PREP Scotch Broth Recipie AGAIN!

SNOWSQUAW

Veteran Member
Hi All
I felt led to post this recipie again as I am going to make 3 years worth next week. This is for my family and to share with friends. I think times are going to get very rough here and I want to be max ready. I did the math based on the recipie:

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G'morning all!

SCOTCH BROTH MIX.

You'll need a large and long container, - we use the Rubbermaid ones which are approx. 4ft x 2 ft long. This will allow you to make up *batches* of 176lbs of soup mix at a time, which you then package in Mylar Bags w/oxygen absorbers, heat seal (we have a steam iron and a plank of wood 36" x 20" which we just smooth the bag out across and iron shut for a vacuum seal) and store in smaller Rubbermaid containers which each take the 176lbs you'll be packaging. The ones we use say they will hold 26 gallons (volume) and they cost about $6 each here. Not much more than a cardboard box from U-Haul.

You'll need to make it in 12 batches, - it's hard work to mix.
For each batch you'll need...

4 x 22lb (or 10kg) rice. (Any kind will do).
2 x 11lb (or 5kg) kidney beans
2 x 11lb (or 5kg) barley
2 x 11lb (or 5kg) lentils (yellow)
1 x 5.5lb(or 5kg) green split peas
1 x 5.5lb(or 5 kg)chick peas

3 x 10lb canisters of powdered soup mix.

Method:

Put in two bags of rice to mixing container
Then add each of the other ingredients 5kg at a time, mixing as you go. (Use surgical gloves or you'll have no nails left, LOL!).
When you have all the other ingredients mixed in with the first two bags of rice, add the last two bags of rice and *REALLY* mix well or you'll get all rice on the bottom of your mixture.

Then take 3 *large size* Mylar Bags and start scooping in mixture. We just use a 2 quart juice jug for a scoop. When you have it 2/3rds filled, add 2 oxygen absorbers and put plank over the mixing container and then spread the Mylar Bag tops over the plank and seal with a HOT steam iron. You should have a 3" seal at least. The mixture will fit nicely into the 3 Mylar Bags and we usually fill them and then seal them all at once so we can get the best seal possible. Then place Mylar bags into your 26 gallon container, label, and put lid on tightly. These are Rodent Proof and can be stacked three high. They should be kept in a cold dark place and they will keep for 20 years at least stored this way.

MAKING SOUP.

Take 12 oz of the dry mixture and put in about 6-7 quarts of water (with a nut of butter or a tsp. of olive oil to prevent soup boiling over) and add 3 tblspns (or to taste) of powdered soup stock. We like to use chicken stock.
Then add any veggies, meat, & seasoning you like. (We like to also put in lots of garlic) (DO NOT USE ONIONS - they'll spoil the mixture).

Bring to a boil and let simmer for two hours and you have enough soup for two days for 4 people.

On the second day you'll need to add some more water (it thickens in the fridge overnight) and another tblspn stock. Make sure to boil for at least 10 minutes the second day to kill off any potential bacteria, - especially if you are not storing in fridge, but just in a root cellar or like that in the event of no electricity in summer.

We make our own bread and have a thick slice fer dunkin' with a large bowl of this delicious soup and it serves as a main meal. You are FULL after just one (large size) bowl of this stuff.

Kids will usually only be able to eat half a bowl w/bread, or a small bowl, whichever you prefer. Adults will likely want a nice big bowl.

If there is any mixture left on the third day, just add the new mixture to it. You will need less of course, but you'll get to know how to gauge things as you go along catering to the requirements of your own little family.

If you make up one batch at a time, it'll cost you approx. $125 for all the ingredients, including 3 x 10lb canisters of powdered soup mix. (One for each Mylar Bag). That's very doable I think, and in no time you'll have your 12 batches or 2,112lbs of soup mix. (Do it over 12 pay-days, and if you are paid weekly, - you'll have your 10 year supply in just 3 months).

We buy ours all at once and just take a weekend and get it over with, - the packaging I mean. I get my Rubbermaid containers from Wal-Mart, both the long ones for mixing, and the small ones.

If you are going to store your soup mix in a garage, you might want to get those rolling Rubbermaid Garbage cans and use these instead of the 26 gallon containers. They have locking lids, can be wheeled around and are water and Rodent Proof. Only RUBBERMAID products *guarantee* that they are Rodent Proof, so I rarely buy anything else. The Rubbermaid Garbage cans are twice as expensive as the 26 gallon containers, and can't be stacked, but if you have a lot of room in your garage and don't like lifting, they may be the best choice for you. Remember, - either way, you'll have 12 containers with 176lbs of soup mix in each. They don't need to be rotated.

