Today's lot was chickpeas, evaporated milk, custard and pasta sauce and more instant mashjennyjj01 wrote: ↑Sat May 15, 2021 10:07 pm'Man cannot live by bread alone: He must have peanut butter'Jerseyspud wrote: ↑Sat May 15, 2021 8:54 pm Catalogued all food that's arrived recently. Depressing that even though it looks alot that it only added a day calorie wise
Mind you I'd focused on protein so does explain alot
Calories : Cheap and easy : The foundation stash.
Flavour : Essential. You won't want to live for more than a day on just calorific foods.
Protein* : If you want to survive long enough to see your calorific food expire.
Vitamins : Meh! What am I a doctor.
What protein foods did you embrace and why? Long life meat and fish products are indeed expensive.
Adding various tinned fish to my rotating stock actually led me to discover that I liked it and probably enhanced my diet. But those tiny tins of sardines and mackerel are obscenely expensive per kilo. Home Bargain and B&M have some cheap tinned fish, but try before you buy, because some is rubbish ( while some is remarkably good )
I reckon soya mince is one of the best value for money protein stashes. But the trick is to use it to pad out / dilute what real meat you have stored. Pulses are also good for protein, but many of us in the West just don't seem to give them space that they deserve in our diet.
Soylent Green is forecast to be a popular protein source next year
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soylent_Green
Protein wise I have tinned meat, tinned fish, vegetable protein dried and now chickpeas. Oh and some jerky