Showing posts with label Food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Monthly Focus: Family Home Storage

This month we are looking at Family Home Storage, a.k.a Food Storage. The reason I use the newer moniker for this is, that Food Storage is misleading. Your Family Home Storage needs to include much more than just food.

Currently the advice is to have at least 3 MONTHS of storage in your home, but it is recommended that you have a year's supply. That sounds like a lot, especially if you have even a medium sized family.

There are ways to help you get started. There are a variety of plans and programs that will guide you on what to buy and when to buy it. Below are links to a few of these plans.

Noah's Ark Program

Storage Calendar

Project Noah

It wasn't raining when Noah built the ark booklet

Monthly Food Storage Plan - The Ark Project

You can also create your own plan. Base your plan on resources available in your area and your shopping habits. Here are some other suggestions on how to build up your food storage.
  • Make use of bulk sales at your local store, or consider buying in bulk from a warehouse store in your area.
  • Take advantage of good sales and deals at your local store. Check ads and the shelves to find some bargains. Tuna 10 cans for a $1.00, stock up!
  • Add an extra item to your normal list. Need to get a can of peaches this week for dinner? Add an extra one to the cart.
  • Consider setting aside a portion of your grocery budget every week to go to family home storage. Then you can get items you need without worrying too much about the extra cost.
  • Use coupons. This will help defray the cost. Also if you have coupon that is money off two or more items (say a $1.00 off 2 boxes of cereal), consider putting that second item in your storage.
While you will need a plan or approach to family home storage, it is important to know what you should be including in it. Here are some of the basic groups that you should include. This is by no means definitive. Be sure that you have considered any special needs in your family, special conditions in your area, or availability. Also be sure to be storing items that you will USE! I've tried to include a variety of options for categories, but know what your family will eat. We don't want this stuff to go to waste.

Food
  • Fruits- Canned fruit, dehydrated fruit (raisins, berries, etc), fruit leather (I personally recommend Stretch Island Fruit Leather), applesauce, fruit juices.
  • Vegetables- Canned vegetables, dehydrated vegetables, possibly frozen vegetables
  • Protein- canned meat (tuna, chicken, ham), dehydrated meat (beef jerkey), package meat (bacon bits, luncheon meats), nuts, peanut butter, beans (pinto, black, red, lima, kidney), dehydrated eggs
  • Dairy- Shelf milk (boxed liquid milk with a long shelf life), powdered milk, canned milk, dried/dehydrated cheese
  • Starches- crackers, pasta, bread mixes, pancake mix
  • Sugars- granulated sugar, powdered sugar, brown sugar (be careful on how you store this), corn syrup
  • Grains- flour, wheat, rice, barley
  • Oils and Fats- shortening, cooking oil, mayonnaise, olive oil
  • Baking supplies- baking soda, salt, baking powder, baking mixes (consider ones that only require water)
  • Liquids- WATER!!!!, juice, soda
  • Other- condiments (ketsup, etc), drink mix, high energy foods (nutritional substitutes, granola bars), spices
  • "luxuries"- candies, marshmallows, alcohol, chocolate
  • VITAMINS! - You should have a multivitamin available (or individual vitamins if you cannot consume a multivitamin) which is appropriate for each age group. Sustained use of "life sustaining" supplies may not be providing all of your nutritional needs. Having a multivitamin will help to ensure that you stay healthy.

Water - This is a difficult one to store in large enough quantities. You should have at least 72 hours worth of water (that is one gallon PER PERSON PER DAY!).

Paper Goods- In the event of an emergency, you may not have adequate facilities to wash and sanitize eating utensils. Consider having some paper bowls, plates, disposable cups, plastic cutlery, paper towels, paper napkins, and disposable pots/pans.

Hygiene Items- Shampoo, conditioner, soap, deodorant

Personal Care- Tampons, maxi pads

Medical- bandages, rubbing alcohol, hydrogen peroxide, antibiotic ointment, tylenol (or other anti-inflamatory drug), antacids, decongestant

Baby- diapers, wipes, formula, canned baby food (can be eaten by adults and children as well)


It is important to store these items well, but it doesn't mean you have to store them in a little room. Be creative with your storage. Here are some of the places people told me that they stored items:
  • under couches
  • under beds
  • closet shelves
  • basements
  • storage rooms
  • storage sheds
  • kitchen cabinets
  • books shelves
  • under misc. furniture
Another suggestion for Family Home storage is to know how to use it. It may be useful to practice making meals with the items you have in storage. There is nothing worse than having food and not knowing what to do with it. Also consider storing a book of recipes that include ingredients you have. You can buy recipe books, or you can make your own using a 3-ring binder and recipes you find.

