set the butter out at least 30–45 minutes before you start baking.

Measure your flour correctly. The most common mistake in baking is packing flour into a measuring cup. Instead, spoon flour into the cup and level it off with a flat edge, or use a kitchen scale for precision. Too much flour makes dense, dry cookies.

Chill the dough if it feels too soft. If your kitchen is warm, the dough may be quite soft. Pop it in the refrigerator for 20–30 minutes before scooping. This helps the cookies hold their shape and results in a thicker, softer bake.

Underbake slightly. The single biggest tip for soft sugar cookies: take them out when they still look underdone in the center. The residual heat will finish the job. Overbaked sugar cookies dry out quickly.

How to Store These Sugar Cookies

Store baked cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 5 days. Because of the oil in the recipe, they stay noticeably soft and fresh far longer than butter-only cookies. You can also layer them between sheets of parchment paper to prevent sticking.

To freeze, place baked and fully cooled cookies in a single layer in a freezer-safe bag or container for up to 3 months. Thaw at room temperature for an hour before serving. You can also freeze the raw dough balls and bake straight from frozen, adding 2–3 extra minutes to the bake time.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use all-purpose flour instead of bread flour?

Why are my sugar cookies spreading too much?

The most common causes are butter that was too warm (melted or very soft), too little flour, or a dough that wasn’t chilled before baking. Make sure your butter is softened but still cool to the touch, and refrigerate the dough for 20–30 minutes if it feels very soft.

Can I make this dough ahead of time?

The dough can be refrigerated for up to 3 days or frozen for up to 3 months. This makes it perfect for holiday baking. Mix the dough in advance and bake fresh cookies whenever you need them.

What is cream of tartar, and can I leave it out?

Cream of tartar is a powdery acid (potassium bitartrate) that activates baking soda and adds a subtle tang and chewy texture. It’s what gives these cookies their bakery-style character. You can leave it out, but the cookies will be noticeably different, less tangy, and slightly less chewy.

Can I add frosting or decorations?

Absolutely! These cookies are excellent with a simple buttercream, royal icing, or cream cheese frosting. Because they stay soft, the frosting won’t crack. They’re also wonderful with colored sprinkles pressed in before baking for a festive look.

Ingredients

Sugar Cookies Ingredients

I used the purple 1/8 cup cookie scoop.

Sugar Cookies Using Cookie Scoop

Sugar Cookies Using Tart Pusher

Use the small end of the tart pusher.

Sugar Cookies Using Tart Pusher

Sugar Cookies Ready To Frost

Sugar Cookies Ready To Frost

Frosted Soft Sugar Cookies

Mark took these to the church party tonight in a 1/4 Sheet Cookie Sheet with a Cover. Dimensions: (13.6″L x 9.8″W x 2″H).

Sugar Cookies Frosted
Soft Sugar Cookies On A Plate
Print

Sugar Cookies (Copycat Famous Cookies)

Course Dessert
Cuisine American
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Total Time 25 minutes
Servings 36 cookies
Author Linda Loosli

Ingredients

  • 1 cup Softened butter (no substitute)
  • 3/4 cup Oil (I use vegetable oil)
  • 2 cups Sugar
  • 2 tablespoons Water
  • 2 Eggs
  • 1/2 teaspoon Baking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoon Cream of Tartar
  • 1 teaspoon Sea salt
  • 2 teaspoons Vanilla
  • 5 cups White bread flour

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 350°F (176°C)
  • Grease your cookie sheet or use parchment paper.
  • Cream all the ingredients together except the flour.
  • Slowly add the flour, mixing with a heavy-duty mixer until fully incorporated.
  • Use a cookie scoop (I used the purple 1/8-cup scoop) and place each scoop about 2 inches apart on a greased cookie sheet. You can use parchment paper or a silicone mat as well.
  • Next, push the center of the cookies with a small glass bottom or tart pusher, but not all the way through.
  • I bake my cookies for 10-12 minutes. (please note *whole wheat takes longer to bake-9-10 minutes).
  • Cool on cool on cooling racks.

