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Friday, May 29, 2026

If We Have A War: Stock Salt Now

Salt Stored

If we have a war: Stock salt now. The ancient currency you are forgetting to store. There is a reason soldiers were once paid in salt. There is a reason the word “salary” comes from Latin. There is a reason civilizations rose and fell over trade routes built around them. Salt is not a seasoning. Salt is survival. And if the world around us ever fractures even slightly, whether through war, supply chain collapse, prolonged power outages, or any number of slow-moving disasters, the people who stocked salt will eat. The people who did not will quickly understand what they are missing.

This is not a doomsday screed. This is practical knowledge that every household used to carry as a matter of course, knowledge that has been quietly lost in the era of refrigeration and grocery delivery. Salt preserves food. Salt sustains the human body. Salt has no expiration date when stored correctly. It is one of the very few pantry items that will outlast everything else on your shelf, including you.

So let us talk about it honestly. What kinds of salt should you store, how much of it, what it actually does inside your body, and why now is the time to start. Please remember never to use oxygen absorbers in salt or sugar, as they will turn to bricks.

Salt In Buckets

The Three Salts Worth Stocking

Not all salt is created equal, and not all salt serves the same purpose. A well-prepared pantry benefits from having at least two or three varieties on hand, each suited to different tasks.

Fine Salt

Fine salt is your workhorse. It is the salt that dissolves fastest, the one you reach for when baking bread, seasoning a pot of beans, brining vegetables, or making a basic electrolyte solution. In a grid-down scenario where you are cooking over an open flame and measuring by sight alone, fine salt is forgiving and easy to control. It integrates into food quickly and evenly.

For preservation purposes, fine salt is essential. Lacto-fermentation, a centuries-old method of preserving vegetables without refrigeration, requires fine salt dissolved in water at specific ratios. Sauerkraut, kimchi, pickled beets, fermented carrots, preserved eggs: all of these depend on salt as the primary agent of preservation. Learning to ferment is one of the most valuable food skills a person can develop, and fine salt is the foundation of that practice.

A good stock of fine non-iodized salt is particularly important for fermentation, because iodized salt can inhibit the beneficial bacteria that make fermentation work. Store both varieties. They serve different purposes.

Redmond Fine Salt, Redmond Fine Salt Refill Pouches

Coarse Salt

Coarse salt, whether kosher salt or sea salt with large crystals, dissolves more slowly and is better suited for dry curing, meat preservation, and drawing moisture from foods before long-term storage. When you are salt-curing fish, making salt-cured pork, or preserving a harvest of summer cucumbers, coarse salt gives you more control and creates a more even cure across the food’s surface.

There is also something tactile and important about coarse salt that fine salt cannot replicate. When you are rubbing a cut of meat before hanging it to dry, or packing a crock with alternating layers of salt and fish, as coastal communities have done for thousands of years, you need the texture and staying power of a large crystal.

Coarse salt also stores beautifully. Because the crystals are less compressed than table salt, they absorb moisture more slowly. In a sealed container, coarse salt will remain usable indefinitely.

From a cooking standpoint, coarse salt gives you something else: restraint. You feel the amount you are using in a way that a shaker of fine salt does not offer. In a world where you are rationing your stores and cooking simply, that tactile feedback matters.

Redmond Coarse Salt, Redmond Coarse Salt Refill Pouch

Himalayan Pink Salt

Himalayan salt has accumulated a great deal of marketing mythology, and it is worth separating the hype from its genuine value. The claims that it contains dozens of trace minerals in medically significant quantities are largely overblown. The actual amounts of those minerals per serving are too small to constitute a meaningful nutritional contribution. What is true, however, is that Himalayan salt is a pure, unrefined product harvested from ancient sea beds and free from the additives and anti-caking agents found in much commercial table salt.

For those who are sensitive to additives or who are building a pantry with long-term purity in mind, Himalayan salt is an excellent choice. It comes in large blocks that can double as serving surfaces and have antimicrobial properties useful for food handling. It dissolves well, stores indefinitely, and works for every application where fine or coarse salt is used.

There is also something worth noting about morale. In a prolonged emergency, the quality of your food matters to your psychological state as much as your physical one. Himalayan salt, used on simple food cooked from your stores, elevates a plain meal. That matters more than it sounds.

Store some. Not because it is a miracle mineral product, but because it is real, pure, long-lasting, and versatile.

Himalayan Salt, Himalayan Salt Refill

Salt and the Human Body

Before we talk about appropriate intake, it is worth understanding what salt actually does in your body, because most people have only the haziest sense of why they need it at all.

Salt is sodium chloride. Sodium is an electrolyte, which means it carries an electrical charge and regulates the movement of water and nutrients in and out of your cells. Every time your heart beats, sodium is involved. Every time a nerve fires a signal, sodium is involved. Every time a muscle contracts, including the involuntary muscles that keep you breathing and digesting, sodium is involved.

Without adequate sodium, your body cannot maintain fluid balance. Blood pressure drops. Muscle cramps become severe. In cases of extreme sodium depletion, a condition called hyponatremia, confusion, seizures, and death can follow. This is not theoretical. Endurance athletes who drink too much water without replacing electrolytes have died from it. Disaster survivors who consume water without any salt intake over extended periods face a serious risk.

