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Is Recession Preparing a New Breed of Survivalist? [Survival Today - an On going Thread #2]
May 05th,2008

Posted on 02/09/2009 12:36:11 AM PST by nw_arizona_granny

Yahoo ran an interesting article this morning indicating a rise in the number of survivalist communities cropping up around the country. I have been wondering myself how much of the recent energy crisis is causing people to do things like stockpile food and water, grow their own vegetables, etc. Could it be that there are many people out there stockpiling and their increased buying has caused food prices to increase? It’s an interesting theory, but I believe increased food prices have more to do with rising fuel prices as cost-to-market costs have increased and grocers are simply passing those increases along to the consumer. A recent stroll through the camping section of Wal-Mart did give me pause - what kinds of things are prudent to have on hand in the event of a worldwide shortage of food and/or fuel? Survivalist in Training

I’ve been interested in survival stories since I was a kid, which is funny considering I grew up in a city. Maybe that’s why the idea of living off the land appealed to me. My grandfather and I frequently took camping trips along the Blue Ridge Parkway and around the Smoky Mountains. Looking back, some of the best times we had were when we stayed at campgrounds without electricity hookups, because it forced us to use what we had to get by. My grandfather was well-prepared with a camp stove and lanterns (which ran off propane), and when the sun went to bed we usually did along with it. We played cards for entertainment, and in the absence of televisions, games, etc. we shared many great conversations. Survivalist in the Neighborhood


TOPICS: Agriculture; Food; Gardening; Pets/Animals
KEYWORDS: barter; canning; cwii; dehydration; disaster; disasterpreparedness; disasters; diy; emergency; emergencyprep; emergencypreparation; food; foodie; freeperkitchen; garden; gardening; granny; loquat; makeamix; medlars; nespola; nwarizonagranny; obamanomics; preparedness; prepper; recession; repository; shinypenny; shtf; solaroven; stinkbait; survival; survivalist; survivallist; survivaltoday; teotwawki; wcgnascarthread
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To: DelaWhere

I agree!! Dry everything. If it doesn’t stop raining soon, I’ll have nothing to dry. Have never dried extensively, but I think this is the year to give it a try. Have tried crock-pot roast with dried vegetable soup mix and it was delicious, giving the gravy an excellent flavor. With home-dried veggies, should be even better. Just wish I had a root cellar as you do. Would only can if we should lose power for an extended period and I could take things from the freezer and can. We do have a propane powered generator so could take my time canning. Something screwed up. Hope this isn’t a double post.


9,281 posted on 06/29/2009 6:52:10 AM PDT by upcountry miss
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9235 | View Replies]

To: upcountry miss

Dehydrated Food Shelf Life

There are many factors that can affect the storable life of your dry and dehydrated bulk food.  Please take the time to read this information page if you are not aware of how foods are packed and how they should be stored.

 
Dehydration techniques have come a long way in recent years. Old technology left as much as 30% moisture in the dehydrated products. These poorly dehydrated foods didn't store very well.  Recent advancements in technology have made significant improvements, with moisture levels now at 2% or 3%. Gone are the pliable dehydrated foods. Now they break with a crisp "snap" when bent.

With moisture levels reduced to 2%-3%, storage life has been increased several years. Cans of 8 year old dehydrated carrots and onions taste as good as freshly dehydrated carrots and onions.  These had previously been stored in a warm garage for at least 3 years.  15 year old potato flakes were tested with positive and impressive results.

Don't expect dehydrated vegetables to taste exactly like their fresh or canned counterparts. Generally speaking, dehydrated foods won't have quite as strong a flavor as fresh foods. Almost in every case, however, after adding a little butter and salt and pepper, prepared, dehydrated food is every bit as tasty and sometimes even better tasting than canned vegetables.

Non-vegetable foods (grains, spagehetti, etc.) taste every bit as good as what you've come to expect. In fact, our bread mixes, muffins mixes, pancake mixes are excellent, some of the best tasting products available.

 

Storage Temperature

It is important to keep in mind that not only do colder temperatures affect shelf life of food products, temperature fluctuations affect shelf life too.  Keeping your food stored at a constant temperature will help you acheive the maximum shelf life.  As you can see from the above chart, it is not that hard to obtain 10+ years on your food storage.  Finding a cool, dry location, such as a basement or root cellar is perhaps your best insurance on maximizing the shelf life on your stored foods.

Storage Life & Temperature

Temperature and temperature changes have the most to do with the shelf life of stored food then any other factor.  The USDA states, "Each 5.6 C. (10.08F) drop in temperature doubles the storage life of the seeds." Experience has shown that this applies to foods too.
Temperature Years
37.6 40
48.4 30
59.2 20
70.0 10
80.8 5
91.6 2.5
102.4 1.25

(See also the product chart below )

Foods that will be prepared and consumed rapidly don't need any special storage requirements.  Such foods can be stored at room temperatures with no appreciatable loss of quality or nutrition.  The above chart demonstrates that bulk food can be stored in warm areas for several years.  We don't recommend this for businesses and individuals that are plan to store food for long lengths of time.

Moisture Content

Many products, such as dry beans, grains, and flours contain an average amount of 10% moisture. Although it is not necessary (and very difficult) to remove all moisture from dry food, it is important that any food stored be stored as dry as possible. Excess moisture can ruin your food stored.

Oxygen Content

Oxygen can be removed from the food storage container, resulting in the food lasting much longer then normal.  Oxygen, naturally found in air will oxidize many food compounds. There are a couple of techniques used to remove oxygen from food containers:
  • Displacing the oxygen with nitrogen: Air is purged out by inserting a nitrogen wand into the bucket.  Nitrogen is the most inert gas known.
  • Absorb the oxygen: Oxygen absorber packet absorb the oxygen.  Air contains about 78% nitrogen and 21% oxygen, leaving about 1% for the other gasses. The oxygen is absorbed, leaving about 99% pure nitrogen in a partial vacuum. Our food product in cans or buckets all come with oxygen absorbers in their containers.

Storage Containers

An air tight seal on the food storage container is a must.  All of our food is packed in air tight, sealable food grade cans or buckets (except for items ordered in bags of course) with an oxygen absorber.