It is also important to have a way to cook items in an emergency (assuming you are either on the go or the electricity is out). Consider having a small camping or backpacking stove available (remember to use them only in well ventilate areas), or if you have a barbeque grill, have fuel supplies stored for it. If you have a fireplace or wood burning stove, you can also consider storing cast iron cook ware.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints offers recipe books and a Family Home Storage Starter Kit through their distribution services. There are also many other sites that offer a variety of preserved, freeze dried, canned, or bagged food items for this purpose (just Google food storage to find some of them).

If you add a little at a time, it really will build up. This isn't a "quick" fix, so don't get discouraged if you cannot get your food storage all ready to go in one day. Keep trying!

Also remember to rotate items, first in, first out. You don't want items to go to waste. Also remember the "expiration dates" on most items are merely a recommendation. Do what you are comfortable with, but keep in mind if that can of green beans expired last week, they are probably still okay.

Please review the resources available, talk to friends and family, make your plan, and get started today!

Monday, December 15, 2008

Mini Challenges: Determine Your Food Storage Needs

Food storage (or Home Storage) is often a tricky subject. The LDS Church guidelines recommend a year's supply of food for you and your family. Some resources suggest less. Space is often an issue, and depending on where you live, laws may prohibit you from storing very much. If you live or work in the military community, you know hauling all that food to different duty stations can be difficult. So what is one to do? The answer is: Do what you can.

Well, since you generally can't rush out and get a year's supply tomorrow, we're going to start small...baby steps. Our December 15th Mini-Challenge is to calculate your family's food storage needs and make a food storage plan.

This exercise will involve a few steps.

  1. Determine your family size...don't forget pets!
  2. Pick a time frame. I would suggest starting with 72 hours. Then you can also calculate needs for 1 month, then 3 months, then 6 months, and then a year. This will help give you an idea of the different goals you can set, and the amount of food each period would require. If space is a concern, this could help you gauge for what time period you could store food.
  3. Using some guidelines or calculators (Long Term Food Storage Calculator or General Food Storage Calculator), determine what the recommended amount (and types) of food are for your family. Don't be afraid to find a subsitution that works for your family. Food storage won't help if you won't eat it. ...just make sure you are covering all the essential categories.
  4. Determine what types of special needs your family would have. You'll need to keep in mind items such as pet food, diapers, wipes, formula, baby food, medicines, vitamins, and personal sanitary items. Try to figure out how much you use during your selected time period and make sure you include those things in your list.
  5. Make a list of all the items you would need, including quantities.
  6. Make a trip to your local grocery or discount store and "shop" your list. This doesn't mean you have to buy anything...in fact DON'T buy anything yet. Just look for the items you've identified, and get an idea of what they cost. Add up the total cost (cost of each item x quantity needed) of each item and then the complete total for your entire list.
  7. Make a goal of when you would like to have your food storage in place. Keep in mind the longer the time period you have chosen, the longer it will take you to aquire.
  8. Take your total cost and divide it into increments based on your pay schedule or shopping schedule, to determine how much money you will need to spend each week/pay period to reach your goal. Say you have decided you want to have your food storage goal complete in three months. You shop every week. Your total is $300. That means that you would be spending roughly $25 a week on food storage in order to meet your goal.
  9. Determine how you will finance this goal. Do you have a budgetary category for food storage? Will it come out of your normal grocery budget? Do you have a chunk of funds set aside in savings you want to use? It doesn't have to be complicated, but you should know how you will finance it, since food storage shouldn't put you into debt.
  10. Share your plan with your family and ask for ideas on completing the goal together. You never know, you may find a co-worker or friend that is giving away an item on your list. Your children might want to "donate" to the goal from their allowance. You may be able to can some items yourself (if you have the resources and know how). Get creative.
  11. And finally, don't despair or become discouraged. It will take time and effort, but it WILL be worth it.
It is hard to reach a goal, when you don't know what that goal will entail. That is why it is so important to do the planning. Take some time out to assess your food storage needs and set some goals. This is a very important part of Provident Living, and in these uncertain economic times, Food and Home Storage can be a great comfort.

Friday, September 19, 2008

A Consumer's Guide to Long Term Food Storage

Several individuals have asked me regarding the "shelf life" of long term food storage staples. While I am sure some of these time limits may be hotly debated, I have found some information on this area to share with you all.

Judy Harrison and Elizabeth Andress, both of the University of Georgia, have produced a Consumer Guide on Long Term Food Storage. The document is reproduced below.


Reprinted with permission from the University of Georgia.
Harrison, J, Andress, E. (1998). Consumer's Guide: Preparing an Emergency Food Supply. Athens, GA: University of Georgia, Cooperative Extension Service.