Salt also drives thirst, which is a survival mechanism. Your body uses thirst to encourage you to drink enough water to keep your sodium concentration at the correct level. In a high-stress, high-exertion situation like a war or a major disaster, you will sweat more, work harder, and lose sodium faster than usual. Your need for salt will increase.

Chloride, the other half of sodium chloride, is equally important. It is a component of stomach acid, essential for digestion, and plays a role in maintaining the proper pH of your blood.

In short, salt is not a luxury. It is a physiological requirement.

How Much Salt Does a Person Actually Need

The current guidance from most major health organizations in the United States suggests that adults should aim for less than 2,300 milligrams of sodium per day, with an ideal intake closer to 1,500 milligrams for individuals with hypertension or cardiovascular risk factors. One teaspoon of fine table salt contains approximately 2,300 milligrams of sodium, which gives you a practical reference point.

In a normal modern diet, most people consume significantly more than this, because sodium is hidden in processed foods, canned goods, restaurant meals, and bread. In a pantry-based emergency diet, where you are cooking from scratch using whole grains, dried beans, root vegetables, and preserved meats, your baseline sodium intake from hidden sources drops dramatically. You will need to add more salt consciously to meet your body’s requirements.

For physically active adults in a high-stress, labor-intensive situation, 3,000 to 5,000 milligrams of sodium per day may be appropriate. Heat, sweat, and exertion change the equation considerably. Athletes and laborers have always known this, which is why sports drinks exist and why field workers historically received extra salt rations.

Children need proportionally less sodium. A child under eight years old needs roughly 1,000 to 1,200 milligrams per day. Adolescents need somewhat more, approaching adult levels.

Individuals with heart disease, kidney disease, or high blood pressure should approach salt intake thoughtfully and in coordination with medical guidance. That said, even these individuals cannot survive without sodium. The goal is appropriate intake, not elimination.

For storage planning, a reasonable estimate is that one adult will consume roughly two to three pounds of salt per year for cooking and basic food needs alone. If you plan to preserve food through fermentation, curing, or brining, that number increases substantially. A five-pound bag of salt per person per year is a conservative baseline for a preparedness pantry. Ten pounds per person puts you in a comfortable position.

Why Salt Stores Better Than Almost Anything Else

Salt does not rot. It does not oxidize. It does not support microbial growth. It does not require cool temperatures or vacuum sealing. Pure salt, kept dry and away from contamination, will remain chemically identical in five hundred years as it is today.

The only storage consideration is moisture. Salt is hygroscopic, meaning it pulls moisture from the air, and if it gets wet, it will clump or, in extreme cases, begin to leach away into the moisture it has absorbed. Store your salt in sealed containers, glass jars with tight lids, food-grade buckets, or the original sealed bags kept inside a dry container. Keep it off concrete floors, which transfer moisture, and away from any area that floods or accumulates humidity.

Iodized salt has a slightly shorter shelf life, not because the sodium chloride degrades, but because the added iodine can dissipate over time, particularly when exposed to heat or humidity. If iodine supplementation matters to you, rotate your iodized salt stock or plan to source iodine from other means, such as seaweed, fish, or supplementation.

For long-term preparedness purposes, non-iodized salt in sealed containers is your most reliable option.

Salt as a Tool, Not Just a Seasoning

One of the practical realities of a world disrupted by war or collapse is that refrigeration becomes unreliable. When refrigeration fails, food preservation methods that predate electricity become essential. Salt is at the center of nearly all of them.

Dry curing preserves meat and fish for months or years without refrigeration. A salt box of pork, a barrel of salt cod, a crock of salt-preserved eggs: these were not quaint traditions. They were how people survived winters, famines, and the gaps between harvests.

Brine pickling preserves vegetables at room temperature for months. A simple saltwater brine will keep cucumbers, beets, green beans, and dozens of other vegetables edible long after they would otherwise have spoiled.

Lacto-fermentation uses salt to create an anaerobic, acidic environment in which beneficial bacteria thrive and harmful bacteria cannot survive. Fermented vegetables are not only preserved, but they are also enhanced in nutritional value, probiotic content, and flavor.

Salt-preserved lemons, a staple of North African cooking, last for months at room temperature and brighten any dish made from stored grains and legumes.

Each of these techniques requires salt in meaningful quantities. Each of them is a skill worth learning now, while the stakes are low and the ingredients are cheap.

A Note on Trading Value

In any prolonged disruption of normal society, salt has historically functioned as a trade commodity. This is not a conspiracy theory or a fantasy. It is documented history. Communities without access to salt have traded extensively for it. Coastal communities have wielded significant power over inland ones precisely because of salt.

This does not mean you should hoard salt as an investment strategy. It means that salt, along with other durable goods, has real value in a world where normal commerce has broken down. A person with fifty pounds of salt is not just fed. They are positioned to help neighbors, to barter for other necessities, and to participate in the informal economies that spring up whenever formal ones collapse.

Store enough for yourself first. Then store a little more.

Where to Start

If you have never thought seriously about food storage, salt is the single best place to begin. It costs almost nothing. A twenty-five-pound bag of non-iodized fine salt costs under ten dollars at most wholesale or club retailers. A five-pound bag of Himalayan salt costs a few dollars more. Coarse sea salt is widely available and inexpensive.

