10 Pioneer Recipes Every Prepper Should Learn (2024)

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10 Pioneer Recipes Every Prepper Should Learn (1)

There is a bit of a romantic fantasy about what it must have been like for the pioneers who traveled out west more than a hundred years ago. The idea of land that stretches on for miles without a single building or road was both exciting and frightening to them.

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However, they had the skills they needed to fend for themselves without the conveniences of big cities. If a major collapse happens, it will be the people with those kinds of skills who make it.

If we ever find ourselves in a world that resembles the pioneer days (no electricity, no running water, etc.), people will have to learn how to cook all over again. Cooking over a fire is a lot different than cooking in the microwave or on an electric stove. Certain meals and recipes are going to require a little tweaking.

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Back in the pioneer days, their recipes were very simple. They didn’t have specialty grocery stores filled with hard-to-find ingredients or things that didn’t store well. They had pantry items and prepared everything from scratch. The lucky pioneers had access to fresh milk and eggs. The unlucky did without.

Pioneers relied a great deal on Dutch ovens to cook their meals on the trail. Recipes didn’t involve specific temperatures. Rather, it was just a matter of putting ingredients into the Dutch oven and letting it cook over a fire.

In this article, I’m going to share some simple recipes from those days. You may want to familiarize yourself with these recipes so you can cook meals when there isn’t any electricity and you only have the ingredients you’ve been stockpiling.

Keep in mind, the staples in a pioneer diet are a bit different than they are for us today.

1. Corn Dodgers

These are essentially round bits of cornbread that can be eaten on the move or served with stew or chili.

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups cornmeal
  • 2 tablespoon butter
  • 1 tablespoon sugar
  • ½ tsp salt
  • 2 cups milk
  • 1 tsp baking powder

Instructions:

  1. Get your Dutch oven nice and hot.
  2. Use a saucepan to cook cornmeal, butter, salt, sugar, and milk.
  3. Remove from heat and let sit for about five minutes.
  4. Mix in the baking powder.
  5. Use a tablespoon to drop spoonfuls of the mix into the Dutch oven.
  6. Cook for about 10 to 15 minutes or until the edges are brown.

2. Corned Beef

This isn’t something you cook, but without refrigeration, salting meat was the only way to really preserve it. The corned beef can then be used in a variety of recipes.

Ingredients:

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  • 10 pounds of beef
  • 2 cups salt
  • 2 cup molasses
  • 2 tablespoon saltpeter
  • 1 tablespoon pepper
  • 1 tablespoon of cloves

Instructions:

  1. Combine the salt and remaining ingredients in a small bowl.
  2. Rub the mixture into the beef.
  3. Allow the meat to sit for 10 days, making sure to turn the meat daily.

3. Cornmeal Mush

Easy breakfast that will stick to the ribs and keep everyone full until the midday meal.

Ingredients:

  • 4 cups boiling water
  • 1 cup cornmeal
  • 1 tbsp lard
  • 1 tsp salt
  • Dried currants

Instructions:

Put the currants in the boiling water and let cook for a few minutes. Add in the cornmeal and keep stirring to keep it from clumping. Add in the lard and salt and continue to stir for about three minutes. Remove from heat and serve immediately.

You can add butter and molasses for flavor.

4. Cured Bacon

Cured bacon was an essential food for the pioneers as they traveled out west, often carrying hundreds of pounds worth of it in their wagons. In order to ensure that the meat would not go bad under the sun, it would first be cured and then packed in a barrel to stop the fat from melting.

Ingredients:

  • Ham
  • Brown Sugar
  • Salt
  • Saltpeter
  • Molasses
  • Bowl
  • Barrel

Instructions:

  1. Mix the saltpeter, sugar, and molasses together in a bowl to form a brine
  2. Sprinkle salt over your ham
  3. Pour your brine cure over your ham before placing it into the barrel to cure.
  4. Give the meat at least four weeks to cure all the way

When the time comes to cook bacon, just cut the ham pieces into smaller strips.

5. Hasty Pudding

Also known as Indian pudding, hasty pudding was in use for hundreds of years by the pioneers and the people who came before them and served as a predecessor for the pudding that we’re used to today.

Ingredients:

  • Water (3 cups worth)
  • Salt (half teaspoon)
  • Cornmeal (half cup)

Instructions:

  • Pour the salt in with the water
  • Boil the salted water over a medium to high flame
  • Continue to stir with a spoon so clumps of salt will not form
  • Now add in your cornmeal, doing so with a steady flow
  • Continue to stir for around twenty minutes until the mixture has been cooked

6. Jerky Gravy

Gravy can be poured over soda biscuits, potatoes or even cornbread to help make a meal a little heartier and flavorful.

