Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
LONG TERM FOOD STORAGE + TRAVEL
#21
It's not really all that hard to buy food and save for a rainy day. Some foods will have a very long shelve life.
Some foods by their nature have surprisingly long shelf life if packaged and stored properly. Many are available at your local grocery store for a relatively low cost but you may want to consider repackaging or further sealing them if you plan to store them for any significant length of time. Here’s the top 10 long-term food storage items:
1. Honey
A story about honey that’s often touted was the discovery by archaeologists of honey jars in an ancient Egyptian tomb. The honey was carbon dated as 3,000 years old and was still food-safe and tasted just like honey.

2. Salt
If you can keep the moisture out of stored salt it will last indefinitely. Salt is a standard staple in any long-term food storage plan and is used in food preservation methods such as curing and pickling.

3. Sugar
Sugar possesses many of the characteristics of salt but here again, moisture is the enemy. If you can keep it hermetically sealed and perhaps add a moisture absorber, sugar also can keep indefinitely.

4. White rice
White rice can last up to 20 years if properly stored. As a staple of most diets around the world, it’s a must in any long-term storage plan.

5. Whole wheat grains
Whole wheat grains are usually purchased through a supplier that specializes in long-term food storage. They are often sealed in large, foil packages and sometimes repackaged inside large plastic buckets.

6. Dried corn
Corn when properly dried and protected from moisture will last for decades. It’s another staple that provides significant nutritional value.

7. Baking soda
While it’s not a food source, its uses from baking to cleaning are many and varied. If kept dry it also will last indefinitely.

8. Instant coffee, cocoa powders and tea
If you succeed in keeping these ingredients dry they will survive for decades without losing potency or flavor.

9. Powdered milk
This staple will survive for up to 20 years. Moisture absorber packets are highly recommended when storing powdered milk for the long-term although some packaging solutions – such as in #10 cans – might not require them.

10. Bouillon products
This may seem a bit redundant with salt, but bouillon products have the added value of flavor. Most are chicken or beef flavored and the granular type tends to store better that bouillon cubes in the long run. With proper processing, packaging and storage, they can last for decades as well.

Foods With a Very Long Shelf Life
Some companies today are in the business of specifically selecting, processing and packaging foods that will typically have a stable shelf life of 20 to 30 years if stored properly.

These are some of the common foods packaged to have a very long shelf life:
Dried beans, 30 years
Rolled oats, 30 years
Pasta products, 30 years
Potato flakes, 30 years
Dehydrated fruit slices, 30 years
Dehydrated carrots, 20 years
These are great items to stockpile because you can be reasonably assured they will retain their integrity and nutritional value for years to come.

Foods With a Fairly Long Shelf Life
Some foods can last a relatively long time but it’s measured in months or a couple of years as opposed to decades. As a general rule, you should pay attention to the expiration dates on bottles, cans and boxes purchased at a grocery store. You can still eat the food after the expiration date, but there may be a loss of nutritional value. Also, packages – such as boxes or bags – are more likely to allow compromise due to moisture or rodent invasion.
The World’s Healthiest Survival Food — And It Stores For YEARS and YEARS!

If you are thinking about storing any oils for the long-term, regular olive oil is a hero with a shelf life of two years. If you want to adapt grocery store foods for long-term food storage, you should seriously consider some packaging solutions that can allow you to protect and preserve these items. This includes using sealed cans and both oxygen and moisture absorbers. Keep in mind, you also can order from a reliable purveyor of long-term foods and buy in bulk.
An important consideration for the shelf life of any food is how it is processed, packaged, stored and rotated.

Processing
The way that any food is processed has a lot to do with shelf life. Typical processing approaches include dehydrating, freeze-drying, pasteurization, heat processing, curing and pickling. While all of these processes extend the shelf life of many foods, the nature of the food itself determines how long it will remain edible.

Packaging
The integrity of packaging is as important as the processing. Typical long-term food storage strategies involve packaging dried or dehydrated foods in metal, cans that are hermetically sealed and often have oxygen and moisture absorbers enclosed.
Another long-term packaging solution involves the use of large, 5-gallon plastic buckets. This is usually used for bulk items such as white rice, flour, sugar, salt and other staples that someone wants to store in a large quantity. Make sure you inquire about the integrity of the seal on the lid.

Storage
Storage has a direct effect on the duration of shelf life. The cooler the temperatures the longer the shelf life, but be careful to avoid freezing temperatures.
A dry environment is also important. Mildew can permeate the seal on some food containers, moisture can cause oxidation of metallic cans, and certain foods like grains can actually sprout if exposed to moisture over a period of time.
Darkness is important for any foods stored in glass jars, and in general advised because direct sunlight will raise temperatures.
People that are loving and affectionate are like delicate flowers, if you don't show them love in return and nurture them daily, they will build up a wall between you and eventually you will lose their love and trust.


[-] The following 2 users say Thank You to Nana for this post:
  • BCGuy (01-24-2019), Texjbird (01-25-2019)
Reply
#22
MoTruckDvr: we're s'posed to have a fridge?