Buy a bag of each this week. Store them in dry, sealed containers on a high shelf where they will not be disturbed. Note the date, though you do not need to worry about it much. Start learning one salt-based preservation technique. Make a simple brine. Ferment a jar of vegetables. Salt-cure a piece of fish.

Please note, I do not buy salt in bulk. It’s a personal choice. I buy the bottles and refillable pouches. Mark and I prefer to open our 5-gallon buckets with Gamma Lids and take out what we need. This way works for us. Is it more expensive, yes it is, but it’s how I want to store my salt safely.

You are not building a bunker. You are restoring a practice that every generation before yours took for granted. You are bringing back into your home the knowledge that kept human beings alive through ice ages, plagues, wars, famines, and all the ordinary catastrophes of ordinary life.

Salt: Everything You Need to Know

Electrolytes: Everything You Need To Know

Final Word

Salt is the oldest food technology in human history. It is also among the most reliable. In a world that may become less predictable than we would like, that reliability is worth more than almost anything else you could put in your pantry.

Stock it now. While it is easy. While it is cheap. While the stores are full and the roads are clear, you have the luxury of choosing to prepare rather than scrambling to survive. That is the time to do it. That time is now. May God bless this world, Linda

The post If We Have A War: Stock Salt Now appeared first on Food Storage Moms.



from Food Storage Moms

Milk Powder for Preppers: The Complete Storage and Survival Guide

Most preppers spend serious time thinking about rice, beans, and canned goods. Milk powder rarely gets the same attention, and that is a mistake. It is one of the most calorie-dense, protein-rich, and versatile ingredients you can stockpile. It reconstitutes into drinkable milk, blends into soups and sauces, and adds nutrition to baked goods when fresh dairy is long gone.

This guide covers everything you need to know: the different types of milk powder, how long each actually lasts, the best storage methods, which brands are worth buying, and how to put it to use when the grid goes down. Whether you are building your first food cache or tightening up a long-term supply, milk powder deserves a real place on your shelf.

Why Milk Powder Belongs in Every Prepper’s Pantry

Fresh milk has a shelf life measured in days. Milk powder, stored correctly, can last decades. That gap alone makes it a critical prep. But the case goes deeper than shelf life.

Nutritionally, milk powder delivers a meaningful punch per serving. A quarter-cup of whole milk powder typically provides around 150 calories, 8 grams of fat, 8 grams of protein, and significant amounts of calcium and vitamin D. In a grid-down or supply-chain disruption scenario, those macronutrients can be hard to source. Kids especially need the calcium and fat for healthy development, and milk powder is one of the few long-shelf-life options that can help fill that gap.

Beyond nutrition, milk powder is a cooking multiplier. It makes oatmeal more filling, thickens soups, enriches bread dough, and creates a base for white sauce, pudding, and cheese sauce from scratch. A pantry without milk powder is missing a foundational ingredient that fresh-food cooking takes for granted.

From a cost and weight standpoint, it also makes sense. A single pound of whole milk powder reconstitutes to roughly one gallon of milk. Compared to storing liquid UHT milk, powder is far lighter to rotate, easier to pack, and more economical per serving.

Related: Butter Powder: The Shelf-Stable Fat They Don’t Want You To Know About

Types of Milk Powder: What You Actually Need to Know

Not all milk powder is the same. The type you choose affects shelf life, nutrition, taste, and best use cases in survival cooking.

Nonfat Dry Milk (Skim)

This is the most widely available and most commonly stored variety. The fat has been removed, which dramatically extends shelf life. Properly sealed in a #10 can or mylar bag with oxygen absorbers, nonfat dry milk can last 20 to 25 years. The tradeoff is taste: reconstituted skim milk powder is noticeably thinner and less rich than whole milk. For drinking straight, many people find it underwhelming. For baking, cooking, and adding to hot drinks, it performs well.

Whole Milk Powder

Whole milk powder retains its fat content, which gives it a much richer flavor but reduces shelf life to roughly 2 to 5 years in an unsealed container, or up to 25 years in a professionally sealed nitrogen-flushed can. The fat is the vulnerability: it can go rancid when exposed to oxygen, heat, or light. If you are buying whole milk powder for long-term storage, prioritize hermetically sealed cans over open bags. For taste and versatility in cooking, whole milk powder is clearly the better option.

Instant vs. Non-Instant

Instant dry milk has been processed to dissolve quickly in water, even cold water. Non-instant (also called regular dry milk) requires warm water and more stirring. For most preppers, instant is more practical since you may not always have the ability or desire to heat water just to reconstitute milk. Non-instant is typically cheaper and works fine if you plan to cook with it rather than drink it.

Buttermilk Powder and Cream Powder

These are specialty items worth considering for a well-rounded pantry. Buttermilk powder is invaluable for baking: pancakes, biscuits, and quick breads depend on its acidity for lift and texture. Cream powder adds richness to sauces and coffee when regular milk is not enough. Neither replaces standard milk powder as a core prep, but both add cooking range that most preppers overlook.

How Long Does Milk Powder Actually Last?