Average Shelf Life

Below is a chart to help you determine the shelf life of food stored in air tight containers at constant temperature of 70 degrees. ** All of the following products will store proportionally longer at cooler temperatures if kept at lower storage temperatures. Shelf life of 30+ years is perfectly feasible for many products!
  Years  

Years

  Years
Apples 30        
Adzuki Beans 8 - 10 Gluten 

5

Powder Eggs  15
Alfalfa Seeds 8 Granola

5

Powder Milk  20
All Purpose Flour 15 Great Northern

15

Quinoa 8
Bakers Flour 15 Groats

8

Refried Beans  5
Barley 10 Hard Red Wheat

25 - 30

Ribbons 8 - 15
Black Turtle Beans 15 - 20 Hard White Wheat

25 - 30

Rolled Oats 30
Blackeye Beans

15 -20

Honey, Salt and Sugar

Indefinitely

Rye

8

Broccoli 8 - 10 Hulled Oats 

30

Small Red Beans 8 - 10
Brown Rice 6 Kamut

8 - 12

Soft wheat 25
Buckwheat 15 Kidney Beans

20

Soy Beans 8 - 10
Butter/margarine Powder 15 Lentils

20

Spaghetti 15 -20
Cabbage 8 - 10 Lima Beans

20

Special bakery wheat 25
Carrots 8 - 10 Macaroni

15 - 20

Spelt  12
Celery 8 - 10 Millet

8 - 12

Sprouting Seeds 4-5
Cheese Powder 15 Mixes 

5 - 10

Triticale 8 - 12
Cocoa Powder 15 Morning Moo 

10

TVP 15 - 20
Corn 8 - 12 Mung Beans

8 - 10

Unbleached Flour 5
Cornmeal 5 Noodles

8 - 10

Wheat flakes 15
Cracked wheat 25 Onions

8 - 12

Whey Powder  15
Durham Wheat 8 - 12 Peanut Butter Powder

4 - 5

White Flour  5
Flax 8 - 12 Pearled Oats

10

White Rice

8 - 10

Fruit 5 Peppers

8 - 12

Whole Wheat Flour 

5

Garbanzo Beans 15 - 20 Pink Beans

20 - 30

Yeast

2

Garden Seeds 4 Pinto Beans

20 - 30

   
Germade 5 Potatoes (flakes, slices, dices)

20 - 30

   

Predicting actual shelf life of dehydrated foods is not an exact science, however there have been many studies done.  In addition to the above average shelf life of food stored at a constant 70 degrees, you can dramatically increase your life expectancy by lowering the constant temperature.  It is possible to double, triple or even quadriple the shelf life by lowering the temperature proportionally. 

Some products, such as seeds, can even be frozen for dramatically increased shelf life.  The basic rule of thumb is to store you food storage in as low of temperature as possible to increase its shelf life and to retain nutritional value.

A new study by the Department of Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Science at Brigham Young University (*.pdf file) tested several varieties of dehydrated stored foods in #10 cans. They have learned that shelf life is considerably longer then previously thought. Here are their findings:

Nutritional Adequacy and Shelf Life of Food Storage by Dean Eliason and Michelle Lloyd

Is my food storage still edible? How is the nutritional value?

In the Department of Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Science at BYU, we have conducted research on long-term storage of food. We have collected samples of dry food stored in No. 10 cans for up to 30 years at room temperature or cooler. So far, we have following food products: powdered milk, rice, baking powder, instant potatoes, dried apples, all-purpose flour, pasta, pinto beans, wheat and powdered eggs.

From this testing, we can generally conclude that if properly packaged and stored, all of these foods store fairly well, except for the powdered eggs. In general, the vitamins we have measured (thiamin, riboflavin, vitamin C, vitamin E) in properly stored foods are fairly stable over time. If you think your food storage is getting too old, the best test would be for you to try a sample and decide if it is edible to you. Some people are more picky than others about the food they eat.

What is the nutritional value of basic food storage?

A year supply of basic food storage (400 lb wheat, 60 lb dry beans, 60 lb sugar, 16 lb powdered milk, 10 qt oil, 8 lb salt) provides adequate calories but is lacking in calcium as well as vitamins A, C, B12, and E. Vitamins A and C can be found in canned or bottled fruits and vegetables as well as in some fruit drink mixes. Most vitamin C is destroyed during dehydration of fruits and vegetables, but some vitamin A remains. Good sources of vitamin A include canned pumpkin and dehydrated carrots. Vitamin B12 comes from animal sources and can be found in canned meats and jerky. Calcium comes mainly from dairy products such as powdered milk, hot cocoa mix, and pudding mix (containing dried milk). Vitamin E is found in fats and oils and can be found in nuts such as sunflower seeds and almonds.

Keeping Food For Years (Science Daily Article)

FOOD STORAGE - THE BASICS

Since the entire idea of a food storage program is that it should be available for you and yours in times of need, it is important to understand the conditions that can affect the edibles stored in your pantry.

A storage program is only as good as the quality of the food that goes into it. It cannot get any better than what originally went in, but it can certainly get worse. In the fullness of time, all stored foods will degrade in nutrients and palatability until they reach the inevitable end where even the dog won't eat them. It's because of this eventuality that every article, book, and teacher concerned with putting food by gives the same advice: Date all food containers and rotate, Rotate, ROTATE.

The first food in should be the first food out. This concept is often shortened to the acronym FIFO.

The reason for this emphasis on stock rotation is that when discussing the usefulness of foodstuffs there are really two shelf lives to be considered - the nutritional life and the palatability life. Nutritional content actually begins to fade at the moment of harvest with three major factors influencing nutrient retention: The food's initial nutrient content; the processing and preservation steps the food underwent; and the storage conditions in which it's kept. Given sufficient time, all but the most durable nutrients will dwindle away to nothing. Unfortunately, there is no good way outside of laboratory testing to know how much nutrition is left in a given food, but we can make our own determinations about other criteria which leads us to the palatability life mentioned also mentioned above.