Ingredients:

  • Jerky chopped
  • Lard/grease
  • Flour
  • Salt and pepper
  • Milk

Instructions:

  1. Heat grease and add jerky until it is nice and crispy.
  2. Remove the chunks of jerky.
  3. In a small bowl, combine the milk and flour to form a paste.
  4. Pour the paste into the grease and slowly stir until smooth.
  5. Add back in the jerky bits and season to taste.

7. Mormon Johnnycake

A take on the standard pancake, but made with cornmeal for a fluffy, filling addition to a soup or stew.

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups cornmeal
  • ½ cup flour
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 2 cups buttermilk
  • 2 tablespoon molasses
  • 2 eggs (optional)

Instructions:

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  1. Mix dry ingredients and then add in the milk and molasses.
  2. Eggs can be added to make the Johnnycake a little fluffier.
  3. Pour batter into a greased 9” pan and cook over high heat for about 20 minutes.

8. Potato Cakes

Potato cakes were essentially the predecessor to modern-day pancakes, and the pioneers relied on them extensively just like they did the cured bacon.

Ingredients:

  • 6 potatoes (ensure they are grate and peeled first)
  • Salt (two tablespoons)
  • Milk (half cup)
  • Eggs (two)
  • Flour (one cup’s worth)
  • Bowl

Instructions:

  1. Wash your potatoes by rinsing underwater.
  2. Mix the flour, eggs, milk, and salt together in a bowl.
  3. Take a mid-sized spoonful of the mixture and pour into a pan.
  4. Add shortening to the mixture if you so desire.
  5. Cook the cakes as if they were pancakes and become golden brown on both sides.

9. Soda Biscuits

Quick and easy and can be eaten alone or dipped in a little grease for flavor. Dipping the biscuits in syrup is also a way to add a little sweetness to a breakfast meal.

Ingredients:

  • 3 1/3 cups of flour
  • Milk
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1 tsp salt

Instructions:

  1. Pour the flour into a bowl and slowly add one tablespoon of milk at a time to form a stiff dough.
  2. In a small dish, dissolve the baking soda in about a tablespoon of milk.
  3. Mix it into the dough.
  4. Add salt and mix again.
  5. Roll out the dough until it is nice and thin.
  6. Cut circles out of the dough.
  7. Cook in a Dutch oven or standard oven until the sides are brown and the biscuits are no longer doughy.

10. Spotted Pup

Rice with some sweet flavoring can be served as breakfast, dessert or dinner.

Ingredients:

  • Cooked rice
  • Milk
  • Eggs
  • Salt
  • Sugar
  • Raisins
  • Nutmeg
  • Vanilla

Instructions:

The amount of rice you cook will depend on the number of people you are feeding.

  1. Put the rice in a Dutch oven and add in the rest of the ingredients to taste.
  2. Heat until the eggs are cooked thoroughly.

Some of these recipes will take practice. You’ll have to be familiar with your Dutch oven, cook things slightly longer or shorter, and increase or decrease ingredients to improve the taste.

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If you want to learn more about pioneer skills and recipes, watch the video below.

10 Pioneer Recipes Every Prepper Should Learn (2)

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10 Pioneer Recipes Every Prepper Should Learn (3)

10 Pioneer Recipes Every Prepper Should Learn (2024)

FAQs

What are the top 10 survival foods? ›

  • Meats & Beans. Canned meat, chicken, turkey, seafood. and other protein-rich foods, such as. ...
  • Vegetables. Canned vegetables and vegetable juices. ...
  • Fruits. Canned fruits and fruit juices. ...
  • Milk. Canned, boxed or dried milk and shelf- ...
  • Grains. Ready-to-eat cereal, crackers, pretzels, ...
  • Water. Enough for 1 gallon per day.

What is the longest lasting food for survival? ›

Indefinitely Shelf-Stable Foods from the Pantry
  • Canned goods (glass and can) with various contents.
  • Crackers, Toast or Canned bread, Hardtack.
  • Vinegar.
  • Cornstarch.
  • Spirits, Wine.
  • Nonfat dry milk.
  • Freeze-dried coffee / Instant coffee.
  • Tea.

