One thing to do now is to practice feeding my family from my food storage. Â Not just making meals entirely from storage, although that’s good practice too, but just using what’s there so it gets rotated and such as I go. Â While working on tightening up my finances, I started creating monthly menus to reduce food waste, make multiple meals from one cut of meat, make shopping lists easy, and cut back on my impulse purchases. Â Sometimes I need to be flexible to take advantage of what’s in my CSA box or what’s on sale at the store, but overall I am finding my menus useful. Â This dinner made use of all those things.
White Beans & Ham, Skillet Cornbread, and Sautéed Greens
I had a meaty hambone in the freezer from an earlier ham dinner.  I put it in with lots of meat on the bone with the intention of using for a lentil soup or something like that.  I had collard greens, leeks, and some peppers in my box, so I weighed out a pound of white beans and set them to soaking the night before.  The original recipe below.  I added leeks and peppers in addition to the onion, and I sautéed them a little before adding the other ingredients.  I reduced the sugar by half, because I don’t like overly sweet beans.  I also tossed in a bay leaf (removed before serving).  Instead of the diced ham, I threw in the whole bone, then at the end pulled it, pulled off the meat, diced it up, and tossed it back in.  It took longer than 2 hours to get the beans tender enough.  Cooked up some cornbread in a cast iron skillet, and made super simple greens with a bit of lemon since everything else was so rich.  Yum.
White Beans & Ham
1 pound dry great Northern beans
1/2 pound cooked ham, diced
1 small onion, diced
1/2 cup brown sugar
salt and pepper to taste
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1 tablespoon dried parsley
Rinse beans in a large pot; discard shriveled beans and any small stones. Add 8 cups of cold water. Let stand overnight or at least 8 hours. Drain and rinse beans. Return beans to pot and add ham, onion, brown sugar, salt, pepper, cayenne and parsley and water to cover. Bring to a boil; reduce heat and simmer 1 1/2 to 2 hours, until beans are tender. Add more water if necessary during cooking time.
Two things – the basic recipe would be very easy to make all LTS.  With spam instead of ham (I think I would add it in the last 30 minutes; it’s not as sturdy as real ham), and dehydrated onions, you could create it completely from shelf stable foods.  I think dehydrated carrots would be tasty in there.  And you could switch up the seasonings.  Ooh, I think mushroom powder would add  nice umami undertone too.
And … How do people weigh the benefits of storing dried beans v. canned? Â Canned are so much heavier and take more space and are more expensive unless you get them on sale. Â Plus they are way saltier, and what else is in there? Â But dried beans, while they store easily, can last practically forever when stored properly and are dirt cheap, take so much more time to prepare. Â And more water. Â And lots more fuel. If you can nestle a Dutch oven in your heating fire, or you have a wood stove, maybe you can let them cook slowly away while you heat your space and kill 2 birds with one stone. Â But if you are relying on a one burner camping stove, or a rocket stove, that’s a lot of fuel to one pot of beans.
Its one thing if you are “only” planning and prepping for a short term emergency or recoverable disaster. Â Space isn’t as critical, and a bit of extra salt and crud in the cans in the short time frame won’t make much difference I suppose. Â But for the long haul? Â Some of each? Â How to balance it?
p.s. I’m still not smoking. Â I had some nicotine gum to take the edge off a couple times (I already had it from a flight last February, so no money wasted), but I haven’t had an actual cigarette in my hand for over 48 hours. Â I’m grouchy. I’m hating it. Â I’ve wanted to buy a pack soooo badly. Â But I haven’t yet.