A food's palatability life is the point at which undesirable changes occur to foods taste, texture, color and cooking qualities. This is the reason for the "use by" and "sell by" dates on many foods and for shelf lives in general. It will almost always be in excess of good nutritive life. If you don't have anything to replace old food with, it's not necessary to throw the food out just because it's reached the end of its best palatable storage life. Do, however, keep in mind that advancing age will only further decrease the useful nutrition, increase the foods' unattractiveness to being eaten and enlarge the chances that something may cause the food to spoil.

Within reason, the key to prolonging the shelf life of your edibles lies in lowering the temperature of the area they are stored in. The storage lives of most foods are cut in half by every increase of 18º F (10º Celsius). For example, if you've stored your food in a garage that has a temperature of 90º F, you should expect a shelf life less than half of what could be obtained at room temperature (70º F) this in turn is less than half the storage life that you could get if you kept them in your refrigerator at 40º F. Your storage area should be located where the temperature can be kept above freezing (32º F) and, if possible, below 72º F.

Ideally, your storage location should have a humidity level of 15% or less, but unless you live in the desert it's not terribly likely you'll be able to achieve this. Regardless, moisture is not good for your dry stored edibles so you want to minimize it as much as possible. This can be done by several methods. The first is to keep the area air-conditioned and/or dehumidified during the humid times of the year. The second is to use packaging impervious to moisture and then to deal with the moisture trapped inside. If you are able, there's no reason not to use both.

All containers should be kept off the floor and out of direct contact from exterior walls to reduce the chances of condensation brought on by temperature differences between the container and the surface it's resting against.

Another major threat to your food is oxygen. Chances are that if your foods are sealed in moisture-proof containers the containers are probably air-tight as well. This means that the oxygen can also be kept from doing its damage. If no more can get in, your only concern is the O2 that was trapped inside the container when it was sealed. Lowering the percentage of O2 to 2% or less of the atmosphere trapped inside the packaging (called head gas) can greatly contribute to extending its contents shelf life. The three main tactics for achieving this are vacuum sealing, flushing with inert gas or chemically absorbing the oxygen. Any one or a combination of the three can be used to good effect.

Once you have temperature, humidity and oxygen under control, it is then necessary to look at light. Light is a form of energy and when it shines on your stored foods long enough it transfers some of that energy to your food. This has the effect of degrading nutritional content and appearance. Fat soluble vitamins, such as A, D, E, and K are particularly sensitive to light degradation. It certainly is a pretty sight to look at rows and rows of jars full of delicious food, particularly if you were the one that put the food in those jars. However, if you want to keep them at their best, you'll admire them only when you turn the light on in the pantry to retrieve one. If you don't have a room that can be dedicated to this purpose then store the jars in the cardboard box they came in. This will protect them not only from light, but help to cushion them from shocks which might break a jar or cause it to lose its seal. For those of you in earthquake country, it's a particularly good idea. When "terra" is no longer "firma" your jars just might dance right off onto the floor.

Assuming they were properly processed in the first place, canned, dried and frozen (never thawed) foods do not become unsafe when stored longer than the recommended time, but their nutrient quality fades and their flavor, color and texture goes downhill. Following these rules of good storage will keep your food wholesome and nutritious for as long as possible:

  1. First In, First Out (FIFO) means rotating your storage
  2. Cooler is better
  3. Drier is better
  4. Less oxygen exposure means more shelf life.
  5. Don't shed light on your food.
Think of rotating your food storage as paying your food insurance premiums -- slacking off on rotation cuts back on your coverage. Is your food insurance up to date?
.

http://survivalacres.com/information/shelflife.html

9,282 posted on 06/29/2009 8:09:09 AM PDT by DelaWhere (Gardening: Lots of work, sweat and sore muscles - but Ooooooh the rewards! YUM!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9281 | View Replies]

To: upcountry miss

Dehydrated Food Shelf Life

There are many factors that can affect the storable life of your dry and dehydrated bulk food.  Please take the time to read this information page if you are not aware of how foods are packed and how they should be stored.

 
Dehydration techniques have come a long way in recent years. Old technology left as much as 30% moisture in the dehydrated products. These poorly dehydrated foods didn't store very well.  Recent advancements in technology have made significant improvements, with moisture levels now at 2% or 3%. Gone are the pliable dehydrated foods. Now they break with a crisp "snap" when bent.

With moisture levels reduced to 2%-3%, storage life has been increased several years. Cans of 8 year old dehydrated carrots and onions taste as good as freshly dehydrated carrots and onions.  These had previously been stored in a warm garage for at least 3 years.  15 year old potato flakes were tested with positive and impressive results.

Don't expect dehydrated vegetables to taste exactly like their fresh or canned counterparts. Generally speaking, dehydrated foods won't have quite as strong a flavor as fresh foods. Almost in every case, however, after adding a little butter and salt and pepper, prepared, dehydrated food is every bit as tasty and sometimes even better tasting than canned vegetables.

Non-vegetable foods (grains, spagehetti, etc.) taste every bit as good as what you've come to expect. In fact, our bread mixes, muffins mixes, pancake mixes are excellent, some of the best tasting products available.

 

Storage Temperature

It is important to keep in mind that not only do colder temperatures affect shelf life of food products, temperature fluctuations affect shelf life too.  Keeping your food stored at a constant temperature will help you acheive the maximum shelf life.  As you can see from the above chart, it is not that hard to obtain 10+ years on your food storage.  Finding a cool, dry location, such as a basement or root cellar is perhaps your best insurance on maximizing the shelf life on your stored foods.

Storage Life & Temperature

Temperature and temperature changes have the most to do with the shelf life of stored food then any other factor.  The USDA states, "Each 5.6 C. (10.08F) drop in temperature doubles the storage life of the seeds." Experience has shown that this applies to foods too.
Temperature Years
37.6 40
48.4 30
59.2 20
70.0 10
80.8 5
91.6 2.5
102.4 1.25

(See also the product chart below )

Foods that will be prepared and consumed rapidly don't need any special storage requirements.  Such foods can be stored at room temperatures with no appreciatable loss of quality or nutrition.  The above chart demonstrates that bulk food can be stored in warm areas for several years.  We don't recommend this for businesses and individuals that are plan to store food for long lengths of time.

Moisture Content

Many products, such as dry beans, grains, and flours contain an average amount of 10% moisture. Although it is not necessary (and very difficult) to remove all moisture from dry food, it is important that any food stored be stored as dry as possible. Excess moisture can ruin your food stored.