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UGA College of Family and Consumer Sciences Extension Service

Consumer's Guide:
Preparing an Emergency Food Supply
Long Term Food Storage


Judy Harrison, Ph.D.
Associate Professor and Extension Food Safety Specialist,
Department of Food and Nutrition

and Elizabeth L. Andress, Ph.D.
Associate Professor and Extension Food Safety Specialist,
Department of Food and Nutrition

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Flash floods, tropical storms, blizzards...whatever the disaster, it pays to be prepared. Emergency items should be stored in a disaster supply kit.

Putting Together a Disaster Supply Kit

  • Items to include in a disaster supply kit:
  • Medical supplies and first aid manual*
  • Hygiene supplies
  • Portable radio and extra batteries**
  • Flashlights and lanterns with extra batteries**
  • Camping cookstove and fuel
  • Sterno cans
  • Matches in a waterproof container
  • Fire Extinguisher**
  • Blankets and extra clothing
  • Shovel and other useful tools
  • Money in a waterproof container
  • Infant and small children's needs (if appropriate)*
  • Can opener, utensils, cookware

* Check expiration dates and rotate stock for long-term storage.
** Check periodically.

Nutrition Information for Emergency Food Storage

In a crisis, it will be most important that you maintain your strength. Eating nutritiously can help you do this. Here are some important nutrition tips.
  • Plan menus to include as much variety as possible.
  • Eat at least one well-balanced meal each day.
  • Drink enough liquid to enable your body to function properly (two quarts a day).
  • Take in enough calories to enable you to do any necessary work.
  • Include vitamin, mineral and protein supplements in your stockpile to assure adequate nutrition.

When deciding what foods to stock, use common sense. Consider what you could use and how you could prepare it. Storing foods that are difficult to prepare and are unlikely to be eaten could be a costly mistake.

Stocking a Long-term Emergency Food Supply

One approach to long term food storage is to store bulk staples along with a variety of canned and dried foods.

Bulk Staples

Wheat, corn, beans and salt can be purchased in bulk quantities fairly inexpensively and have nearly unlimited shelf life. If necessary, you could survive for years on small daily amounts of these staples. The following amounts are suggested per adult, per year:
Item Amount*
Wheat240 pounds
Powdered Milk75 pounds
Corn240 pounds
Iodized Salt5 pounds
Soybeans120 pounds
Fats and Oil20 pounds**
Vitamin C***180 grams
* Best to buy in nitrogen-packed cans
** 1 gallon equals 7 pounds
*** Rotate every two years

Stocking Foods for Infants

Special attention would need to be paid to stocking supplies of foods for infants. Powdered formula would be the least expensive form of infant formula to stock. Commercially canned liquid formula concentrate and ready-to-feed formula may also be stored. Amounts needed would vary, depending on the age of the infant. Infant formula has expiration dates on the packages and should not be used past the expiration date. Parents should also plan to have a variety of infant cereals and baby foods on hand. Amounts needed will vary depending on the age of the infant.

Other Foods to Supplement Your Bulk Staples

You can supplement bulk staples which offer a limited menu with commercially packed air-dried or freeze-dried foods, packaged mixes and other supermarket goods. Canned meats are a good selection. Rice and varieties of beans are nutritious and long-lasting. Ready-to-eat cereals, pasta mixes, rice mixes, dried fruits, etc. can also be included to add variety to your menus. Packaged convenience mixes that only need water and require short cooking times are good options because they are easy to prepare. The more of these products you include, the more expensive your stockpile will be.

The following is an easy approach to long-term food storage:

1.Buy a supply of the bulk staples listed previously.

2.Build up your everyday stock of canned goods until you have a two-week to one-month surplus. Rotate it periodically to maintain a supply of common foods that will not require special preparation, water or cooking.

3.From a sporting or camping equipment store, buy commercially packaged, freeze-dried or air-dried foods. Although costly, this is an excellent form of stored meat, so buy accordingly. (Canned meats are also options.) Another option is to purchase dry, packaged mixes from the supermarket.


Consider stocking some of the items listed as examples below. Amounts are suggested quantities for an adult for one year.

Flour, White Enriched17 lbs
Corn Meal42 lbs
Pasta (Spaghetti/Macaroni)42 lbs
Beans (dry)25 lbs
Beans, Lima (dry)1 lb
Peas, Split (dry)1 lb
Lentils (dry)1 lb
Dry Soup Mix5 lbs
Peanut Butter4 lbs
Dry Yeast1/2 lb
Sugar, White Granulated40 lbs
Soda1 lb
Baking Powder1 lb
Vinegar1/2 gal

Storage and Preparation of Food Supplies

All dry ingredients or supplies should be stored off the floor in clean, dry, dark places away from any source of moisture. Foods will maintain quality longer if extreme changes in temperature and exposure to light are avoided.

