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Wise Company

By Tom Sailors
on January 10, 2012

Dehydrated Survival Food from Wise Food Storage


  • Minimum Storage Area

    • Typical Survival Food can take up an incredible amount of space. Space that most families simply don't have.  You can store enough Dehydrated Survival Foods with a 20-25 year Shelf Life to feed a family of 6 for a year in the same amount of space as a normal washer and dryer. Wise Foods,for example, offers unique packaging to their Survival Food, and adds incredible value to the product by making it easier to store and eat. Mylar packaging further prolongs the shelf life of each individual meal. Instead of using #10 cans, which when opened, force you to eat enormous amounts of that particular food all at once to prevent rapid spoilage, Wise Foods packages each meal in its own separate Mylar pouch, thus eliminating waste. A Mylar pouch is basically a flexible tin can that gives you the ability to eat what you want, when you want.

  • Freeze Dried AND Dehydrated 

    • Dehydrated and freeze-dried food maintains its original flavor, shape, color and texture, and retains its nutritional value. With nearly all (98%) of the water removed, the food is condensed in volume and weight. With the addition of water, the food is quickly and completely reconstituted.

  • JUST ADD WATER 

    • Wise Foods Survival Meals, in particular are simple to prepare by adding water directly into the pouch and waiting 10-12 minutes. On average, each individual Survival Food serving requires 1 cup of water. Using hot water will speed up the process of reconstitution and the meal will be hot and ready to eat as soon as reconstitution is complete. However, many of the meals can be re-hydrated and eaten even if the water is cold. 
>>Back to WISE FOOD Packages>>

Mountain House

By Eric Larkin
on January 10, 2012

  • 25+ Year Shelf Life Packaged in #10 Cans 
  • ALL Freeze Dried for Home Cooked Meal Taste 
  • JUST ADD WATER  
  • Excellent Quality
  • Amazing Taste
  • #10 Cans instead of plastic packages


Freeze-drying has several advantages over other food preservation methods.

  • Frozen foods retain fresh flavor and nutritional value, but require uniform, low temperature storage conditions. Dehydrated and canned foods are shelf-stable, but high-temperature processing can degrade flavor, texture and nutritional content. Freeze-drying combines the best of these processing methods. It preserves freshness, color and aroma similar to frozen food, while providing the shelf-stable convenience of canned or dehydrated food. Freeze-dried foods:
    • Taste fresh. Freeze-dried foods, like frozen, retain virtually all their fresh-food taste and nutritional content. Freeze-drying removes the water, not the flavor.
    • Look fresh. Freeze-dried foods maintain their original shape and texture, unlike dehydrated foods, which shrink and shrivel due to high-temperature processing. Freeze-drying removes water under low temperatures (typically a maximum of 100 to 130 degrees F), which keeps intact the moisture channels and food fibers. Just add water, and in minutes every fresh food detail returns.
    • Weigh less than fresh. Freeze-dried foods have 98% of their water removed. This reduces the food's weight by about 90%. Mountain House products light weight and compact so you can carry several days of food in a small backpack. This also allows Grab and Go if needed in an emergency.
    • Stay fresh. Freeze-dried foods can be stored at room temperature, without deterioration or spoilage. This is because freeze-drying and packaging remove both water and oxygen - the two primary causes of food deterioration. Mountain House, backpacking products are immediately packed in a unique moisture and oxygen-barrier packaging to preserve the food's flavor, texture, color, and nutrients. To "double" ensure freshness and prevent the food from turning rancid, an oxygen scavenger packet is placed in each pouch. The oxygen scavenger consists of iron oxide, which absorbs oxygen within the pouch. This product is not harmful to your health, but is not meant to be eaten.
    • Almost any food, from apples to zucchini, can be freeze-dried. So can entire meals, such as omelettes, hamburgers, or Chicken a la King. 
  • Mountain House #10 Cans
    • #10 Cans give the consumer peace of mind when it comes to longevity. They have more protection against the animals and bugs than plastic sealed bags.
    • They will out last plastic sealed bags, while keeping in freshness and taste.
    • Easily stackable


>>Back to MOUNTAIN HOUSE Packages>>

Survive Winter (Solar Heat)

By Brandon Floyd
on October 08, 2011

Winter Survival

One of the biggest errors that people make in preparation for disaster living is the idea that it will only happen in good weather.  Surviving winter during below freezing temperatures requires more than just warm clothing, food storage, and a blanket or sleeping bag. Even if you have all of these items and some sort of shelter the idea would be your doing just that… SURVIVING.

We are developing a solar panel heat source with a firm here in the united states in a cost effective platform that would allow for a product to do three thing based on one solar panel the size of your computer screen.

The solar panel will provide three attachments with a fourth accessory available for purchase. 

1. Light (your panel would provide the equivalent of about two 40 watt light bulbs of light for your needs in the evening.

2. Charger (your panel would provide electricity to charge a cell phone, I-pad, or radio)

3. Heat (your panel would provide power to a portable heater)

The fourth and optional accessory is a water heater, this would allow you to cycle water through your water heater in order to bathe or clean dishes.

The most innovative and unique portion of our product is the heater, which would allow for comfortable living with in a dwelling for extended survival during and after a natural disaster.