Oxygen Content

Oxygen can be removed from the food storage container, resulting in the food lasting much longer then normal.  Oxygen, naturally found in air will oxidize many food compounds. There are a couple of techniques used to remove oxygen from food containers:
  • Displacing the oxygen with nitrogen: Air is purged out by inserting a nitrogen wand into the bucket.  Nitrogen is the most inert gas known.
  • Absorb the oxygen: Oxygen absorber packet absorb the oxygen.  Air contains about 78% nitrogen and 21% oxygen, leaving about 1% for the other gasses. The oxygen is absorbed, leaving about 99% pure nitrogen in a partial vacuum. Our food product in cans or buckets all come with oxygen absorbers in their containers.

Storage Containers

An air tight seal on the food storage container is a must.  All of our food is packed in air tight, sealable food grade cans or buckets (except for items ordered in bags of course) with an oxygen absorber.

Average Shelf Life

Below is a chart to help you determine the shelf life of food stored in air tight containers at constant temperature of 70 degrees. ** All of the following products will store proportionally longer at cooler temperatures if kept at lower storage temperatures. Shelf life of 30+ years is perfectly feasible for many products!
  Years  

Years

  Years
Apples 30        
Adzuki Beans 8 - 10 Gluten 

5

Powder Eggs  15
Alfalfa Seeds 8 Granola

5

Powder Milk  20
All Purpose Flour 15 Great Northern

15

Quinoa 8
Bakers Flour 15 Groats

8

Refried Beans  5
Barley 10 Hard Red Wheat

25 - 30

Ribbons 8 - 15
Black Turtle Beans 15 - 20 Hard White Wheat

25 - 30

Rolled Oats 30
Blackeye Beans

15 -20

Honey, Salt and Sugar

Indefinitely

Rye

8

Broccoli 8 - 10 Hulled Oats 

30

Small Red Beans 8 - 10
Brown Rice 6 Kamut

8 - 12

Soft wheat 25
Buckwheat 15 Kidney Beans

20

Soy Beans 8 - 10
Butter/margarine Powder 15 Lentils

20

Spaghetti 15 -20
Cabbage 8 - 10 Lima Beans

20

Special bakery wheat 25
Carrots 8 - 10 Macaroni

15 - 20

Spelt  12
Celery 8 - 10 Millet

8 - 12

Sprouting Seeds 4-5
Cheese Powder 15 Mixes 

5 - 10

Triticale 8 - 12
Cocoa Powder 15 Morning Moo 

10

TVP 15 - 20
Corn 8 - 12 Mung Beans

8 - 10

Unbleached Flour 5
Cornmeal 5 Noodles

8 - 10

Wheat flakes 15
Cracked wheat 25 Onions

8 - 12

Whey Powder  15
Durham Wheat 8 - 12 Peanut Butter Powder

4 - 5

White Flour  5
Flax 8 - 12 Pearled Oats

10

White Rice

8 - 10

Fruit 5 Peppers

8 - 12

Whole Wheat Flour 

5

Garbanzo Beans 15 - 20 Pink Beans

20 - 30

Yeast

2

Garden Seeds 4 Pinto Beans

20 - 30

   
Germade 5 Potatoes (flakes, slices, dices)

20 - 30

   

Predicting actual shelf life of dehydrated foods is not an exact science, however there have been many studies done.  In addition to the above average shelf life of food stored at a constant 70 degrees, you can dramatically increase your life expectancy by lowering the constant temperature.  It is possible to double, triple or even quadriple the shelf life by lowering the temperature proportionally. 

Some products, such as seeds, can even be frozen for dramatically increased shelf life.  The basic rule of thumb is to store you food storage in as low of temperature as possible to increase its shelf life and to retain nutritional value.

A new study by the Department of Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Science at Brigham Young University (*.pdf file) tested several varieties of dehydrated stored foods in #10 cans. They have learned that shelf life is considerably longer then previously thought. Here are their findings:

Nutritional Adequacy and Shelf Life of Food Storage by Dean Eliason and Michelle Lloyd

Is my food storage still edible? How is the nutritional value?

In the Department of Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Science at BYU, we have conducted research on long-term storage of food. We have collected samples of dry food stored in No. 10 cans for up to 30 years at room temperature or cooler. So far, we have following food products: powdered milk, rice, baking powder, instant potatoes, dried apples, all-purpose flour, pasta, pinto beans, wheat and powdered eggs.

From this testing, we can generally conclude that if properly packaged and stored, all of these foods store fairly well, except for the powdered eggs. In general, the vitamins we have measured (thiamin, riboflavin, vitamin C, vitamin E) in properly stored foods are fairly stable over time. If you think your food storage is getting too old, the best test would be for you to try a sample and decide if it is edible to you. Some people are more picky than others about the food they eat.

What is the nutritional value of basic food storage?

A year supply of basic food storage (400 lb wheat, 60 lb dry beans, 60 lb sugar, 16 lb powdered milk, 10 qt oil, 8 lb salt) provides adequate calories but is lacking in calcium as well as vitamins A, C, B12, and E. Vitamins A and C can be found in canned or bottled fruits and vegetables as well as in some fruit drink mixes. Most vitamin C is destroyed during dehydration of fruits and vegetables, but some vitamin A remains. Good sources of vitamin A include canned pumpkin and dehydrated carrots. Vitamin B12 comes from animal sources and can be found in canned meats and jerky. Calcium comes mainly from dairy products such as powdered milk, hot cocoa mix, and pudding mix (containing dried milk). Vitamin E is found in fats and oils and can be found in nuts such as sunflower seeds and almonds.

Keeping Food For Years (Science Daily Article)

FOOD STORAGE - THE BASICS

Since the entire idea of a food storage program is that it should be available for you and yours in times of need, it is important to understand the conditions that can affect the edibles stored in your pantry.

A storage program is only as good as the quality of the food that goes into it. It cannot get any better than what originally went in, but it can certainly get worse. In the fullness of time, all stored foods will degrade in nutrients and palatability until they reach the inevitable end where even the dog won't eat them. It's because of this eventuality that every article, book, and teacher concerned with putting food by gives the same advice: Date all food containers and rotate, Rotate, ROTATE.