Hope this helps!

Love in Christ, - Jesse.





MY NOTES:

WINCO has great bulk beans etc. too

I do not put the broth in the mix. just keep it sealed in its jars. I only mix all the beans, rice etc - bag up . When I cook it I will add the broth.

Love you - Janette
 

mom2many

Veteran Member
I also just made up a batch of this. I filled 20 ounce soda bottles with the mix added a couple bouillon cubes and a bay leaf to keep the bugs out, and printed labels with cooking instructions. I'm thinking about dipping the lids in wax to seal them. I plan on giving them to friends and family for Christmas
 

bbbuddy

DEPLORABLE ME
I used to make this alot. Have to restart. It's delish!
And I never had trouble putting onions in, but then I also didn't leave it out on a stove, either...
 

Wildwood

Veteran Member
I remember this recipe from many, many years ago. There was a web site and the woman who owned it lived in a remote area with deep snow on the ground at the time she posted about it. The scenery was gorgeous.

I had just gotten to a new level of serious about prepping and I loved the whole idea of the Scotch Broth and her web site. I could swear her name was Jesse. I heard later on that she was a member here at one time. Of course I made some and it was good. That may have been fifteen or more years ago.

A few years later, I dropped my laptop and lost everything on it. Not one thing could be recovered so I lost the link to her web site.
 

bamma

Veteran Member
Thank you, Snowsquaw, for reposting. I had copied this recipe years ago when Jesse had posted it on TB, but misplaced it years ago.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I would be cautious about only giving kidney beans two hours to cook after salt or stock cubes had been added. Also today the advice is to soak kidney beans for a few hours and drain the liquid off because there is some natural chemical in them that can be a bit toxic (I never had a problem before I learned this, so maybe it only affects some people).

Anyway, to avoid that I would probably use pinto beans instead of kidneys, though dried they usually need soaking overnight to cook quickly. One way around that would just be to put the soup mix in the pan the night before with water, cook for an hour or so (until the beans are soft) then add stock with salt, butter, or anything with salt or oil in it.

Then just cook until needed or the flavors are blended.

I may try a smaller version of this to see if we like it, using brown rice or cracked wheat in place of barley since my housemate is allergic, I also have vegetarian stock cubes.

Thanks for posting, this looks like a very good plan ahead for prepping recipes over all.
 

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
I've made it. Makes a nice rich stew combined with whatever meat or stock you have around. One thing? Make sure you like barley (if you include it). A lot of folks can't handle the texture, and many these days have had no exposure to it. Also, I'd really rather use all lentils and split peas instead of dry beans - just for speed of cooking.

Never really saw the need to mix up a huge batch of the stuff. If I have the ingredients, would rather combine to my own to taste and whatever meat I'm using at the time of prep.
 

psychgirl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I've made it. Makes a nice rich stew combined with whatever meat or stock you have around. One thing? Make sure you like barley (if you include it). A lot of folks can't handle the texture, and many these days have had no exposure to it. Also, I'd really rather use all lentils and split peas instead of dry beans - just for speed of cooking.

Never really saw the need to mix up a huge batch of the stuff. If I have the ingredients, would rather combine to my own to taste and whatever meat I'm using at the time of prep.
I agree. I love lentils and split pea but hesitate on the beans.

Hmmm. I’m going to ponder one this though.

Thank you to the OP!
 

KMR58

Veteran Member
I would be cautious about only giving kidney beans two hours to cook after salt or stock cubes had been added. Also today the advice is to soak kidney beans for a few hours and drain the liquid off because there is some natural chemical in them that can be a bit toxic (I never had a problem before I learned this, so maybe it only affects some people).

Anyway, to avoid that I would probably use pinto beans instead of kidneys, though dried they usually need soaking overnight to cook quickly. One way around that would just be to put the soup mix in the pan the night before with water, cook for an hour or so (until the beans are soft) then add stock with salt, butter, or anything with salt or oil in it.

Then just cook until needed or the flavors are blended.

I may try a smaller version of this to see if we like it, using brown rice or cracked wheat in place of barley since my housemate is allergic, I also have vegetarian stock cubes.