Shelf life claims on packaging are often conservative commercial estimates, not true limits under ideal storage conditions. Here is a practical breakdown:

Type Unopened (Ideal) Once Opened Worst Case (Poor Storage)
Nonfat Dry Milk 20-25 years 1-2 years 2-3 years
Whole Milk Powder 2-25 years* 3-6 months 6-12 months
Instant Dry Milk 2-10 years 1 year 1-2 years
Buttermilk Powder 2-5 years 6-12 months 1-2 years
Cream Powder 2-4 years 3-6 months 6-12 months

*Whole milk powder sealed in nitrogen-flushed #10 cans by manufacturers like Augason Farms or Emergency Essentials can achieve the longer end of that range. Bulk bags from a grocery store will not.

The four enemies of milk powder longevity are oxygen, moisture, heat, and light. Address all four and you are maximizing that shelf life. Ignore any one of them and you are cutting it dramatically.

How to Store Milk Powder for Maximum Shelf Life

Storage is where most preppers either get this right or waste their money. Here is the systematic approach.

Container Choice

  • #10 Cans: The gold standard for long-term storage. Metal provides a complete barrier against light and oxygen infiltration. Many survival food companies sell pre-packed, nitrogen-flushed milk powder in #10 cans ready to shelve. You can also purchase empty #10 cans and a hand seamer to pack your own.
  • Mylar Bags with Oxygen Absorbers: The DIY prepper’s best tool. Use 5-mil thick mylar bags (thinner bags allow oxygen migration over time), add appropriately sized oxygen absorbers for the volume, and heat-seal the bag. A one-gallon mylar bag needs roughly 300-400cc of oxygen absorber capacity. Mylar bags are often stored inside food-grade buckets for physical protection.
  • Food-Grade PETE Plastic Bottles: Suitable for short to medium-term storage (1-5 years) with oxygen absorbers. PETE plastic has low oxygen permeability. Regular HDPE buckets without mylar lining are not suitable for long-term milk powder storage because they allow gradual oxygen transfer.
  • Original Sealed Cans: Many commercial milk powders come sealed from the factory. Do not open until needed. Once opened, transfer to an airtight container immediately.

Oxygen Absorbers

These are non-negotiable for anything beyond a year or two of storage. Oxygen causes fat oxidation (rancidity) and nutrient degradation. A 300cc absorber is appropriate for a quart-sized container; use 2000cc for a one-gallon mylar bag. Purchase in bulk and use them the same day you open the packaging, as they activate on contact with air.

Temperature and Location

Every 10 degrees Fahrenheit above 70 degrees roughly halves the shelf life of stored food. A cool basement, interior closet, or root cellar where temps stay between 50-65 degrees is ideal. Avoid garages, attics, and anywhere with temperature swings. Consistent cool beats occasional cold.

According to the USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service, dried dairy products should be stored in cool, dry conditions away from direct light to maintain quality and prevent off-flavors from developing in the fat component. (USDA FSIS)

Moisture Control

Milk powder is hygroscopic, meaning it actively pulls moisture from the air. Even brief exposure to humidity can cause clumping and accelerate spoilage. Never scoop from a bag and leave it open. Use a dry spoon, reseal immediately, and consider adding a food-safe desiccant packet inside opened containers.

Labeling and Rotation

Label every container with the pack date, not just the best-by date. Rotate first-in, first-out. Keep opened containers accessible for regular use and long-term sealed supply in the back. If you have both whole and nonfat stored, note the difference clearly since they reconstitute at different ratios.

Best Milk Powder Brands for Preppers

Not all milk powder is worth buying for long-term prep. Here are the options that consistently deliver on quality, shelf life, and value.

Augason Farms Nonfat Dry Milk

One of the most popular long-term storage options on the market. Comes in nitrogen-flushed #10 cans with a claimed 20-year shelf life. Widely available through Amazon, Walmart, and directly from the company. Good flavor for reconstituted drinking, and it dissolves readily in warm water. The value per serving is hard to beat for nonfat.

Hoosier Hill Farm Whole Milk Powder

A frequently recommended choice for whole milk powder in the prepper community. Sold in resealable foil bags in various sizes. Rich flavor and good fat content make it superior for cooking. Because it comes in bags rather than cans, you should repack into mylar with oxygen absorbers for anything beyond a 2-year storage window. Widely available on Amazon.

NOW Foods Whole Dry Milk

A solid option for preppers who also track nutritional inputs carefully. NOW Foods tests for quality and publishes product specs. Available in bulk resealable bags. Repack for long-term storage.

Nestle Nido Whole Milk Powder

Originally formulated for markets where refrigeration is unreliable, Nido is an internationally trusted product and widely available in the US in large tin cans. It reconstitutes well and is well-suited for families with children. The tin can packaging provides reasonable protection; reseal tightly after opening and use within a year once opened.

Nido is particularly useful as an everyday-use option that you rotate through, keeping your dedicated long-term storage (sealed cans, mylar) untouched until genuinely needed.

Store Brand Nonfat Dry Milk (Short-Term Budget Option)

If budget is the constraint, grocery store nonfat dry milk in cardboard boxes is a legitimate short-term option (1-2 years). Transfer it immediately to a sealed PETE bottle or mylar bag with an oxygen absorber and you extend that meaningfully. It will not last 20 years, but it gets the job done for a starter pantry.

How to Reconstitute Milk Powder Correctly

Many people who claim to dislike powdered milk have simply made it wrong. Technique matters.

