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- Dec 4, 2017
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You can buy 20kg (50 pound?) Bags of bicarbonate of soda at feed stores for not much money.
They use it as a feed choice cattle lick in feed lots.
They use it as a feed choice cattle lick in feed lots.
I am thinking this is the same thing as baking soda? I have read that of all the things to store or have in our preps, it is an important one. It is not going to be easy to get some if SHTF. I have been buying it in bags from Costco. It has many uses. I don't think it goes bad, unless it gets wet or exposed to something else.You can buy 20kg (50 pound?) Bags of bicarbonate of soda at feed stores for not much money.
They use it as a feed choice cattle lick in feed lots.
I am thinking this is the same thing as baking soda? I have read that of all the things to store or have in our preps, it is an important one. It is not going to be easy to get some if SHTF. I have been buying it in bags from Costco. It has many uses. I don't think it goes bad, unless it gets wet or exposed to something else.
I would keep it in canning jars.Bicarbonate of soda is a pure leavening agent that needs a moisture and and a acid - like vinegar, butter milk, cream of tartar to activate it.
Baking powder is bicarbonate of soda with a acid added in powdered form - cream of tartar.
Buying in bulk it needs to be sealed in air tight bags or it will absorbs moisture and odour from the air rendering it useless.
Pizza stones are a great thing for making not only pizza, but other flat breads. I keep watching for them on Craigslist and at yard sales. They do not come up very often. It seems that people do not get rid of them once they get them. I did finally get one a couple years ago and it stays in my oven.I recently bought some pizza stones to use on the grill b/c I know I will never get an outdoor oven. These worked great! We sprinkled corn meal on the stones before putting the pizzas on and they turned out perfect. If we were out of charcoal, we could use the stones over a campfire with our tripod grill. The stones can be fragile so you'd have to be careful. We found that we didn't need to use the lids b/c we just used the lid on the grill. However, over a campfire, the lids would probably be helpful.
https://www.marthastewart.com/shop/...pc0005-p2c613c436159a504d3755a8dd2c31843.html
I actually bought 6 of these on Amazon so that we can do these when we camp. We can just put the ingredients out and let everyone make their own. I just need to make the dough ahead of time and then we should be good to go./
If we took a poll, you would be in a very small minority of people who can't stand pizza. You are correct, we will probably be in flat bread mode, unless we have prepared for other options.personally I cant stand pizza.
forget the normal loaf of bread as we know it, I think post SHTF we will be eating something that is more like a flat bread or a damper.
I doubt we'll have wheat as we know it post SHTF.
I love pizza, but don't eat much of it, as part of avoiding carbs. A dutch oven is one way to cook it.Not just for pizza, but I seriously covet this wood stove...
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But without that, I should be practicing how to make pizza in a dutch oven.
Thank you. So funny how people love pizza. I love pizza, and Lone Wolf is the only person I've ever known who didn't like pizza, but there have to be more. I've had someone tell me that when they eat pizza, it is the only time that they drink soda. Not sure what that is about. I don't drink soda very often, but I do get that it is good with pizza.what a cool thread, weedy!
i like making pizza now and then. im kinda lazy and just make a flat bread, put some sauce on it,. im liking the contadina pizza sauce. then some shredded cheese, some diced pepperoni and a sprinkle of parmasean, green chiles and black olives. ive canned uop a bunch of pepperoni---bought the long sticks, diced and canned half pints.
pizza is MUST HAVE for the end fo the world ya know. im pretty sure its in the Bi;ll or Rights or something
pretty cool pizza oven
Thank you. This is the ingredients list. Have you converted from grams to American measurements, or do you weigh your ingredients?I just found this thread and wanted to add my $0.02.
If you prep for bread making you can make pizza dough. Same can be said for canning your own tomatoes to make sauce.
I can my own sauce in half pint jars. That makes one pizza per jar. No waste or need to refrigerate the remaining sauce.
I freeze cheese and pepperoni. I haven't figured out how to make pepperoni yet but you can top with fresh veggies from the garden.
I freeze the dough if I don't use it right away after it rises. It will rise again after it thaws. The recipe I use makes 2 pizzas in dough.
My go to dough recipe...
https://altonbrown.com/recipes/the-last-pizza-dough-recipe/
I love pizza, but don't eat much of it, as part of avoiding carbs. A dutch oven is one way to cook it.
I weigh them. I have several scales both digital and analog.Thank you. This is the ingredients list. Have you converted from grams to American measurements, or do you weigh your ingredients?
- 690 grams bread flour, plus 1/2 cup for shaping
- 20 grams kosher salt
- 15 grams sugar
- 9 grams active dry yeast
- 455 milliliters filtered water
- 15 grams olive oil, plus extra for brushing crust
- Sauce and pizza toppings, as desired
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