Cream Cheese Frosting:

  • Frosts 1 bundt cake, 3-4 dozen cookies, or 3 dozen cupcakes.
    1/2 cup butter, softened
    1-eight-ounce cream cheese (softened)
    3 to 3-1/2 cups powdered sugar
    1-2 teaspoons vanilla
    Cream the butter and cream cheese together, then slowly add the powdered sugar until you reach the desired thickness. Add the vanilla until blended.

Please tell me what you do for your family get-togethers, neighborhood parties, or church functions. These cookies are popular for family reunions because they stay soft even without plastic wrap. Tupperware Freezer Containers

I freeze the cookies on a cookie sheet, so all I have to do is thaw them before taking them to a party. The frosting freezes well, too. If I have a little leftover frosting, I freeze it in a small plastic container to use on graham crackers when I need a little treat. 

How to Make Sugar Cookie Bars

Final Word

Sometimes we have to make soft sugar cookies in between prepping for the unexpected, right? Or a casserole, it’s what we do, we cook from scratch, and maybe wear an apron, sometimes. I don’t wear one, but I love the look of aprons. Keep cooking from scratch my friends, we must make memories with those around us. May God bless this world, Linda

The post Sugar Cookies (Copycat Famous Cookies) appeared first on Food Storage Moms.



from Food Storage Moms

If We Have A War: Stock Paper Products Now

Paper Products Plates Cups Bowls

If we have a war: stock paper products now, please. Preparing for the possibility of war or a large-scale national emergency is no longer the territory of conspiracy theorists or extreme survivalists. Governments, emergency management agencies, and disaster preparedness experts worldwide have long recommended that households maintain a meaningful stockpile of essential supplies. Among the most overlooked categories in any emergency preparedness plan are paper products and disposable tableware.

When infrastructure fails, when water supplies become unreliable, when supply chains collapse, and when everyday routines are turned upside down, paper products become some of the most valuable and practical items you can have on hand. This post examines each major category of paper and disposable products you should store and explains in depth why each one matters when conflict or disaster strikes.

Toilet Paper and Paper Towel

Paper Towels: The Multi-Purpose Emergency Workhorse

Paper towels are one of the single most versatile products you can stockpile in anticipation of a wartime or disaster scenario. In normal life, they serve a basic cleaning function. In an emergency, they become a critical multi-tool that addresses sanitation, first aid, filtration, and personal hygiene all at once.

When clean running water is unavailable or severely restricted, washing cloth towels, rags, and dishcloths becomes nearly impossible. Traditional fabric alternatives require water, soap, and a drying environment; resources that may all be compromised during active conflict or infrastructure breakdown. Paper towels eliminate this problem. They can be used once and discarded, preventing the spread of bacteria and viruses and reducing contamination within a household that may already be under significant stress.

From a sanitation standpoint, paper towels are essential for maintaining clean surfaces when disinfectant supplies are limited. They can be used to wipe down food preparation areas, clean wounds in the absence of proper medical supplies, cover food to prevent airborne contamination, and serve as makeshift filters when boiling or treating water. They can even serve as emergency bandaging material when conventional first-aid supplies have been depleted.

Wartime conditions often bring disease and infection risks that compound the direct dangers of conflict itself. Cholera, dysentery, and other sanitation-related illnesses have historically claimed more lives during wartime than direct combat. Having an abundant supply of paper towels helps a household maintain the baseline level of surface hygiene that helps prevent the spread of these illnesses.

Stock paper towels in both standard rolls and the larger commercial-sized rolls if storage space permits. Vacuum-seal them in bags to protect against moisture and to extend shelf life. A household of four should aim to have a minimum of a three-month supply, though six months to a year is a more resilient target.

Toilet Paper: The Non-Negotiable Necessity

No emergency preparedness conversation is complete without an honest discussion of toilet paper. It may sound mundane, but the absence of toilet paper in a crisis creates immediate and serious problems for hygiene, dignity, and health. The panic buying of toilet paper during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic gave many people their first real glimpse of what supply chain disruption feels like. In a wartime scenario, that disruption would be far deeper, far longer, and far less predictable.