Basic Reconstitution Ratio

The standard ratio for nonfat dry milk is 1/4 cup of powder to 1 cup of water to yield roughly one cup of reconstituted milk. For whole milk powder, check the specific product, but 3 to 4 tablespoons per cup of water is typical. These are starting points; adjust to taste.

Temperature Matters

Cold water produces a better-tasting result than hot water for drinking. Start by mixing the powder into a small amount of cool water to form a smooth paste, then add the remaining water. Hot water can cause clumping and a slightly cooked flavor. For cooking purposes, warm water is fine.

Let It Chill

Reconstituted milk tastes significantly better after being refrigerated for at least an hour, ideally overnight. If you have any cooling capacity in a grid-down situation, this makes a real difference. The flavor mellows and the texture improves.

Blending

In a non-emergency setting, blending reconstituted milk with a hand blender for 20-30 seconds produces a smoother, frothier result that is much closer to fresh milk. Worth doing when you have the power.

Using Milk Powder in Survival Cooking

This is where milk powder really earns its shelf space. Knowing how to cook with it means your food stores go further and your meals stay nutritious.

Baking

Most bread, biscuit, pancake, muffin, and cake recipes that call for milk can use reconstituted milk powder at a 1:1 substitution. You can also add dry milk powder directly to dry ingredients and add the equivalent amount of water to the wet ingredients. This is faster and reduces washing up. Adding 2 to 4 tablespoons of dry milk powder per cup of flour in bread recipes improves protein content, texture, and browning.

Oatmeal and Hot Cereals

Stir 2 to 3 tablespoons of milk powder into dry oats before adding boiling water. The result is creamier oatmeal with meaningfully more protein and calcium per bowl. Over days and weeks of emergency eating, small nutritional upgrades like this accumulate.

Soups and Sauces

Milk powder is the base for white sauce (bechamel) in a grid-down kitchen. Mix 2 tablespoons of powder with 1 tablespoon of fat and add water to create a serviceable cooking cream. Works well in potato soup, cream of wheat, pasta sauce, and gravy.

Protein and Calorie Boosting

Adding a tablespoon or two of milk powder to meals, smoothies, and drinks is a low-effort way to increase calorie and protein density for children, elderly, and anyone in a physically demanding situation. Reconstituted whole milk powder provides roughly 150 calories per cup, making it a meaningful energy source when calories are scarce.

Coffee and Tea

Dry milk powder dissolves acceptably in hot coffee and tea. Whole milk powder produces a richer result. For those who take their coffee with cream, cream powder stored alongside milk powder is worth the added shelf space.

How Much Milk Powder Should You Store?

Recommended quantities depend on your household size, dietary habits, and storage goals. Here is a practical framework.

  • For a 3-month supply for one adult: plan for roughly 4 to 5 pounds of nonfat dry milk powder, which reconstitutes to approximately 16 to 20 quarts of milk.
  • For a 1-year supply for a family of four: most survival food planners suggest 60 to 75 pounds of dry milk for adequate coverage, assuming moderate use in cooking and drinking.
  • FEMA’s emergency food storage guidance recommends at minimum a two-week supply of non-perishable food per household, and dairy alternatives like milk powder are specifically cited as priority items for households with children.
  • A practical approach for most preppers: start with a 3-month supply in sealed #10 cans or mylar bags, rotate a smaller working stock of everyday milk powder (Nido or similar), and expand toward 6 to 12 months of dedicated storage as budget allows. Do not let perfect be the enemy of started.

Signs That Milk Powder Has Gone Bad

Even well-stored milk powder can eventually degrade. Know what to look for before using stored product.

  • Off smell: Fresh milk powder has a clean, faintly sweet smell. Rancidity from fat oxidation smells noticeably sour, musty, or paint-like. If it smells wrong, do not use it.
  • Yellow or gray discoloration: Properly stored milk powder is white to pale cream. Significant yellowing, especially with an off odor, indicates fat degradation.
  • Hard clumping: Some clumping is normal and breaks apart easily if moisture was briefly introduced. Solid, brick-like clumping that will not dissolve indicates significant moisture exposure. Discard.
  • Sour taste in reconstituted milk: Always taste a small amount before using in cooking. If the reconstituted product is noticeably sour or bitter, the batch is compromised.
  • Mold: Visible mold is an immediate discard. If mold is present, the entire container is contaminated.

Milk Powder vs. Other Long-Term Dairy Options

Milk powder is not the only game in town. Here is how it stacks up against alternatives preppers sometimes consider.

UHT (Ultra-High Temperature) Liquid Milk

UHT milk in aseptic cartons lasts 6 to 12 months unrefrigerated. It tastes significantly closer to fresh milk and requires no preparation. The downside: it is heavy, bulky, and more expensive per serving than powder. It is an excellent complement to a powder supply for the early weeks of a disruption, not a replacement for long-term storage.

Evaporated Milk

Canned evaporated milk lasts 1 to 2 years and reconstitutes easily with equal parts water. It works well in recipes and tastes decent. Storage density and shelf life are inferior to milk powder, but it is widely available and requires no special packaging.

