Chris Papasadero | December 15, 2023
The Gourmet Prepper Edition
On living your best life during stressful times
Recommended Products
A manual lever espresso maker for making coffee.
A manual burr grinder for coffee beans.
A manual, portable espresso maker for making coffee.
A comprehensive guide on homebrewing, for beginners and advanced brewers.
A manual grain mill for processing grains into flour, suitable for situations without electricity.
A kit for brewing alcohol at home.
A guide for beginners on hunting deer for food.
A guide on how to butcher livestock and game.
A series of books on folk culture and survival skills.
A fireproof, waterproof, EMP-proof bag for protecting important documents
A printed road atlas for navigation.
A health care handbook for practitioners in remote areas.
An adjustable-height grill for campfire cooking.
Chris Papasadero is professional dilettante, former Green Beret, and co-author of one of WITI’s most popular article, The Go Bag Edition.
Chris here. Just because you’re prepping for the apocalypse, doesn’t mean you can’t exercise a little taste. Given that there’s a strong risk you might still die within the first week of a major catastrophe, you may as well enjoy it. To help, I’ve prepared this companion list to my original Go Bag — TP and bottled water not included.
Once you’ve converted your parking strip into a micro wheat field, you’ll need some way to process it into flour. Behold, the manual grain mill. If you have a generator, consider an attachment for your stand mixer.
Outdoor wood ovens are great, but why not take some inspiration from Francis Mallmann and learn to cook on an open fire? You can construct a Calder-style wire mobile like him, buy an adjustable-height grill, or just use chicken wire and proper fire-zone management.
You’ll drink or trade your booze away within the first 72 hours, so you’ll want to replenish with a home brewing kit. (Mead is even easier.) Here are some important books on home brewing. Note: I never bought a full kit, just built one out of stuff from Webstraunt Store and Home Depot.
Get a Nanopresso or Flair manual espresso maker and burr grinder – assuming you’ve still got a guy who’s smuggling arabica up from Brazil.
A wine cave is good for protecting your magnums and your magnums. Also good for dry curing at home. Build one while you can, or at least get yourself a nice locking storage rack. Worst case, you can always get on your ‘Root Cellaring’ and dig a hole.
Plant a victory garden, or at least a herb garden. Don’t forget something to keep away the rabbits and raiders.
Buy a bunch of meat, store it, and dry it. (I’m still looking for a halfway decent recipe for pemmican, if anyone has any pointers).
Learn to hunt and fish by asking your local groundskeeper or yeoman to teach you. After you’ve felled your first stag, learn to butcher it.
Speaking of learning, there’s a whole host of prepper books out there, and most of them are useless. I don’t have any recommendations other than Where There Is No Doctor and the entire Foxfire series. While you’re at it, get a copy of the Iliad in Greek and the Liddel and Scott Lexicon and work your way through the translation on your own. Also, consider downloading Kiwix and keeping the whole of Wikipedia on a local drive — just be sure to store it in a waterproof, fireproof, EMP-proof faraday bag. Other resources for restoring a civilized post-collapse civilization include forums like r/datahoarder and the offline version of Project Gutenberg.
Get a printed map of your area, ideally a Rand McNally Road Atlas. Mark all the best places for foraging truffles and trading ammo for cheese.
Speaking of cheese, this is the best, most scientific book on making it. Befriend your local dairy farmer.
Thanks for reading,
Noah (NRB) & Colin (CJN)
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