Thursday, December 18, 2025

Need meat for long-term storage? Here's a very useful option

 

A few readers have contacted me asking what sort of meat they should buy for long-term storage and emergency use.  All the usual answers are well-known, particularly a freezer filled with the meat you normally eat:  but in a long-term emergency situation, you may not have power to run your freezer.  That's where dried and/or canned meat comes in.  (Jerky is basically dried meat, of course, although often over-seasoned.)  I also keep a stock of pemmican, as I wrote a few weeks ago.  What else do I recommend?

Some time ago, author and friend Mike Williamson introduced me to Grabill Country Meats in Indiana.  They're an Amish-run company, producing cans of beef, port, turkey and chicken preserved the Amish way, boiled in the can with water and nothing else at all.  The meat tastes delicious and lasts a very long time, so much so that they don't put a "best by" date on the can.  Last Monday I opened a can of pork chunks that I bought from them twelve years ago, and it looked, smelled and tasted just as good as one bought last year.  Delicious!

They sell 13oz. and 27oz. cans in boxes of twelve only.  I make sure we always have some in our long-term storage, simply because I've never found better-tasting, easier-to-use canned meat.  Their cans may seem expensive, but if you work it out on a cost-per-pound basis (particularly considering the quality of their meat), it's not bad.  The larger cans work out considerably cheaper per pound than the smaller ones, of course.  Shipping costs are a bear, but anything heavy has that problem.

So, if you want to keep a few (or more than a few) cans of "emergency meat" around to feed yourself and your family, Grabill Country Meats has my strong recommendation.  Being canned chunks, it can't be roasted or fried, but it makes great stews and soups.  In emergency, it can be eaten cold out of the can with a spoon.  Good stuff.

Peter


13 comments:

  1. I use Werling and Sons from Ohio. Family farm.

    https://www.werlingandsons.com/shop/beef/?srsltid=AfmBOooF0g-qgqeGf7o0FKhQLZom9NrYHYlkpga9VbP2FdHEyvGQLQNP


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    1. Forgot to say… look under shop, they also sell chicken, pork, bacon in a can.

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  2. Canned meat is cheap insurance, indeed. Life without meat is no fun, as many who lived through the Great Depression attest.

    I would also add canned cheese and butter to the essentials list. I personally know people with $20k worth of firearms who think $500 spent on canned meat is excessive.

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  3. Thank you for the reference. I have canned chicken & beef from Costco/Sams/Walmart storred up but would prefer something like this thats "cleaner"

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  4. Have you tried canning your own meat?

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  5. https://shop.bentonscountryham.com/
    So smoked you don't even have to refrigerate the stuff!
    Seriously, good pork. It's more for cooking, than eating, but if you've never had a BLT with Benton's bacon, lemme tell's ya...

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  6. I use the Costco canned chicken with the shelf stable Madras Lentils as a meal sauce over rice, and find it good enough for a regular meal.
    Gordon Foods / GFS for large spices cheap, Mormon food supply for basic foods, and please, support your local slaughterhouse / butcher for beef.
    John in Indy

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  7. We started cold-packed, pressure-canning beef and chicken years ago. And it's one of the simplest of all canning projects. We buy eye of round roasts - very little fat - and boneless chicken breasts from a local butcher. Cut the meat into 1 inch cubes, "pack" - and I do mean pack - 8 oz glass canning jars, add no water but just a 1/2 teaspoon of salt. Place in your pressure canner for 90 minutes. The meat is tender beyond belief. Soups and stews taste fresh and full of flavor. Or, like Peter says, you can just eat it cold.

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  8. I have been experimenting with biltong. Clay Hayes has an excellent video on the subject. As an old Africa hand, I'm sure you are familiar with it

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  9. Replies
    1. I've tried several different varieties of Keystone meats, but haven't found them appetizing. Some are very salty, while others have a seasoning blend that I can't identify, but which makes them "iffy" for my digestion.

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  10. You know, nobody ever talks about the old Royal Navy Salt Beef in a cask. That ought to be good for a few years.....

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  11. I can my own meat as well as “meals in a jar”. So much better tasting as well as less expensive than purchased canned meats.

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