The first food in should be the first food out. This concept is often shortened to the acronym FIFO.

The reason for this emphasis on stock rotation is that when discussing the usefulness of foodstuffs there are really two shelf lives to be considered - the nutritional life and the palatability life. Nutritional content actually begins to fade at the moment of harvest with three major factors influencing nutrient retention: The food's initial nutrient content; the processing and preservation steps the food underwent; and the storage conditions in which it's kept. Given sufficient time, all but the most durable nutrients will dwindle away to nothing. Unfortunately, there is no good way outside of laboratory testing to know how much nutrition is left in a given food, but we can make our own determinations about other criteria which leads us to the palatability life mentioned also mentioned above.

A food's palatability life is the point at which undesirable changes occur to foods taste, texture, color and cooking qualities. This is the reason for the "use by" and "sell by" dates on many foods and for shelf lives in general. It will almost always be in excess of good nutritive life. If you don't have anything to replace old food with, it's not necessary to throw the food out just because it's reached the end of its best palatable storage life. Do, however, keep in mind that advancing age will only further decrease the useful nutrition, increase the foods' unattractiveness to being eaten and enlarge the chances that something may cause the food to spoil.

Within reason, the key to prolonging the shelf life of your edibles lies in lowering the temperature of the area they are stored in. The storage lives of most foods are cut in half by every increase of 18º F (10º Celsius). For example, if you've stored your food in a garage that has a temperature of 90º F, you should expect a shelf life less than half of what could be obtained at room temperature (70º F) this in turn is less than half the storage life that you could get if you kept them in your refrigerator at 40º F. Your storage area should be located where the temperature can be kept above freezing (32º F) and, if possible, below 72º F.

Ideally, your storage location should have a humidity level of 15% or less, but unless you live in the desert it's not terribly likely you'll be able to achieve this. Regardless, moisture is not good for your dry stored edibles so you want to minimize it as much as possible. This can be done by several methods. The first is to keep the area air-conditioned and/or dehumidified during the humid times of the year. The second is to use packaging impervious to moisture and then to deal with the moisture trapped inside. If you are able, there's no reason not to use both.

All containers should be kept off the floor and out of direct contact from exterior walls to reduce the chances of condensation brought on by temperature differences between the container and the surface it's resting against.

Another major threat to your food is oxygen. Chances are that if your foods are sealed in moisture-proof containers the containers are probably air-tight as well. This means that the oxygen can also be kept from doing its damage. If no more can get in, your only concern is the O2 that was trapped inside the container when it was sealed. Lowering the percentage of O2 to 2% or less of the atmosphere trapped inside the packaging (called head gas) can greatly contribute to extending its contents shelf life. The three main tactics for achieving this are vacuum sealing, flushing with inert gas or chemically absorbing the oxygen. Any one or a combination of the three can be used to good effect.

Once you have temperature, humidity and oxygen under control, it is then necessary to look at light. Light is a form of energy and when it shines on your stored foods long enough it transfers some of that energy to your food. This has the effect of degrading nutritional content and appearance. Fat soluble vitamins, such as A, D, E, and K are particularly sensitive to light degradation. It certainly is a pretty sight to look at rows and rows of jars full of delicious food, particularly if you were the one that put the food in those jars. However, if you want to keep them at their best, you'll admire them only when you turn the light on in the pantry to retrieve one. If you don't have a room that can be dedicated to this purpose then store the jars in the cardboard box they came in. This will protect them not only from light, but help to cushion them from shocks which might break a jar or cause it to lose its seal. For those of you in earthquake country, it's a particularly good idea. When "terra" is no longer "firma" your jars just might dance right off onto the floor.

Assuming they were properly processed in the first place, canned, dried and frozen (never thawed) foods do not become unsafe when stored longer than the recommended time, but their nutrient quality fades and their flavor, color and texture goes downhill. Following these rules of good storage will keep your food wholesome and nutritious for as long as possible:

  1. First In, First Out (FIFO) means rotating your storage
  2. Cooler is better
  3. Drier is better
  4. Less oxygen exposure means more shelf life.
  5. Don't shed light on your food.
Think of rotating your food storage as paying your food insurance premiums -- slacking off on rotation cuts back on your coverage. Is your food insurance up to date?
.

http://survivalacres.com/information/shelflife.html

9,283 posted on 06/29/2009 9:29:17 AM PDT by DelaWhere (Gardening: Lots of work, sweat and sore muscles - but Ooooooh the rewards! YUM!)
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To: upcountry miss

Dehydrated Food Shelf Life

There are many factors that can affect the storable life of your dry and dehydrated bulk food.  Please take the time to read this information page if you are not aware of how foods are packed and how they should be stored.

 
Dehydration techniques have come a long way in recent years. Old technology left as much as 30% moisture in the dehydrated products. These poorly dehydrated foods didn't store very well.  Recent advancements in technology have made significant improvements, with moisture levels now at 2% or 3%. Gone are the pliable dehydrated foods. Now they break with a crisp "snap" when bent.

With moisture levels reduced to 2%-3%, storage life has been increased several years. Cans of 8 year old dehydrated carrots and onions taste as good as freshly dehydrated carrots and onions.  These had previously been stored in a warm garage for at least 3 years.  15 year old potato flakes were tested with positive and impressive results.

Don't expect dehydrated vegetables to taste exactly like their fresh or canned counterparts. Generally speaking, dehydrated foods won't have quite as strong a flavor as fresh foods. Almost in every case, however, after adding a little butter and salt and pepper, prepared, dehydrated food is every bit as tasty and sometimes even better tasting than canned vegetables.

Non-vegetable foods (grains, spagehetti, etc.) taste every bit as good as what you've come to expect. In fact, our bread mixes, muffins mixes, pancake mixes are excellent, some of the best tasting products available.

 

Storage Temperature

It is important to keep in mind that not only do colder temperatures affect shelf life of food products, temperature fluctuations affect shelf life too.  Keeping your food stored at a constant temperature will help you acheive the maximum shelf life.  As you can see from the above chart, it is not that hard to obtain 10+ years on your food storage.  Finding a cool, dry location, such as a basement or root cellar is perhaps your best insurance on maximizing the shelf life on your stored foods.