Imagine– Snow falling while you have warm shelter, warm food and clean water all of which Survival Food co. provides at your convenience.


Food - Storage

By Brandon Floyd
on October 08, 2011

Freeze Dried Dehydrated / Dried - Canned

Freeze Dried Foods - with out a doubt is the best way for storing food long-term from ancient times storing food in salt to drying, canning and today having the luxury of freezing foods we now know that the universal solution is freeze-dried foods. One of the advantages of storing freeze-dried foods is the shelf life of at least 25 years when vacuum packed and nitrogen sealed in #10 cans. Another benefit is preparation, just add water! If a Jet boil is not available, room temperature or cold water can be used, too. Because no cooking is needed, the freeze-dried foods require much less water and fuel than most fresh, frozen or dehydrated foods which can come in handy if you are not in a position to heat water or don't have access to clean water.

Our foods are delicious as well - the real benefit to storing food this way is the quality in consumption - the nutrients are preserved as well as flavor. The meals are prepared and cooked the same way you would cook a meal for your family at home or even eat a prepared meal at a restaurant; it is then that the food is prepared through the freeze drying process in order to provide you with the same flavors and nutrients. 

Dehydrated or Dried Foods - are susceptible to insect contamination and moisture re-absorption and must be properly packaged and stored immediately. First, cool completely. Warm food causes sweating which could provide enough moisture for mold to grow. Pack foods into clean, dry insect-proof containers as tightly as possible without crushing. Dried foods should be stored in cool, dry, dark areas. Recommended storage times for dried foods range from 4 months to 1 year. Because food quality is affected by heat, the storage temperature helps determine the length of storage; the higher the temperature, the shorter the storage time. Most dried fruits can be stored for 1 year at 60ºF, 6 months at 80ºF. Vegetables have about half the shelf-life of fruits. 

This method is typically done in the home by someone with no other means as it is tedious and does not yield a quality long-term solution for storing food. 

Canned Foods - many fresh foods contain from 10 percent to more than 30 percent air. How long canned food retains high quality depends on how much air is removed from food before jars are sealed.
Raw-packing is the practice of filling jars tightly with freshly prepared, but unheated food. Such foods, especially fruit, will float in the jars. The entrapped air in and around the food may cause discoloration within 2 to 3 months of storage. Raw-packing is more suitable for vegetables processed in a pressure canner.
Hot-packing is the practice of heating freshly prepared food to boiling, simmering it 2 to 5 minutes, and promptly filling jars loosely with the boiled food. Whether food has been hot-packed or raw-packed, the juice, syrup, or water to be added to the foods should also be heated to boiling before adding it to the jars. This practice helps to remove air from food tissues, shrinks food, helps keep the food from floating in the jars, increases vacuum in sealed jars, and improves shelf life. Preshrinking food permits filling more food into each jar.
Hot-packing is the best way to remove air and is the preferred pack style for foods processed in a boiling-water canner. At first, the color of hot-packed foods may appear no better than that of raw-packed foods, but within a short storage period, both color and flavor of hot-packed foods will be superior.
The high percentage of water in most fresh foods makes them very perishable. They spoil or lose their quality for several reasons:

  • growth of undesirable microorganisms-bacteria, molds, and yeasts,
  • activity of food enzymes,
  • reactions with oxygen,
  • moisture loss.
Microorganisms live and multiply quickly on the surfaces of fresh food and on the inside of bruised, insect-damaged, and diseased food. Oxygen and enzymes are present throughout fresh food tissues.
Proper canning practices include:
  • carefully selecting and washing fresh food,
  • peeling some fresh foods,
  • hot packing many foods,
  • adding acids (lemon juice or vinegar) to some foods,
  • using acceptable jars and self-sealing lids,
  • processing jars in a boiling-water or pressure canner for the correct period of time.
Collectively, these practices remove oxygen; destroy enzymes; prevent the growth of undesirable bacteria, yeasts, and molds; and help form a high vacuum in jars. Good vacuums form tight seals which keep liquid in and air and microorganisms out.


(portions extracted from "So Easy to Preserve", 5th ed. 2006. Bulletin 989, Cooperative Extension Service, The University of Georgia, Athens. Revised by Elizabeth L. Andress. Ph.D. and Judy A. Harrison, Ph.D., Extension Foods Specialists.)


Purifying the Water

By Brandon Floyd
on August 27, 2011

Don't assume that water at a campground is safe to drink, even if it comes from a spigot. 

The water in lakes, rivers, and springs may look crystal clear but often contains various bacteria that can cause illness. Unless it is posted or an official from the campground has told you that the water is safe to drink, you must use one of three purification methods: filter, chemical tablets, or boiling.

 Filters: With a filter, you simply pump water from the source into a container. The filter mechanically removes protozoa and bacteria, and you are good to go. If the filter also has an iodine system built-in, it will kill viruses too.

Chemical tablets: Water purification tablets, such as Potable Aqua, are a second option. They employ chemicals, usually iodine, to kill harmful bacteria. Tablets are easy, inexpensive, and quick, but can affect the taste of the water.

Boiling: Bringing water to a rolling boil is a third option. Boiling has no effect on taste. But it has drawbacks as well. Boiling water is time-consuming, must be done in small batches. Jet-Boil a self contained cooking unit works well for this.

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