Grains

If you purchase bulk wheat, dark hard winter or dark hard spring wheat are good selections. Wheat should be #2 grade or better with a protein content from 12 - 15% and moisture content less than 10%. If wheat is not already in nitrogen-packed cans, it can be stored in sturdy 5 gallon food-grade plastic buckets or containers with tight fitting lids. If the wheat has not already been treated to prevent insects from hatching, wheat may be treated at the time of storage by placing one-fourth pound of dry ice per 5 gallon container in the bottom and then filling with wheat. Cover the wheat with the lid, but not tightly, for five or six hours before tightening the lid to be air tight. Other grains to consider storing include rye, rice, oats, triticale, barley and millet. Pasta products also satisfy the grain component of the diet. Milled rice will maintain its quality longer in storage than will brown rice. Many of the grains may require grinding before use. Some health food stores sell hand-cranked grain mills or can tell you where you can get one. Make sure you buy one that can grind corn. If you are caught without a mill, you can grind your grain by filling a large can with whole grain one inch deep, holding the can on the ground between your feet and pounding the grain with a hard metal object such as a pipe.

Non-fat Dry Milk/Dairy Products

Store dry milk in a tightly covered air-tight container. Dry milk may be stored at 70oF for 12 - 24 months. If purchased in nitrogen packed cans, storage time for best quality will be 24 months. Other dairy products for long term storage may include canned evaporated milk, pasteurized cheese spreads and powdered cheese.

Other Foods or Ingredients

Iodized salt should be selected and stored in its original package. Dried beans, peas, lentils, etc. provide an inexpensive alternative to meat and are easy to store in glass or plastic containers tightly covered. Those purchased from the grocery shelf are normally the highest quality. Open food boxes or cans carefully so that you can close them tightly after each use. Wrap cookies and crackers in plastic bags, and keep them in air-tight storage containers. Empty opened packages of sugar, dried fruits and nuts into screw-top jars or airtight food storage containers to protect them from pests. Inspect all food containers for signs of spoilage before use. Commercially canned foods are safe to eat after long periods of storage unless they are bulging, leaking or badly rusted. Quality, however, will diminish with long term storage. Changes in flavor, color and texture may be observed and nutritional value will decrease. For best quality, use within one year. If stored longer than one year, rotate canned goods at least every two to four years.

Vitamin and Mineral Supplements

To help compensate for possible deficiencies in the diet in emergency situations, families may wish to store 365 multi-vitamin/mineral tablets per person. Careful attention should be paid to expiration dates on packages.

Shelf Life of Foods for Storage (Unopened)

Here are some general guidelines for rotating common emergency foods to ensure the best quality of the products.

Use within six months:
  • Powdered milk (boxed)
  • Dried fruit (in metal container)
  • Dry, crisp crackers (in metal container)
  • Potatoes

Use within one year:
  • Canned condensed meat and vegetable soups
  • Canned fruits, fruit juices and vegetables
  • Ready-to-eat cereals and uncooked instant cereals (in metal containers)
  • Peanut butter Jelly
  • Hard candy, chocolate bars and canned nuts

May be stored indefinitely* (in proper containers and conditions):
  • Wheat
  • Vegetable oils
  • Corn
  • Baking powder
  • Soybeans
  • Instant coffee, tea
  • Cocoa
  • Salt
  • Noncarbonated soft drinks
  • White rice
  • Bouillon products
  • Dry pasta
  • Vitamin C
  • Powdered milk (in nitrogen-packed cans)

*Two to three years


If the Electricity Goes Off...

FIRST, use perishable food and foods from the refrigerator. THEN use the foods from the freezer. To minimize the number of times you open the freezer door, post a list of freezer contents on it. In a well-filled, well-insulated freezer, foods will usually still have ice crystals in their centers. Consume the foods only if they have ice crystals remaining or if the temperature of the freezer has remained at 40 degrees F or below. Covering the freezer with blankets will help to hold in cold. Be sure to pin blankets back so that the air vent is not covered. FINALLY, begin to use non-perishable foods and staples.

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References:

Federal Emergency Management Agency. June 16, 1998 Update. Emergency Food and Water Supplies (FEMA-215). Washington, DC.

Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. 1998. Emergency Preparedness Manual.


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Document use:
Permission is granted to reproduce these materials in whole or in part for educational purposes only (not for profit beyond the cost of reproduction) provided that the author and the University of Georgia receive acknowledgement and the notice is included:

Reprinted with permission from the University of Georgia.
Harrison, J, Andress, E. (1998). Consumer's Guide: Preparing an Emergency Food Supply. Athens, GA: University of Georgia, Cooperative Extension Service.

*************************************************************************************

Content Person Contact: Elizabeth L. Andress, Ph.D. eandress@uga.edu
Copyright Permission: (706) 542-4860
Document Review:
Document Size:
Publication Date: 1998-12-01
Entry Date: 1999-01-28
Pull Date:
Pub #: FDNS-E-34-1