Storage Life & Temperature

Temperature and temperature changes have the most to do with the shelf life of stored food then any other factor.  The USDA states, "Each 5.6 C. (10.08F) drop in temperature doubles the storage life of the seeds." Experience has shown that this applies to foods too.
Temperature Years
37.6 40
48.4 30
59.2 20
70.0 10
80.8 5
91.6 2.5
102.4 1.25

(See also the product chart below )

Foods that will be prepared and consumed rapidly don't need any special storage requirements.  Such foods can be stored at room temperatures with no appreciatable loss of quality or nutrition.  The above chart demonstrates that bulk food can be stored in warm areas for several years.  We don't recommend this for businesses and individuals that are plan to store food for long lengths of time.

Moisture Content

Many products, such as dry beans, grains, and flours contain an average amount of 10% moisture. Although it is not necessary (and very difficult) to remove all moisture from dry food, it is important that any food stored be stored as dry as possible. Excess moisture can ruin your food stored.

Oxygen Content

Oxygen can be removed from the food storage container, resulting in the food lasting much longer then normal.  Oxygen, naturally found in air will oxidize many food compounds. There are a couple of techniques used to remove oxygen from food containers:
  • Displacing the oxygen with nitrogen: Air is purged out by inserting a nitrogen wand into the bucket.  Nitrogen is the most inert gas known.
  • Absorb the oxygen: Oxygen absorber packet absorb the oxygen.  Air contains about 78% nitrogen and 21% oxygen, leaving about 1% for the other gasses. The oxygen is absorbed, leaving about 99% pure nitrogen in a partial vacuum. Our food product in cans or buckets all come with oxygen absorbers in their containers.

Storage Containers

An air tight seal on the food storage container is a must.  All of our food is packed in air tight, sealable food grade cans or buckets (except for items ordered in bags of course) with an oxygen absorber.

Average Shelf Life

Below is a chart to help you determine the shelf life of food stored in air tight containers at constant temperature of 70 degrees. ** All of the following products will store proportionally longer at cooler temperatures if kept at lower storage temperatures. Shelf life of 30+ years is perfectly feasible for many products!
  Years  

Years

  Years
Apples 30        
Adzuki Beans 8 - 10 Gluten 

5

Powder Eggs  15
Alfalfa Seeds 8 Granola

5

Powder Milk  20
All Purpose Flour 15 Great Northern

15

Quinoa 8
Bakers Flour 15 Groats

8

Refried Beans  5
Barley 10 Hard Red Wheat

25 - 30

Ribbons 8 - 15
Black Turtle Beans 15 - 20 Hard White Wheat

25 - 30

Rolled Oats 30
Blackeye Beans

15 -20

Honey, Salt and Sugar

Indefinitely

Rye

8

Broccoli 8 - 10 Hulled Oats 

30

Small Red Beans 8 - 10
Brown Rice 6 Kamut

8 - 12

Soft wheat 25
Buckwheat 15 Kidney Beans

20

Soy Beans 8 - 10
Butter/margarine Powder 15 Lentils

20

Spaghetti 15 -20
Cabbage 8 - 10 Lima Beans

20

Special bakery wheat 25
Carrots 8 - 10 Macaroni

15 - 20

Spelt  12
Celery 8 - 10 Millet

8 - 12

Sprouting Seeds 4-5
Cheese Powder 15 Mixes 

5 - 10

Triticale 8 - 12
Cocoa Powder 15 Morning Moo 

10

TVP 15 - 20
Corn 8 - 12 Mung Beans

8 - 10

Unbleached Flour 5
Cornmeal 5 Noodles

8 - 10

Wheat flakes 15
Cracked wheat 25 Onions

8 - 12

Whey Powder  15
Durham Wheat 8 - 12 Peanut Butter Powder

4 - 5

White Flour  5
Flax 8 - 12 Pearled Oats

10

White Rice

8 - 10

Fruit 5 Peppers

8 - 12

Whole Wheat Flour 

5

Garbanzo Beans 15 - 20 Pink Beans

20 - 30

Yeast

2

Garden Seeds 4 Pinto Beans

20 - 30

   
Germade 5 Potatoes (flakes, slices, dices)

20 - 30

   

Predicting actual shelf life of dehydrated foods is not an exact science, however there have been many studies done.  In addition to the above average shelf life of food stored at a constant 70 degrees, you can dramatically increase your life expectancy by lowering the constant temperature.  It is possible to double, triple or even quadriple the shelf life by lowering the temperature proportionally. 

Some products, such as seeds, can even be frozen for dramatically increased shelf life.  The basic rule of thumb is to store you food storage in as low of temperature as possible to increase its shelf life and to retain nutritional value.

A new study by the Department of Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Science at Brigham Young University (*.pdf file) tested several varieties of dehydrated stored foods in #10 cans. They have learned that shelf life is considerably longer then previously thought. Here are their findings:

Nutritional Adequacy and Shelf Life of Food Storage by Dean Eliason and Michelle Lloyd

Is my food storage still edible? How is the nutritional value?

In the Department of Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Science at BYU, we have conducted research on long-term storage of food. We have collected samples of dry food stored in No. 10 cans for up to 30 years at room temperature or cooler. So far, we have following food products: powdered milk, rice, baking powder, instant potatoes, dried apples, all-purpose flour, pasta, pinto beans, wheat and powdered eggs.

From this testing, we can generally conclude that if properly packaged and stored, all of these foods store fairly well, except for the powdered eggs. In general, the vitamins we have measured (thiamin, riboflavin, vitamin C, vitamin E) in properly stored foods are fairly stable over time. If you think your food storage is getting too old, the best test would be for you to try a sample and decide if it is edible to you. Some people are more picky than others about the food they eat.

What is the nutritional value of basic food storage?

A year supply of basic food storage (400 lb wheat, 60 lb dry beans, 60 lb sugar, 16 lb powdered milk, 10 qt oil, 8 lb salt) provides adequate calories but is lacking in calcium as well as vitamins A, C, B12, and E. Vitamins A and C can be found in canned or bottled fruits and vegetables as well as in some fruit drink mixes. Most vitamin C is destroyed during dehydration of fruits and vegetables, but some vitamin A remains. Good sources of vitamin A include canned pumpkin and dehydrated carrots. Vitamin B12 comes from animal sources and can be found in canned meats and jerky. Calcium comes mainly from dairy products such as powdered milk, hot cocoa mix, and pudding mix (containing dried milk). Vitamin E is found in fats and oils and can be found in nuts such as sunflower seeds and almonds.

