This article has been excerpted from
"An Emergency and Outdoor Bread Manual." This
28 page manual can be had free and without purchase
from The Prepared Pantry.
Click here to get a free manual.
Emergency Bread

This article was submitted by Dennis Weaver.
He is the general manager of The Prepared Pantry,
which produces baking mixes that are designed
and packaged for both storage and everyday use.
You can obtain a free catalog or sign up for
a weekly informational newsletter at
Prepared
Pantry.
*****************
Last week, a winter storm roared through
our state. Winds reached nearly 70 miles per
hour. Roads were suddenly closed, including
the interstate highways, and hundreds of motorists
were stranded. Icy snow pelted everything, clinging
to power lines and poles. Soon there was a 300
mile swath of power outages. As the storm blew
past, temperatures dropped toward zero.
At our home, we broke out lanterns and extra
bedding. With the outside conditions, with the
road closures, and the wide swath of the storm,
we knew we could be without power for days.
We began to think about how prepared we really
were for an emergency. We had lots of food in
the pantry--including bread mixes and flour
to make bread, the staple of our lives--but
no stove or oven. What would you eat if you
were stranded without power? It could happen;
it does happen. A natural disaster, a breakdown
in the delivery system as the Northeast experienced
last year, or a terrorist strike against the
infrastructure could leave you without power.
Don't despair. You probably have a source
of heat-a camp stove, a barbeque grill, a fireplace,
or a place to build a fire. (Never use a grill
or camp stove in an enclosed room.) In most
cases, you can find a way to eat your daily
bread--even without an oven. Fry it. Those indulgent
raised, glazed donuts are fried. You can do
the same with any dough. Serve them hot with
a little butter and syrup or honey and you will
have a treat that the kids will clamor for.
Simply mix the bread as instructed and let
the dough rise. Instead of forming loaves, roll
or pat the dough on a counter until it is about
1/2-inch thick. Slice the dough into wedges,
separate the pieces, and let them rise again
until twice as thick.
Heat a pan of oil until hot and slip the
dough pieces two or three at a time into the
hot oil. When one side is browned, turn the
dough over. If the oil is hot enough, the dough
should absorb little oil. When done, drain the
fried bread on paper towels.
Pictured above is bread dough fried into
five-inch wedges then slathered in butter and
served with apricot preserves.
Boil it. Bagels are boiled. Actually, they
are boiled and then baked. You can form your
dough into a bagel shape, let it rise, and then
gently slip it into a large pan of rapidly boiling
water. Once the bread is firm, remove it with
a slotted spoon, let dry, and then fry each
side in a lightly greased skillet to create
a crust and finish the cooking. The advantage
in this technique is that you can use much less
oil (and less fat in your diet) than deep frying.
Bake it. That's right-even without an oven
you can bake bread. It's easy to do on most
outdoor grills. (Be prepared. Always have extra
propane or charcoal on hand but never use an
outdoor grill indoors.) Baking requires heat
from both above and below. If your grill doesn't
have a cover, use a bucket or tub to capture
the heat and direct it down onto the bread.
(You want as much heat coming from above as
below.) If the bread is too close to the heat-as
it likely is-stick something under the bread
pan to raise it-a couple empty tuna cans, an
old brick-almost anything will work as long
as it doesn't insulate the bread from the heat.
You can use a Dutch oven to bake bread. Line
the Dutch oven with aluminum foil and place
the dough on the foil or lay the bread pan in
the Dutch oven. Stack hot coals on the lid.
You can bake bread over an open fire with two
pans. Two pie tins will work for biscuits.
To form a makeshift oven, put a large heavy
pan on warm coals, a lid or baking sheet over
the top, and stack on hot coals. Remember, you
are trying to get as much heat from above as
below. (The tendency is to have too much heat
at the bottom.)
A good place to practice these techniques
is on your next camping trip. You can become
a real pro at making unconventional bread while
enjoying the treat of fresh bread while camping.
We guarantee that fresh bread over an open fire
will make you the envy of the campground. With
a little imagination, you can bake almost any
bread without an oven.
If you want to try frying bread, most white
or wheat bread recipes are nearly foolproof.
Even without the emergency, it won't go to waste.
We can hope that disaster never strikes but
it's nice to know that those bread fixin's in
the pantry can be used in an emergency.