The Lost Superfoods Review: is the $37 survival food book worth it?
The Lost Superfoods is a 270-page guide to 126+ no-refrigeration survival foods. We cut through the dramatic marketing to explain what it really is (a guide, not a food kit), what's genuinely good, where it falls short, and who should buy it.
A solid, practical food-preservation guide — if you'll actually use it.
For $37 with a 60-day guarantee you get a thorough, well-illustrated manual of historical food-storage methods. It's real, useful, and low-risk — just know it's a book of skills you apply yourself, not a ready-made stockpile, and the sales page oversells the drama.
The short version
What The Lost Superfoods actually is
First, the clarification the sales page buries and most buyers get wrong: The Lost Superfoods is an instructional book, not a food kit. You're not buying a box of emergency rations — you're buying a 270-page guide that teaches you how to make and store 126+ long-lasting foods yourself, using historical preservation methods that need no refrigeration.
It includes step-by-step instructions, color photos, and nutritional data for each food, plus two bonus guides (a year-round greenhouse guide and a self-sufficiency projects report). It's a one-time $37 purchase (physical book + digital eBook, with shipping on the physical copy) and comes with a 60-day money-back guarantee. A transparency note: the lead author name "Claude Davis" is a pen name the publisher's writing team uses — disclosed in the brand's own terms — though the content draws on well-documented historical methods.
Setting expectations straight
What the marketing says vs. what's realistic
The sales page leans on dramatic crisis scenarios. Here's the grounded version, because going in with the right expectations is what separates happy buyers from disappointed ones.
It's knowledge, not a stockpile
You do the work. The value is in skills you keep forever — unlike a freeze-dried kit that runs out. But you have to actually apply it.
The drama is oversold
The "doomsday" framing is marketing. Most of these are practical, even tasty, everyday-useful preservation methods — not just grim emergency rations.
Physical shipping varies
Some buyers report shipping delays or print-quality niggles on the physical book. The digital eBook is instant and avoids that.
Is it legit? Yes — it's a real, substantial book grounded in documented historical methods, with a working 60-day refund policy. The fair criticisms are oversell and the occasional specialty ingredient, not fraud.
The honest ledger
Pros and cons
What we liked
- Genuinely useful, practical content with clear photos and steps.
- Teaches reusable skills — you keep the knowledge for life.
- Low one-time $37 price with two bonus guides included.
- Many recipes are everyday-useful, not just emergency-only.
- 60-day money-back guarantee; refunds are reported as honored.
What to weigh first
- It's a guide, not a ready-made food supply — you do the work.
- The sales page oversells the doomsday drama.
- A handful of recipes need specialty ingredients.
- The volume of info can feel daunting at first.
- Physical book can have shipping delays / print-quality variation.
Pricing
What you'll pay
The Lost Superfoods is a one-time $37 purchase that includes both the physical book and the digital eBook, plus the two bonus guides. The physical copy adds a shipping fee; the digital version is instant. Confirm current price, shipping, and refund terms at checkout.
Backed by a 60-day money-back guarantee, you can read the whole thing and still request a refund if it's not for you.
Is it right for you?
Who it fits — and who should skip it
A good fit if you…
- Want to build food security through skills, not just buying kits.
- Like DIY and will actually try the methods.
- Want a low-cost, low-risk way to start prepping.
- Care about cutting food waste and stretching your pantry.
Probably skip it if you…
- Want ready-to-eat emergency food, not instructions.
- Won't put in the time to actually make and store food.
- Need everything digital-only and dislike specialty ingredients.
- Are only after the "doomsday" hype rather than practical use.
Quick answers
The Lost Superfoods FAQ
Is The Lost Superfoods a kit or a book?
A book. It's a 270-page instructional guide (plus digital eBook) teaching you how to make and store 126+ long-lasting foods yourself. It is not a pre-made food supply.
Is it legit or a scam?
Legit. It's a substantial, well-illustrated guide grounded in documented historical preservation methods, with a working 60-day refund policy. The fair criticisms are marketing oversell and occasional specialty ingredients — not fraud.
How much does it cost?
A one-time $37 for the physical book plus digital eBook and two bonus guides. The physical copy adds shipping. Confirm current pricing at checkout.
Who actually wrote it?
It's credited to "Claude Davis" with Art Rude and others. The brand discloses in its own terms that "Claude Davis" is a pen name used by its writing team. The content itself draws on well-documented historical methods.
Is there a refund policy?
Yes — a 60-day money-back guarantee, and reviewers report refunds are honored when requested. Confirm the current terms at checkout.
Our take: a genuinely useful prepping starter
If you want to build real food security through skills you keep for life — and you'll actually use it — The Lost Superfoods is a practical, low-risk buy at $37. Ignore the doomsday drama and judge it as what it is: a solid, well-made preservation manual. The 60-day guarantee makes trying it easy.
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