Plant-Based Milk Powders

Coconut milk powder, soy milk powder, and oat milk powder are available as long-term storage options and serve preppers with dairy allergies or dietary restrictions. Shelf life varies by product and fat content. Coconut milk powder in particular has strong cooking applications. These are solid additions but do not replace the nutritional profile of dairy milk powder for most preppers.

Discover the Amish Secret to Food Security

Long before freeze-dried meals and warehouse stockpiles, Amish families mastered the art of keeping food on the table through hard winters, crop failures, and uncertain times. Their practical methods for food preservation, pantry management, self-reliance, and homestead resilience have been refined over generations.

The Amish Ways book reveals many of these time-tested strategies, helping modern families build a more secure and self-sufficient lifestyle. If you’re serious about preparedness, food storage, and reducing dependence on fragile supply chains, this book is packed with lessons that still work today.

👉 Get your copy of The Amish Ways and learn the proven skills that have helped Amish communities thrive for generations!

Final Thoughts

Milk powder is underrated in most prepper pantries. It is calorie-dense, protein-rich, extraordinarily shelf-stable when properly stored, and one of the most useful cooking ingredients you can stockpile. Nonfat dry milk in sealed #10 cans or mylar bags with oxygen absorbers is the backbone of a serious dairy prep. Whole milk powder adds flavor and fat for cooking. Buttermilk and cream powder round out a complete setup for anyone serious about maintaining real cooking capability long-term.

Start with a 3-month supply, learn to reconstitute and cook with it now while you can experiment, and scale up from there. The time to get comfortable with shelf-stable food is before you need it.


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Thursday, May 28, 2026

We Asked 500 Preppers What They’d Barter When SHTF. Nobody Said Guns

We ran a poll in one of the largest prepper communities online, and the results caught us off guard. The question: What would you barter in a crisis?

The options covered the usual suspects – food and water, precious metals, ammunition, skills and knowledge, seeds and growing supplies, alcohol and tobacco. Over 500 people voted. And the answers that most prepper websites push as essential? They barely registered.

What dominated instead says a lot about how the experienced prepper community is actually thinking right now – and it’s not what you’d expect from reading the usual “top 10 barter items” articles. The comments were even more interesting than the votes.

People aren’t sitting around dreaming about trading silver coins for canned goods. They’re asking harder questions – about trust, about who they’d actually be willing to trade with, and about what happens when everyone’s food stockpile runs out at the same time.

Why Nobody Voted for Guns and Ammo

This was the most surprising result, and it tells you something important about how the prepper community has matured over the past decade. Guns and ammunition are obviously critical to personal security. Nobody in the thread disputed that. But as a barter item? Hardly anyone voted for it.

The reasoning is that trading ammunition to someone you don’t fully trust means arming a potential threat. That’s a trade-off that gets more dangerous the further into a collapse you go, because the social norms that make people predictable are the first things to erode. Trading a bag of rice to a stranger is low risk. Trading a box of .223 to a stranger is a fundamentally different calculation.

👉 Never (Ever!) Trade This Type of Gun

Several commenters also pointed out that ammunition is a one-use consumable with diminishing returns in a barter economy. Once the person you sold it to fires it, it’s gone. Meanwhile, seeds and knowledge are forever. Ammunition just goes bang once and turns into a brass casing. For personal use, it’s essential. For trade, it’s risky and finite.

Seeds Beat Precious Metals, and It Wasn’t Close

The number one barter asset, according to this poll, was seeds and growing supplies. Not food itself – the ability to grow food. That’s a meaningful distinction, and it reflects how experienced preppers think about time horizons differently than beginners.

A can of beans gets you through a day. A packet of heirloom tomato seeds gets you through a season. And because heirloom seeds produce plants that yield harvestable seeds for next year, they’re effectively a renewable resource. You can trade a handful of seeds today and still have a full garden tomorrow. You can’t say that about a bag of rice or a box of 9mm.

And seeds don’t stop at food. Several commenters brought up medicinal herb seeds as a separate barter category entirely – and for good reason. When pharmacies are closed and supply lines are cut, a garden that grows chamomile, calendula, echinacea, yarrow, and valerian fills a gap that no amount of stockpiled rice ever will. 

A medicinal herb seed kit runs $15 to $30, includes 20 to 30 varieties, and stores just as long as vegetable seeds. 

special offer MK seeds

If you only add one thing to your stockpile after reading this article, make it that. And if you have the space, start growing a few of these now.

Skills Came in Right Behind – But Not the Skills You’d Expect

“Skills and knowledge” was the other dominant answer, and the comments made it clear that people aren’t thinking about the dramatic stuff when they say skills. Nobody mentioned combat tactics or wilderness tracking. The skills preppers actually want to trade are boring, practical, and immediately useful.

One commenter mentioned bread-making and soap-making from scratch but then added something honest that most prepper content rarely acknowledges: finding people who actually want those things is harder than you think.

She pointed out that a lot of people in her area “are afraid” of homemade soap, and plenty of folks already own bread machines. She’s now actively looking for a skill that will be in higher demand – something most preppers never think about until they try to trade and find no buyers. 

Facebook poll with comments

That comment alone is worth more than a hundred listicles about barter items. Because it gets at the core problem with most barter planning: you’re not trading in a vacuum. You’re trading with specific people in your specific community, and if nobody around you wants what you’re offering, it doesn’t matter how useful it is in theory.