Keeping Food For Years (Science Daily Article)

FOOD STORAGE - THE BASICS

Since the entire idea of a food storage program is that it should be available for you and yours in times of need, it is important to understand the conditions that can affect the edibles stored in your pantry.

A storage program is only as good as the quality of the food that goes into it. It cannot get any better than what originally went in, but it can certainly get worse. In the fullness of time, all stored foods will degrade in nutrients and palatability until they reach the inevitable end where even the dog won't eat them. It's because of this eventuality that every article, book, and teacher concerned with putting food by gives the same advice: Date all food containers and rotate, Rotate, ROTATE.

The first food in should be the first food out. This concept is often shortened to the acronym FIFO.

The reason for this emphasis on stock rotation is that when discussing the usefulness of foodstuffs there are really two shelf lives to be considered - the nutritional life and the palatability life. Nutritional content actually begins to fade at the moment of harvest with three major factors influencing nutrient retention: The food's initial nutrient content; the processing and preservation steps the food underwent; and the storage conditions in which it's kept. Given sufficient time, all but the most durable nutrients will dwindle away to nothing. Unfortunately, there is no good way outside of laboratory testing to know how much nutrition is left in a given food, but we can make our own determinations about other criteria which leads us to the palatability life mentioned also mentioned above.

A food's palatability life is the point at which undesirable changes occur to foods taste, texture, color and cooking qualities. This is the reason for the "use by" and "sell by" dates on many foods and for shelf lives in general. It will almost always be in excess of good nutritive life. If you don't have anything to replace old food with, it's not necessary to throw the food out just because it's reached the end of its best palatable storage life. Do, however, keep in mind that advancing age will only further decrease the useful nutrition, increase the foods' unattractiveness to being eaten and enlarge the chances that something may cause the food to spoil.

Within reason, the key to prolonging the shelf life of your edibles lies in lowering the temperature of the area they are stored in. The storage lives of most foods are cut in half by every increase of 18º F (10º Celsius). For example, if you've stored your food in a garage that has a temperature of 90º F, you should expect a shelf life less than half of what could be obtained at room temperature (70º F) this in turn is less than half the storage life that you could get if you kept them in your refrigerator at 40º F. Your storage area should be located where the temperature can be kept above freezing (32º F) and, if possible, below 72º F.

Ideally, your storage location should have a humidity level of 15% or less, but unless you live in the desert it's not terribly likely you'll be able to achieve this. Regardless, moisture is not good for your dry stored edibles so you want to minimize it as much as possible. This can be done by several methods. The first is to keep the area air-conditioned and/or dehumidified during the humid times of the year. The second is to use packaging impervious to moisture and then to deal with the moisture trapped inside. If you are able, there's no reason not to use both.

All containers should be kept off the floor and out of direct contact from exterior walls to reduce the chances of condensation brought on by temperature differences between the container and the surface it's resting against.

Another major threat to your food is oxygen. Chances are that if your foods are sealed in moisture-proof containers the containers are probably air-tight as well. This means that the oxygen can also be kept from doing its damage. If no more can get in, your only concern is the O2 that was trapped inside the container when it was sealed. Lowering the percentage of O2 to 2% or less of the atmosphere trapped inside the packaging (called head gas) can greatly contribute to extending its contents shelf life. The three main tactics for achieving this are vacuum sealing, flushing with inert gas or chemically absorbing the oxygen. Any one or a combination of the three can be used to good effect.

Once you have temperature, humidity and oxygen under control, it is then necessary to look at light. Light is a form of energy and when it shines on your stored foods long enough it transfers some of that energy to your food. This has the effect of degrading nutritional content and appearance. Fat soluble vitamins, such as A, D, E, and K are particularly sensitive to light degradation. It certainly is a pretty sight to look at rows and rows of jars full of delicious food, particularly if you were the one that put the food in those jars. However, if you want to keep them at their best, you'll admire them only when you turn the light on in the pantry to retrieve one. If you don't have a room that can be dedicated to this purpose then store the jars in the cardboard box they came in. This will protect them not only from light, but help to cushion them from shocks which might break a jar or cause it to lose its seal. For those of you in earthquake country, it's a particularly good idea. When "terra" is no longer "firma" your jars just might dance right off onto the floor.

Assuming they were properly processed in the first place, canned, dried and frozen (never thawed) foods do not become unsafe when stored longer than the recommended time, but their nutrient quality fades and their flavor, color and texture goes downhill. Following these rules of good storage will keep your food wholesome and nutritious for as long as possible:

  1. First In, First Out (FIFO) means rotating your storage
  2. Cooler is better
  3. Drier is better
  4. Less oxygen exposure means more shelf life.
  5. Don't shed light on your food.
Think of rotating your food storage as paying your food insurance premiums -- slacking off on rotation cuts back on your coverage. Is your food insurance up to date?
.

http://survivalacres.com/information/shelflife.html

9,284 posted on 06/29/2009 9:32:37 AM PDT by DelaWhere (Gardening: Lots of work, sweat and sore muscles - but Ooooooh the rewards! YUM!)
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To: upcountry miss

Dehydrated Food Shelf Life

There are many factors that can affect the storable life of your dry and dehydrated bulk food.  Please take the time to read this information page if you are not aware of how foods are packed and how they should be stored.

 
Dehydration techniques have come a long way in recent years. Old technology left as much as 30% moisture in the dehydrated products. These poorly dehydrated foods didn't store very well.  Recent advancements in technology have made significant improvements, with moisture levels now at 2% or 3%. Gone are the pliable dehydrated foods. Now they break with a crisp "snap" when bent.

With moisture levels reduced to 2%-3%, storage life has been increased several years. Cans of 8 year old dehydrated carrots and onions taste as good as freshly dehydrated carrots and onions.  These had previously been stored in a warm garage for at least 3 years.  15 year old potato flakes were tested with positive and impressive results.