Toilet paper is a product that most people in the developed world have never had to live without. Its absence forces individuals to improvise in ways that can introduce bacterial contamination, cause skin irritation, and increase the risk of infection. In a household where medical care may not be readily accessible, a simple skin breakdown caused by inadequate hygiene materials can become a serious health issue.

During wartime or severe civil disruption, manufacturing facilities may be shut down or redirected toward military production. Distribution networks are frequently disrupted by infrastructure damage, fuel shortages, and prioritization of military logistics. Retail shelves that empty within days during a pandemic could remain empty for weeks or months during an active conflict.

Toilet paper is also an item that has genuine barter value in a prolonged emergency. It’s lightweight, universally needed, and easy to transport. Storing extra quantities beyond your household’s needs gives you a tangible resource you can exchange for food, medicine, or other critical supplies within your community.

Store toilet paper in a cool, dry location away from direct sunlight. Compression storage bags can significantly reduce the physical space required without compromising the product’s integrity. Aim to store at least 100 rolls per person in your household. Double-ply is preferable for longevity per use, reducing overall consumption over time.

Paper Plates in Various Sizes: Preserving Water and Preventing Disease

Washing dishes requires clean water, dish soap, a clean drying area, and time. In a wartime or emergency environment, all four of those requirements may be compromised simultaneously. Paper plates in a range of sizes solve this problem cleanly and efficiently, allowing a household to continue eating meals without sacrificing large quantities of precious clean water to sanitation.

The importance of having multiple sizes of paper plates can’t be overstated. Small plates serve as versatile surfaces for snacks, condiments, and single-serving items. Medium plates handle most standard meal portions and work well for children. Large plates accommodate full meals, double as serving trays, and provide sufficient surface area for food preparation when counter space or clean preparation surfaces are limited.

In addition to conserving water, paper plates dramatically reduce the risk of cross-contamination in a household dealing with illness. During wartime, disease spreads rapidly in stressed populations. Shared dishes that are improperly cleaned due to limited water or soap become vectors for gastrointestinal illness, which can be debilitating and life-threatening when medical resources are unavailable.

Paper plates also carry a psychological benefit that should not be dismissed. Maintaining some semblance of a normal mealtime routine during a crisis supports mental health and morale. Eating from a proper plate rather than directly from a can or shared pot preserves a sense of normalcy and dignity that matters deeply when everything else in the environment has broken down.

Purchase a mix of standard plate sizes and store them flat in their original packaging inside plastic bins or sealed bags. Coated paper plates have a longer practical shelf life than uncoated varieties and perform better under moderate humidity. A household should aim to maintain at least two plates per person per day for a minimum of 90 days’ supply. Please don’t buy those flimsy white paper plates.

Paper Bowls: Essential for Hot Food and Liquid-Based Meals

While paper plates address the broad category of mealtime needs, paper bowls serve a distinct and equally important function. Many of the most calorie-dense and easily stored emergency foods are best served in bowls: soups, stews, oatmeal, rice dishes, canned beans, and pasta. These foods are both nutritionally valuable in a crisis and poorly suited to flat plate surfaces.

In emergencies, cooking often occurs over open flames, camp stoves, or improvised heat sources. Hot liquid-based foods are ideal for these conditions because they can be prepared in large batches, are easy to portion, are warming and comforting in stressful conditions, and make efficient use of limited cooking fuel. Without paper bowls, households are forced to share and reuse a limited number of bowls, which increases water consumption for washing and the risk of cross-contamination between users.

Paper bowls also serve important secondary uses beyond meals. They serve as containers for sorting and organizing small items, mixing dry ingredients, collecting rainwater for secondary uses, and even as improvised waste containers when other options are unavailable. Their structural integrity, particularly in thicker coated varieties, makes them more versatile than they might initially appear.

Bowls with some degree of grease and liquid resistance are preferable for emergency stockpiling, as they’ll hold up better under actual use conditions with warm or wet contents. Stock bowls in both medium and large sizes to accommodate varying meal types and portion needs. As with plates, calculating two to three bowls per person per day and targeting a ninety-day minimum supply is a reasonable baseline.