The skills that actually came up as high-demand in the comments were:

  • Basic medical care – wound stitching, infection treatment, tooth extraction
  • Mechanical repair – small engines, water pumps, generators
  • Clothing and shoe repair – patching, sewing, resoling
  • Animal husbandry – birthing, feeding, butchering
  • Food preservation – smoking, curing, canning, fermenting

So, keeping this in mind, you should definitely join The Amish Way Academy – that’s how you will learn forgotten skills that will be truly useful when SHTF. From making soap, bread and canning to house heating and handling money like the Amish – this course is all you need (and it’s also made to be engaging and entertaining).

The throughline is that these skills are hard to fake, hard to learn in a crisis, and produce results that people can immediately verify. If you stitch a wound and it heals, word gets around. That reputation becomes your currency.

The Trust Problem Nobody Wants to Talk About

HDAOne of the sharpest comments in the entire thread came from a commenter who broke the barter question into three tiers based on who you’re trading with.

For trustworthy neighbors, he’d trade food and supplies freely. For people in his broader community, he’d add ammunition to the table.

And for someone trying to start a new government? He said they could have his gold and silver in exchange for actual survival goods. That answer flips the entire gold-and-silver prepper narrative on its head. He’s not saying precious metals are worthless.

He’s saying they’re worth exactly as much as the person across from you believes they’re worth – and in a real collapse, that number might be zero. Or it might be high, but only to someone with ambitions that don’t align with yours. The value of gold depends entirely on whether society is stable enough to agree that gold has value. In the immediate aftermath of a collapse, that consensus doesn’t exist.

This tracks with real-world history. During the Great Depression, cigarettes functioned as the default currency for small trades because they were divisible, addictive, and immediately consumable. Precious metals traded at a fraction of their pre-war value because you couldn’t eat them and the people who had food to spare didn’t need them. 

Gold only started regaining value weeks into the crisis, once some sense of a longer-term economy began to form – and even then, it traded at massive discounts compared to pre-war prices, sometimes losing 80% or more of its purchasing power relative to basic goods.

Venezuela’s collapse showed the same pattern. People weren’t trading gold for groceries. They were standing in line for flour and cooking oil. The people who fared best were the ones with tangible skills and tangible goods that addressed tangible problems, not abstract stores of value.

The Barter Myth the Prepper Internet Gets Wrong

Shelves with diverse products and a headline saying 75 items worth more than gold in a crisisIf you read most barter articles online, you’d think the move is to fill a closet with lighters, mini whiskey bottles, and cartons of cigarettes.

And sure, those things have some trade value. But the poll results paint a different picture. People who’ve been prepping for years aren’t building a post-apocalyptic convenience store in their garage.

They’re thinking about who they know, who they trust, and what they can do that nobody else on their street can do.

A box of Bic lighters gets you through one trade negotiation. Knowing how to build a clay oven that feeds an entire street? You’ve got a seat at the table for as long as the crisis lasts. Someone who can set a broken bone, deliver a calf, fix a water pump, or turn raw meat into jerky that lasts six months will never run out of people willing to trade with them. Can’t use that up. Can’t steal it out of a shed. Can’t fake it either.

And that’s what this poll is really saying. Your best barter asset isn’t sitting in a bucket somewhere. It’s in your hands and between your ears.

So What Should You Actually Do?

If this poll reflects how the broader prepper community is thinking, then here’s what the smart money is doing right now.

  • Learn a real skill that solves a physical problem. Medical knowledge tops the list. If you can clean, stitch, and dress a wound, you’re more valuable than someone sitting on a hundred ounces of silver. Second tier: mechanical repair, small-scale food preservation (smoking, curing, fermenting, canning), water filtration and purification, and animal care. Pick one. Get genuinely good at it. Practice on real projects from this book or other similar resources, not just YouTube tutorials.
  • Build a seed library. Buy heirloom seeds (not hybrid, not GMO) in varieties suited to your climate zone. Store them in sealed mylar bags with silica gel packets in a cool, dark place. Better yet, start gardening now so you actually know how to grow the seeds you’re storing. A seed vault means nothing if you’ve never put one in soil. Or better, try my favorite medicinal seed kit that are already packed in sturdy Mylar bags – it’s going to save you a lot of time. 
  • Map your community. Know your neighbors. Know what they can do, what they have, and what they’re likely to need. The commenter who broke bartering into trust tiers had it exactly right – who you’re trading with matters as much as what you’re trading. Build those relationships before you need them. Barter doesn’t start when the grid goes down. It starts with knowing the person across the table well enough to trust them.

In fact, the best thing you can bring to a trade is having skills. And where to learn those skills if not from the Amish, who’ve been through this for at least 200 years?

But as you might already know, the Amish don’t teach outsiders. Two hundred years of off-grid know-how – the food preservation, the remedies, the electricity-free builds – has stayed locked inside closed communities that nobody on the outside ever really gets into.

That’s what makes The Amish Ways Academy different: Eddie Swartzentruber was born into one of the strictest Amish settlements in America, left, and brought every skill his family taught him out with him – on camera, for the first time. It’s around 3 hours of HD video, 45+ skills broken into bite-sized lessons you can watch online at your own pace. No deadlines, you pay once, is yours for life.