Thanks for posting, this looks like a very good plan ahead for prepping recipes over all.
Yes. Adding salt to beans before cooking causes them to seize up and they will never get really soft. They will be edible but very Al dente. Most broth or bouillon has salt. I would cook the mixture first with water then add the seasoning/bouillon.
 

SousJo

Contributing Member
Melodi is correct about kidney beans. If y'all could look up the search phrase "kidney bean toxicity" you'll find a ton of resources to explain what and why. Pardon me for not dropping links, I'm on mobile and I'm not sure how. But the beans contain lectin, which can cause a pretty unhappy day. Kidney beans need thorough cooking, and for preference at a decent temp - not in a slow cooker.

There's two ways around this. The easiest would be to prep the recipe as written except leaving out the kidney beans. Then when you are fixing a batch, add a can of kidney beans per four servings for the last twenty minutes of cooking.

The other way would be to rinse and soak the kidney beans, then parboil for an hour or so until a spoonful splits their skins when you blow on them. Drain, rinse, then run the beans through the dehydrator until fully dry. Now, the original recipe should be fine with beans that were pre-treated.

The recipe looks really good, I must say. You could feed a lot of people for a long time with this. It's probably one of the most effective long-term storage solutions I've ever seen, and we're going to try it out (with pre-treated beans, I've got enough cases of cans taking up space as is). Thanks for the recipe, Snowsquaw!
 

Marthanoir

TB Fanatic
Sounds lovely , it really does but Scotch Broth , Chickpeas & Rice :shkr:

Love lentils & peas.

Main part of my preps is Soup Mix , split peas, lentils & barley

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Just add some mutton , lovely
 

Wildwood

Veteran Member
I may be wrong but I think, back in the day when this kind of thing was life sustaining on a regular basis, it was kept over the fire most of the day so the harder to cook beans would have no problem getting done. From what my grandmother said, they just continuously added to it so that the taste evolved depending on what was added that day. I'm sure they had a little more tolerance to bacteria and mold than we do.

If the heat went out, the broth was boiled to kill off any nasties it may have developed while cooled down plus it would make any of the toxin generating beans safer if they were added at that time. Their homes, at night, were probably cold enough to act like a refrigerator in the winter months.

In any recipe, I always sub out pinto beans for kidney beans. They seem to cook slightly quicker and like many southerners, I just prefer the taste. In any event, the pintos I get now cook lots faster than they use to which makes no sense to me.
 

Sacajawea

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I've not seen that kind of soup mix available in my local stores. Any suggestions on substitutes? I'm fine starting from (or even making my own) stock & broth.
 

Bubble Head

Has No Life - Lives on TB
With all the concern about kidney beans and all the other ingredients this is where the InstaPot cowboy comes riding to the rescue. Easily solved cooking problem. I know you need electricity but if you got solar you got an InstaPot. Cook up a batch for a couple days and wait for the sun to shine again. Don’t shine then break out the Dutch Ovens and mix up a batch to your liking. Could simmer all day if you know what your doing.
 

SousJo

Contributing Member
Martha, Americans have been dinking with other folks' recipes for so long, it'd be impossible to get us to stop. It's a wonder the Italians forgive us.

Snowsquaw's recipe served as inspiration for supper tonight. (Don't look, Martha.) I've had a ham bone simmering since yesterday, so I strained the stock and added four cups of parboiled pintos, a diced yellow onion, and a cup of well washed, uncooked barley. Simmered that for an hour and a half or so and added half a red pepper and a couple of carrots, diced, and about two or three cups of finely sliced leeks. Simmered that for another hour or so, topping up the pot with water as needed. Last I added a cup and a half of uncooked rice, a tablespoon of chicken bouillon, black pepper and just a little salt.

(Okay, Martha, you can look.) Y'all, this is basically gruel or porridge, and it tasted amazing. It was thick, hearty, it had substance. It also made a lot, my 7qt cast iron pot was plumb full. I served it with french bread and garlic chili oil, the kids demolished it, my granddaughter loved it. Cheap, filling, flavorful, Snowsquaw your idea is a triumph.
 

bbbuddy

DEPLORABLE ME
I've made the Scotch broth recipe at least a dozen times, and the kidney beans were always cooked enough. I probably let it simmer about 3 hours, although it's been a few years since I last made it.

The mix of beans, lentils, barley etc just melds deliciously.
 
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