Sprouts are very nutritious & easily done in a van for fresh green stuff, even in winter - add to sandwiches, soups, Stir-Fry. Cheap & healthy
[-] The following 1 user says Thank You to fantym1 for this post:
  • Texjbird (01-25-2019)
Reply
#23
(01-24-2019, 01:34 PM)fantym1 Wrote: MoTruckDvr: we're s'posed to have a fridge?

Sprouts are very nutritious & easily done in a van for fresh green stuff, even in winter - add to sandwiches, soups, Stir-Fry. Cheap & healthy

Well not s'posed to have one but I'd have one.  I had a refrigerator in all my trucks and I ate well.  Lived full time in em for many many years haulin down the highway.  Most of my recipes I developed using what I had in the cab.  Fridge, microwave, electric skillet, crock pot.. etc.
  [Image: 414097000.jpg]
Reply
#24
John asked me to post this pic

[Image: f07ef9191306e072f6523cf6fd0431fc.jpg]
monkeyfoot
Reply
#25
(01-24-2019, 08:53 PM)Cammalu Wrote: John asked me to post this pic

[Image: f07ef9191306e072f6523cf6fd0431fc.jpg]
Well the thread is about long term food storage. 

I saw this in a flea market in Quartzite. They have everything but the one item that you need.
Compared to parenting, Cat herding is less complicated
Reply
#26
Hopefully it was next to a package of survival gravy.
  [Image: 414097000.jpg]
Reply
#27
(01-24-2019, 07:45 AM)rvpopey Wrote: I also stock up before going "wilding"

I have dried peanut butter , just add water.
It's a little gritty at first .
I use peanut oil instead of the water.......
(there is also a chocolate flavored kind)

Peanut butter isn't fun if it gets cold..

I've seen peanut butter powder at Wal Mart.  Thanks for the oil tip.
  My favorite PB is Peter Pan Honey Roast Chunky.

I met my SD friends in TX in the mid 1980s.
 At first I just thought they talked funny. They ended some sentences with "go with"?
Then I knew their "cornbread wasn't done in the middle"when they asked for PB at the Waffle House FOR THEIR TOAST Huh
THAT'S O.K. Marilyn sez she knew me for 2 weeks before she could understand a word I said.

Both times I've had homes in SD Marilyn and I have canned together,  I had apple trees dating back to around 1900 and she had a huge wild rhubarb bed behind their garage. Waldo grew veggies out on some farm property that had well water. 
We've been good friends for 35yrs.

The term "Prepper" wasn't well known at that time. I'm not sure when it came into use.  I don't recall hearing it during the Y2K scare or in my books from that era.  To me "PREPPER" is just the way some folk identify themselves or others.  Like Teacher, Banker, LEO, Welder.......there are different levels of skills and knowledge in most people.  Also Good and Bad in most people.  I'm not debating what determines Good and Bad.

I was adopted and raised by Grandparents who were born in 1900 & 1902.  We lived in Dallas TX.  My Great Grandmother lived part-time with us and I had Great Aunts and Uncles still farming and living retired on the family farms up around Ada OK and Kaufman TX.  We used everything we had and repurposed as needed.  Canning and freezing food was just what we did.  We weren't "Prepping" for a catrastophe we were using the bounty of the land and "putting by" for hard times.

Jewell Ann
  I DON'T GO CRAZY
Tongue      I AM CRAZY          
   I JUST GO NORMAL FROM TIME TO TIME
Reply
#28
(01-24-2019, 11:40 AM)Motrukdriver Wrote: Heck, a can of seasoned green beans with bacon bits would make a meal for me.

My current favorite is a can of Del Monte Greenbeans &  Potaoes with Ham Seasoning.  I like these without adding anything to them.
Now to get fancy i'll add chopped onion, a touch of garlic powder and maybe a can of blackeyed peas with a 1/2 can of water and a shot of worcestershire sauce <<<<<did I spell that correctly?  If so there truly is a first time for everything Smile
^^^^^^^then simmer for a while.
A black iron skillet of cornbread and supper is served.
A plate of cold sliced sweet onion and home grown 'maters to round it off.  YUM! YUM!  
QUEENIE LIKES HER SOME CORNBREAD   Big Grin

QUEENIE AND JEWELL ANN
  I DON'T GO CRAZY
Tongue      I AM CRAZY          
   I JUST GO NORMAL FROM TIME TO TIME
Reply
#29
(01-24-2019, 09:28 PM)GotSmart Wrote:
(01-24-2019, 08:53 PM)Cammalu Wrote: John asked me to post this picture

I saw this in a flea market in Quartzite. They have everything but the one item that you need.

Thanks for telling us this.  I was about to tell Camalu and anyone you guys are camping with to keep a eye on you, especially if you got up one day all sweet and acting like butter wouldn't melt in your mouth and then offered to bake biscuits for breakfast. Rolleyes

Jewell Ann
  I DON'T GO CRAZY
Tongue      I AM CRAZY          
   I JUST GO NORMAL FROM TIME TO TIME
[-] The following 1 user says Thank You to Texjbird for this post:
  • Cammalu (01-25-2019)
Reply
#30
Prepping is what people have been doing for thousands of years so they could survive through the non-producing times.
[-] The following 1 user says Thank You to TrainChaser for this post:
  • Texjbird (01-25-2019)
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 2 Guest(s)