So you’re not learning prepper theory from someone who read a book. You’re learning the real thing from someone who grew up doing it. 👉 Enroll here before that door closes again!


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The post We Asked 500 Preppers What They’d Barter When SHTF. Nobody Said Guns appeared first on Ask a Prepper.



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100-Year-Old Life Hacks You Should Try

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes

100-Year-Old Life Hacks You Should Try

It's amazing how much wisdom has been lost to the ages. There are so many simple life hacks that used to be common knowledge. In this video, Household Hacker tries out some life hack inserts that were printed over 100 years ago in 1916.

These inserts are cards that were sold with packs of cigarettes. There are hundreds of them out there, but this video focuses on seven. The first card is about…

1. How To Pull Out Long Nails

The card says, “It is often rather difficult to pull out a long nail from wood into which it has been driven, for when drawn out a short distance, there is no purchase from which to pull it further. If, however, a small block of wood be placed under the pincers, the nail can be pulled right out without difficulty.”

This method follows a basic principle of physics called mechanical advantage, specifically lever mechanics. By placing a small block of wood under the pincers (or under a hammer claw), you increase the distance from the pivot point (where the tool meets the wood) to the point where you apply force. When you push down on the handle, the longer distance to the pivot point lets you exert more force with less effort.

The next card is about…

2. How to Take Ink Stains Out of a Handkerchief

The card says, “A fine linen handkerchief which has had the misfortune to become stained with ink can be restored to its original spotlessness. When the accident occurs, the handkerchief should at once be plunged into milk. After soaking for some time it will be found that the ink stains have disappeared.”

I can't believe I never heard this tip before! It's simple and effective. It works because milk has mild acidic and enzymatic properties that help break down the ink pigments. The longer you leave it in, the better it can work on stubborn stains. It’s surprising that this hack isn’t more well-known, as it works on fabrics besides handkerchiefs too.

The next card is about…

3. How to Cut New Bread into Thin Slices

The card says, “The difficulty of cutting new bread into thin slices can be readily be overcome by the following expedient. Plunge the bread knife into hot water and when thoroughly hot wipe quickly. It will be found that the heated knife will cut soft, yielding new bread into the thinnest slices.”

Of course, this trick was used before the modern bread knife was invented. It works because heating the blade reduces friction, which lets the knife glide smoothly through the dense, sticky texture of fresh bread. Though we have serrated bread knives now, this tip still comes in handy for cakes or other soft foods that tend to squish instead of slice.

The next card is about…

4. How to Clean New Boots

The card says, “New boots are sometimes very difficult to polish. A successful method is to rub the boots over with half a lemon, allow them to dry, after which they will easily polish, although occasionally it may be found necessary to repeat the application of the lemon juice.”

This one makes sense to me as lemons have many applications, especially when it comes to cleaning. Lemon juice acts as a natural degreaser and polish, cutting through residues and helping polish stick. It’s similar to modern cleaning solutions but all-natural. It also leaves a nice fresh smell.

The next card is about…

5. How to Pack Choice Flowers

The card says, “When sending choice flowers a long journey by post or otherwise, an excellent way to keep them from fading is to insert ends of stalks into small holes or slits cut in a raw potato. This will keep the flowers fresh for a week or more. The flowers should also be supported by paper or cotton-wool.”

Most people know to put flowers in water to make them last longer, but if you can't do that, potatoes are a great alternative. Potatoes work as a makeshift reservoir, providing moisture to the flowers for days. It’s a unique twist on keeping blooms fresh, especially when water isn’t an option.

The next card is about…

6. How to Measure With Coins

The card says, “It is sometimes useful to know that half-a-crown equals half an ounce in weight, and three pennies weigh one ounce. A half-penny measures one inch in diameter; half-crown an inch and a quarter, and a sixpence three-quarters of an inch in diameter.”

The material used to make coins has changed since then, so the weight isn't accurate. However, a penny does equal exactly 3/4 of an inch, which means 4 pennies is 3 inches and 16 pennies is 1 foot. This is great to know if you don't have a ruler.

The next card is about…

7. How to Make a Spirit Level

The card says, “This useful instrument can be made by the exercise of a little care and accuracy in the construction of the box and top of the level shown in the picture. The glass tube should be perfectly true, corked at each end, and filled with enough water or spirit to leave a bubble of air. The ends of the tube are fixed in the box by sealing wax, which should cover them over and thus prevent any loss of liquid by evaporation.”

The general idea is good but overly complicated. Instead, just use a glass or plastic bottle with a label on it. Get the liquid down to where it's even with the bottom of the label, then use the bottle to check if something is level.

The next card is about…

8. How to Cool Wine Without Ice

The card says, “If no ice is available for cooling wine, a good method is to wrap the bottle in flannel and place it in a crock beneath the cold water tap. Allow the water to run over it, as shown in the picture, and in about ten minutes the wine will be thoroughly cool and ready for the table.”

Of course, this doesn't just work with wine but with any bottled beverage. You'll have to use a fair amount of water, so I wouldn't do this unless you have no alternative.

If any of these old life hacks confused you, watch the video below to see them demonstrated.

Originally published on Homestead Survival Site.

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The post 100-Year-Old Life Hacks You Should Try appeared first on Urban Survival Site.



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