Paper Cups: Hydration, Sanitation, and Hygiene Management

Access to clean drinking vessels is one of the most fundamental sanitation requirements during any emergency. Paper cups address this need in a lightweight, space-efficient way, requiring no water for maintenance. When water is being carefully rationed and every drop counts, using paper cups for drinking and personal hygiene tasks eliminates the need to wash reusable cups after each use.

Disease transmission through shared drinking vessels is well documented and historically significant. During wartime and displacement scenarios, outbreaks of illness frequently trace back to contaminated water sources and shared eating and drinking implements. Paper cups provide a per-person, single-use option that dramatically reduces the risk of transmission within a household.

Paper cups have uses that extend beyond drinking. They serve as measuring liquid options when precise quantities of water or other liquids are needed for food preparation or medication. They function as containers for rinsing wounds, administering liquid medications, or providing small animals or children with controlled amounts of water. In dental hygiene routines, which must continue even during emergencies to prevent infection, paper cups support rinsing without the contamination risks of shared reusable cups.

Stock paper cups in multiple sizes. Small bathroom-style cups are ideal for administering medication, rinsing wounds, and dental care. Larger cups in the eight- to sixteen-ounce range meet beverage needs for meals and throughout the day. Both hot and cold-rated varieties are worth maintaining in your stockpile, as the ability to serve warm beverages like tea or broth is an important source of comfort and nutrition during prolonged stress.

Paper cups compress well and store efficiently. Sleeve-wrapped cups take up less space than loose stacks. Store them in a sealed container to prevent moisture absorption, which can cause structural weakening over time. Target a supply of at least five to eight cups per person per day across your size varieties.

Plastic Silverware: Maintaining Safe and Functional Mealtimes

Forks, spoons, and knives are so basic to daily life that their potential absence in an emergency rarely registers as a concern until that emergency is actually underway. Plastic silverware solves the same core problem that paper plates and cups address: it eliminates the need to wash eating utensils with scarce clean water while providing hygienic, individual-use tools for consuming food safely.

In wartime or disaster scenarios where household members may be dealing with illness, injury, or varying degrees of immune compromise, sharing utensils poses a significant health risk. Individual plastic silverware ensures that each person at the table is using tools that have not been in contact with another person’s saliva or hands, unless thoroughly cleaned. This level of separation, which feels trivial during normal times, becomes genuinely important when access to medical care is limited or nonexistent.

Plastic silverware is also relevant to food preparation tasks. Plastic spoons can stir heated foods without conducting heat dangerously. Plastic knives, while not suitable for heavy cutting, handle soft foods, spreading tasks, and general meal assembly adequately. Having a full set of utensil types means that meal preparation doesn’t require constantly cleaning and reusing the same handful of metal implements.

Beyond direct meal use, plastic utensils serve as tools for rationing and measuring food portions, ensuring that limited supplies are distributed equitably among household members. They can also serve as basic implements for medical tasks such as mixing oral rehydration solutions, measuring medication, or preparing food for individuals with specific dietary or health needs.

Heavy-duty plastic silverware is preferable to the lightest bargain varieties. Thicker plastic is less likely to snap under normal use stress and provides a more functional tool under a wider range of conditions. Store plastic silverware in sealed bags or original packaging to keep it clean and dry. A supply of at least three to five complete sets per person per day, covering forks, spoons, and knives, should be maintained for a minimum of ninety days.

Aluminum Foil: The Overlooked Survival Essential

Aluminum foil is one of those products that sits quietly in a kitchen drawer and rarely gets a second thought. In an emergency or wartime scenario, it ranks among the most valuable items in your stockpile. Its versatility spans cooking, food preservation, sanitation, signaling, insulation, and medical improvisation. No other single product at its price point covers so many critical survival functions simultaneously.

Cooking Without Conventional Equipment

When gas lines are severed, the power grid goes down, or conventional kitchen appliances become unusable, cooking methods shift dramatically. Open fires, camp stoves, and improvised heat sources become the norm. Aluminum foil makes cooking over these sources practical and safe. Food wrapped tightly in foil can be placed directly on coals or over an open flame without needing pots, pans, or other cookware. Vegetables, proteins, and starches can all be cooked effectively in foil packets that seal in moisture and heat, producing a full meal with no equipment beyond a heat source. This matters enormously when conventional cookware is unavailable, broken, or too heavy to transport during displacement.