What should I stock up on for survival? ›

Basic Disaster Supplies Kit
  • Water (one gallon per person per day for several days, for drinking and sanitation)
  • Food (at least a several-day supply of non-perishable food)
  • Battery-powered or hand crank radio and a NOAA Weather Radio with tone alert.
  • Flashlight.
  • First aid kit.
  • Extra batteries.
  • Whistle (to signal for help)
Aug 4, 2023

What are the long lasting pioneer foods? ›

Dried fruit: To dry fruit, pioneers would lay the sliced fruit out in the sun. Tubers (potatoes, turnips, etc.): These were also a pioneer favorite because they lasted a long time without spoiling. Tubers could also be foraged easily on the frontier.

What 2 foods can you survive on? ›

Grains and legumes constitute the cornerstone of any survival diet. They are essential for providing sustainable energy and nutrients in challenging situations. They are packed with essential nutrients and can be stored for long periods, making them ideal for survival food storage.

What's the best food to stockpile? ›

These items make excellent additions to any disaster preparedness kit:
  • Peanut butter.
  • Canned tuna.
  • Canned meats.
  • Beef jerky.
  • Beans.

What is the only food that has an unlimited shelf life? ›

Salt // Forever

Since it's a mineral, salt essentially has an infinite shelf life, and because our body needs it, that makes it a critical commodity. So if you keep your salt in an air-tight container, you could probably pass it down to your grandchildren. Honestly.

What single food can you live on the longest? ›

The only food which comes close to being something you could survive on long term as a sole ingredient is the potato. The fact that the potato has Vitamin C means that scurvy is not a risk like it would be with almost any other food source lacking in this nutrient.

What foods never expire? ›

9 Foods That (Almost) Never Go Bad
  • 01 of 09. Soy Sauce. © Getty Images/iStockphoto. ...
  • 02 of 09. Worcestershire Sauce. © MCT via Getty Images. ...
  • 03 of 09. Honey. © Getty Images. ...
  • 04 of 09. Sugar. © Getty Images/iStockphoto. ...
  • 05 of 09. Rice. © Getty Images/iStockphoto. ...
  • 06 of 09. Dried Vegetables. ...
  • 07 of 09. Peanuts. ...
  • 08 of 09. Canned Fish.
Mar 15, 2023

What should I stockpile as a prepper? ›

If you have the space, experts recommend a week's supply of food and water. Choose foods that don't require refrigeration and are not high in salt. Your stockpile should also contain flashlights, a manual can opener, a radio, batteries and copies of important documents.

What are considered the top three survival items? ›

As you said, food, water and shelter are the essence of survival, so the most important objects you can have with you are those that help you get food, water and shelter. #3) A knife. A good cutting edge is probably the most obvious tool you will need for survival in the wilderness.

How much cash should you stockpile? ›

“As a general rule of thumb, having access to $1,000 in cash at home would ensure you can at least pay for immediate expenses in the case of a national emergency,” she said.

What did the pioneers eat for breakfast? ›

Beans, cornmeal mush, Johnnycakes or pancakes, and coffee were the usual breakfast. Fresh milk was available from the dairy cows that some families brought along, and pioneers took advantage go the rough rides of the wagon to churn their butter.

What cheap foods last the longest? ›

10 Cheap (and Healthy) Foods that Last a Long Time
  • Dried Beans and Lentils. Average Price: Under $2 for a 1-pound bag. ...
  • Brown Rice and Other Whole Grains. Average Price: About $2 (depending on where you purchase) for a 1-pound bag. ...
  • Frozen Vegetables. ...
  • Peanut Butter. ...
  • Canned Tuna. ...
  • Eggs. ...
  • Whey Protein. ...
  • Apples.

What did Mormon pioneers eat? ›

Poor families gleaned wheat from fields. Pioneers in 1847 learned about local foraging from indigenous tribes like the Goshutes. Pioneers ate wild sego bulbs, rose hips, berries, onions, nettles, Amaranth, dandelion greens, wild mushrooms, and artichokes. They hunted elk, rabbit, sage hen, duck, trout, and salmon.

What 4 foods can you survive on? ›

A balanced diet of survival food will ensure that your body is getting all the protein, carbs, minerals, and vitamins it requires to remain healthy. If you could only select five foods to survive on, potatoes, kale, trail mix, grains, and beans would get you pretty far.

What to stock up on if there is a war? ›

If you have the space, experts recommend a week's supply of food and water. Choose foods that don't require refrigeration and are not high in salt. Your stockpile should also contain flashlights, a radio, manual can opener, batteries and copies of important documents.

What are the 4 super foods? ›

So although there's no such thing as a “superfood”, we've put together a shortlist of four foods that have substantial evidence behind them.
  • Garlic. ...
  • Dark berries. ...
  • Spirulina. ...
  • Leafy greens. ...
  • Don't listen to the hype.
Jan 31, 2023

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