Monday, November 12, 2012

Food Storage Made Easy



FOOD STORAGE MADE EASY

Two theories for food storage: 1) Store extra of what you eat. Tasty but hard to store, hard to inventory, more expensive. 2) Store what lasts 30+ years as much as possible. Not as tasty but when starving, tastes good. Costs less, easy to inventory, easy to store.

Easy/cheapest food storage: Wheat, sugar, honey, salt stored properly lasts forever. Do not rotate. Store out of the way, don’t touch.  Buy more for daily use, so no need to open or re-inventory. Beans/legumes/other grains/rice last 30+ years. Decide if rotate, or if just famine insurance—no rotate/replace when too old. Don’t throw away even after 30 years—often lasts much longer. If replace, give old food to someone for storage.  Milk, fats must be rotated. (Switch to powdered milk—can get used to it.) Put date on everything you buy. Use oldest first on rotated foods. Don’t touch non-rotated foods. Store all food in coolest place available, especially Milk and fats.

Age of Food:  Most food lasts years, even decades, longer than expiration dates. Nutrition value will decline in time. DO NOT use food in bulged cans, bulged lids on bottles, etc. Throw away cans unopened. Empty and wash home canning bottles, be careful about contamination, cover as open lids to prevent contents spraying out. Good way to rotate older canned goods: donate to Christmas food banks or as gifts to struggling families—benefit you and them.

Storage/inventory: Church cans in cases can be stacked floor to ceiling—tight on space, pull furniture from the wall and make a wall of food behind, (paint box side or cover with curtain/fabric for cute wall.) Put boxes/buckets under bed, mattress on top. If necessary stack higher and use a step stool to get into bed (like the plush, expensive beds). Layer of cans/boxes/buckets bottom of closets, etc. Use cases for end tables or benches and put cute cloth over. Make a “play house/fort” in a “play room” out of food cases—tape cases any where there may be danger of falling, especially on children. Layer of cases across the entire floor of a room with wood and area rug on top. Buckets can only be stored 2-3 high—in time weight cracks lids, put on shelves, keep out of sunlight. Church canned goods or commercial #10 cans store best, keep exterior of cans dry. Buckets sealed properly next best, sometimes don’t seal as well when refilled, but usually fine and easier for big families, cheaper as refilled. Easy inventory: non-rotated foods, don’t touch. Rotated foods, set aside a space big enough for amount needed. Get 1 ½ year supply. Inventory only 2x/year—don’t count lbs and oz. just fill the empty space. Develop a system so oldest used first. General conference is a good time to inventory. Save a little each month to replace food 2x/year.  Then don’t think about food storage the rest of the year—easy! Store water barrels outside on shaded side, or cover if in sun, don’t fill completely full if chance of freezing. Have little plastic pump or a siphon to remove water. Rotate water every 1-2 years if chlorinated—add bleach as needed, ½ t./5 gal clear water, 1 t./5 gal cloudy water. Easiest to rotate water if you can just dump water into the yard. Also store a gal. of water under household sinks. Don’t store water in cheap “gal. milk” type plastic—designed to deteriorate in landfill and will leak within a couple of years. Heavy juice plastic okay. Have a way to catch water from roof or other ways to gather in a long-time emergency. Rotate cans: 4’ shelf, length-wise slats, put cans/bottles in one side, take out the other—automatically rotates. When have food, consider TP, feminine supplies, diapers, toothpaste, soap….

Miscellaneous: Store the right type food the right way, for example: hard red/white wheat and white rice store well, other wheat and rice doesn’t store as long. Brands of powdered milk taste different-- buy 1 of available brands, compare price and taste before buying bulk—good RS activityJ. We are promised that if we are diligent we can get our storage within a year. We are also told that food storage is as important in our day as boarding the ark in Noah’s day.  Many things we spend money on will seem foolish if we are hungry. Give food storage and warm clothing for Christmas. Be diligent. Follow the Spirit. START!

(Courtesy of Mom)

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