Foil also serves as an improvised oven lining, a drip tray, a makeshift pan, and a reflective surface to direct heat toward food. In situations where fuel is scarce and every BTU counts, foil’s ability to concentrate and retain heat around food reduces cooking time and conserves fuel. That efficiency compounds over weeks and months of emergency conditions into a significant practical advantage.

Food Preservation and Storage

In a crisis, food waste is not a minor inconvenience; it’s a serious threat to survival. Aluminum foil is one of the most effective short-term food preservation tools available. It creates a near airtight seal around cooked or raw food, dramatically slowing oxidation, moisture loss, and contamination by airborne pathogens. When refrigeration is unavailable, properly wrapped food stored in a cool location retains its safety and quality far longer than food left in open containers.

Foil wrapping is particularly valuable for protecting foods that have already been opened from their original packaging. Canned goods that have been partially consumed, dried foods exposed to air, and cooked meals waiting to be eaten later all benefit from tight foil wrapping. In the absence of resealable bags or plastic wrap, which will also degrade over time, aluminum foil serves as a durable, reusable preservation barrier.

Sanitation and Hygiene Applications

Maintaining sanitation standards during a prolonged emergency requires creative use of available materials. Aluminum foil contributes meaningfully to this effort in several ways. It can be shaped into bowls, cups, and plates when disposable tableware supplies run low, providing a non-porous, bacteria-resistant surface that is easy to wipe clean with minimal water. Unlike paper products, foil can be rinsed and reused multiple times before being discarded, extending your overall supply of clean eating surfaces.

Foil can also be used to cover wounds as an emergency barrier against environmental contamination when proper bandaging materials are unavailable. Emergency medical protocols in some contexts include using foil as a reflective covering to reduce heat loss in trauma patients, a technique familiar to anyone who has seen marathon runners wrapped in thin mylar sheets at the finish line. The same principle applies in a crisis setting where hypothermia is a risk.

Insulation and Heat Retention

The thermal reflective properties of aluminum foil have well-documented practical value in survival conditions. Wrapping foil around the interior of a shelter, a sleeping area, or a window significantly reduces heat loss during cold conditions by reflecting body heat toward the occupant. This same principle makes foil useful for keeping cooked food warm when serving conditions are delayed, wrapping water containers to slow temperature change, and insulating pipes or critical equipment against freezing temperatures.

In warmer conditions, foil’s reflective surface can be positioned to deflect solar heat away from a shelter or storage area, helping to keep interior temperatures lower and reducing the risk of heat-related illness for occupants and spoilage for stored food supplies.

Signaling and Navigation

Aluminum foil has a surface that reflects sunlight with considerable intensity. In a scenario where rescue or communication with friendly forces or emergency responders is needed, a sheet of foil can serve as an effective signal mirror. Positioned to catch direct sunlight, it produces a flash visible for significant distances, providing a means of communication that requires no batteries, no electronics, and no infrastructure whatsoever.

Strips of foil attached to visible surfaces can also serve as navigational markers, identifying paths, supply caches, or safe zones for household members or community groups moving through unfamiliar or dangerous territory. This low-tech approach to communication and navigation has genuine value when electronic alternatives have failed.

How Much to Store and How to Store It

Standard household rolls of aluminum foil are inexpensive, compact, and have an effectively unlimited shelf life when stored properly. Heavy-duty foil is preferable for an emergency stockpile, as it holds up better under the physical demands of open-flame cooking and repeated handling. Standard weight foil remains useful for lighter tasks, including food wrapping and improvised surfaces.

Store foil rolls in their original boxes inside a sealed plastic bin to protect the cardboard from moisture. A stockpile of 10 to 15 heavy-duty rolls per household of 4 provides a meaningful reserve for a 3-month emergency. If storage space permits, doubling that quantity costs relatively little and provides substantial additional security. Like all emergency supplies, rotate foil through regular household use and replace what you consume to keep your stockpile fresh and at full strength.

How to Store Paper Products for Maximum Longevity

Knowing what to stock is only half of the preparedness equation. Understanding how to store paper products properly ensures that your investment in emergency supplies remains usable when it’s most needed. Paper products are vulnerable to moisture, pests, mold, and prolonged exposure to ultraviolet light. All of these threats can render an entire stockpile unusable within a matter of months if storage conditions are poor.

The single most important storage principle is keeping paper products dry. Moisture is the primary enemy of any cellulose-based product. Store all paper goods in sealed plastic bins, vacuum-sealed bags, or airtight containers. Even in seemingly dry environments, humidity can fluctuate with the seasons. Silica gel desiccant packets placed inside storage containers provide an additional layer of moisture protection. Please note, I have never done this. If I lived in a humid area, I would consider using this approach to storage.

Store your paper product stockpile away from direct sunlight, which degrades both the paper fibers and any plastic components in packaging over time. A basement, interior closet, or dedicated storage room is ideal. If you’re in a flood-prone area, elevate storage containers off the floor on shelving units. Avoid storing paper products in attics where temperature extremes can accelerate deterioration.

Rotate your stockpile regularly. Label containers with purchase dates and use the oldest supplies first during normal times, replacing what you use to maintain a consistent stock level. This practice, often called first-in-first-out rotation, ensures that your emergency supply never ages beyond practical usability. Products stored under good conditions can remain fully functional for several years beyond their stated shelf dates.

Organize your stockpile by category and keep an inventory list. Knowing exactly what you have and where it’s located eliminates confusion during high-stress situations when decision-making capacity is already taxed. A simple spreadsheet or handwritten log, kept in a waterproof document sleeve alongside your supplies, is sufficient for most households.

Building Your Emergency Paper Product Stockpile: A Practical Starting Point

Beginning a paper product stockpile can feel overwhelming, but the process becomes manageable when approached incrementally. Rather than attempting to purchase several months’ worth of supplies at once, which is both financially stressful and likely to attract attention during periods of social tension, a steady accumulation strategy is more practical and sustainable.

Start by purchasing one extra unit from each product category on every routine shopping trip. Over the course of six to eight weeks, this practice alone will begin building a meaningful reserve without placing significant strain on your household budget. As your baseline supply grows, you can begin purchasing in bulk through warehouse retailers or online suppliers to accelerate the process and reduce per-unit cost if the budget allows.

Prioritize the products that address the most fundamental needs first: toilet paper, paper towels, and paper cups. These three categories address the most basic sanitation and hygiene requirements and should reach a 90-day minimum supply before you allocate additional resources to plates, bowls, and silverware.

Consider the specific needs of everyone in your household when building your stockpile. Households with young children will need to account for higher paper towel use and may benefit from additional small plates and cups. Older household members may require more cups for medication administration. Individuals with dietary restrictions may need specific types of disposable containers. Tailoring your stockpile to your actual household composition makes it far more effective in practice.

Emergency preparedness is ultimately an act of responsibility toward yourself, your family, and your community. Paper products represent a modest financial investment that pays enormous dividends in hygiene, health, and everyday functioning during the most disruptive and dangerous circumstances. The time to build this foundation is now, not when the need has already arrived.

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Final Word

The categories covered in this post, paper towels, toilet paper, paper plates in various sizes, paper bowls, paper cups, and plastic silverware, collectively form a practical and powerful layer of emergency preparedness that the vast majority of households currently lack. They are affordable, widely available today, and capable of preserving health and functional daily life in circumstances that would otherwise make them very difficult to maintain. Building this stockpile now, methodically and intentionally, is one of the most concrete and impactful steps any household can take toward genuine resilience. May God bless this world, Linda

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from Food Storage Moms

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

The Hidden Dangers Behind Vacuum-Sealing Meat

Vacuum sealing has become one of the most popular food preservation methods in recent years. Walk into almost any prepping forum or hunting community, and you will find people recommending vacuum sealers as a way to make meat last longer in the freezer. The idea sounds simple enough: remove the air, seal the bag, and […]

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