Don't expect dehydrated vegetables to taste exactly like their fresh or canned counterparts. Generally speaking, dehydrated foods won't have quite as strong a flavor as fresh foods. Almost in every case, however, after adding a little butter and salt and pepper, prepared, dehydrated food is every bit as tasty and sometimes even better tasting than canned vegetables.

Non-vegetable foods (grains, spagehetti, etc.) taste every bit as good as what you've come to expect. In fact, our bread mixes, muffins mixes, pancake mixes are excellent, some of the best tasting products available.

 

Storage Temperature

It is important to keep in mind that not only do colder temperatures affect shelf life of food products, temperature fluctuations affect shelf life too.  Keeping your food stored at a constant temperature will help you acheive the maximum shelf life.  As you can see from the above chart, it is not that hard to obtain 10+ years on your food storage.  Finding a cool, dry location, such as a basement or root cellar is perhaps your best insurance on maximizing the shelf life on your stored foods.

Storage Life & Temperature

Temperature and temperature changes have the most to do with the shelf life of stored food then any other factor.  The USDA states, "Each 5.6 C. (10.08F) drop in temperature doubles the storage life of the seeds." Experience has shown that this applies to foods too.
Temperature Years
37.6 40
48.4 30
59.2 20
70.0 10
80.8 5
91.6 2.5
102.4 1.25

(See also the product chart below )

Foods that will be prepared and consumed rapidly don't need any special storage requirements.  Such foods can be stored at room temperatures with no appreciatable loss of quality or nutrition.  The above chart demonstrates that bulk food can be stored in warm areas for several years.  We don't recommend this for businesses and individuals that are plan to store food for long lengths of time.

Moisture Content

Many products, such as dry beans, grains, and flours contain an average amount of 10% moisture. Although it is not necessary (and very difficult) to remove all moisture from dry food, it is important that any food stored be stored as dry as possible. Excess moisture can ruin your food stored.

Oxygen Content

Oxygen can be removed from the food storage container, resulting in the food lasting much longer then normal.  Oxygen, naturally found in air will oxidize many food compounds. There are a couple of techniques used to remove oxygen from food containers:
  • Displacing the oxygen with nitrogen: Air is purged out by inserting a nitrogen wand into the bucket.  Nitrogen is the most inert gas known.
  • Absorb the oxygen: Oxygen absorber packet absorb the oxygen.  Air contains about 78% nitrogen and 21% oxygen, leaving about 1% for the other gasses. The oxygen is absorbed, leaving about 99% pure nitrogen in a partial vacuum. Our food product in cans or buckets all come with oxygen absorbers in their containers.

Storage Containers

An air tight seal on the food storage container is a must.  All of our food is packed in air tight, sealable food grade cans or buckets (except for items ordered in bags of course) with an oxygen absorber.

Average Shelf Life

Below is a chart to help you determine the shelf life of food stored in air tight containers at constant temperature of 70 degrees. ** All of the following products will store proportionally longer at cooler temperatures if kept at lower storage temperatures. Shelf life of 30+ years is perfectly feasible for many products!
  Years  

Years

  Years
Apples 30        
Adzuki Beans 8 - 10 Gluten 

5

Powder Eggs  15
Alfalfa Seeds 8 Granola

5

Powder Milk  20
All Purpose Flour 15 Great Northern

15

Quinoa 8
Bakers Flour 15 Groats

8

Refried Beans  5
Barley 10 Hard Red Wheat

25 - 30

Ribbons 8 - 15
Black Turtle Beans 15 - 20 Hard White Wheat

25 - 30

Rolled Oats 30
Blackeye Beans

15 -20

Honey, Salt and Sugar

Indefinitely

Rye

8

Broccoli 8 - 10 Hulled Oats 

30

Small Red Beans 8 - 10
Brown Rice 6 Kamut

8 - 12

Soft wheat 25
Buckwheat 15 Kidney Beans

20

Soy Beans 8 - 10
Butter/margarine Powder 15 Lentils

20

Spaghetti 15 -20
Cabbage 8 - 10 Lima Beans

20

Special bakery wheat 25
Carrots 8 - 10 Macaroni

15 - 20

Spelt  12
Celery 8 - 10 Millet

8 - 12

Sprouting Seeds 4-5
Cheese Powder 15 Mixes 

5 - 10

Triticale 8 - 12
Cocoa Powder 15 Morning Moo 

10

TVP 15 - 20
Corn 8 - 12 Mung Beans

8 - 10

Unbleached Flour 5
Cornmeal 5 Noodles

8 - 10

Wheat flakes 15
Cracked wheat 25 Onions

8 - 12

Whey Powder  15
Durham Wheat 8 - 12 Peanut Butter Powder

4 - 5

White Flour  5
Flax 8 - 12 Pearled Oats

10

White Rice

8 - 10

Fruit 5 Peppers

8 - 12

Whole Wheat Flour 

5

Garbanzo Beans 15 - 20 Pink Beans

20 - 30

Yeast

2

Garden Seeds 4 Pinto Beans

20 - 30

   
Germade 5 Potatoes (, slices, dices)

20 - 30

   

Predicting actual shelf life of dehydrated foods is not an exact science, however there have been many studies done.  In addition to the above average shelf life of food stored at a constant 70 degrees, you can dramatically increase your life expectancy by lowering the constant temperature.  It is possible to double, triple or even quadriple the shelf life by lowering the temperature proportionally. 

Some products, such as seeds, can even be frozen for dramatically increased shelf life.  The basic rule of thumb is to store you food storage in as low of temperature as possible to increase its shelf life and to retain nutritional value.

A new study by the Department of Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Science at Brigham Young University (*.pdf file) tested several varieties of dehydrated stored foods in #10 cans. They have learned that shelf life is considerably longer then previously thought. Here are their findings:

Nutritional Adequacy and Shelf Life of Food Storage by Dean Eliason and Michelle Lloyd

Is my food storage still edible? How is the nutritional value?

In the Department of Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Science at BYU, we have conducted research on long-term storage of food. We have collected samples of dry food stored in No. 10 cans for up to 30 years at room temperature or cooler. So far, we have following food products: powdered milk, rice, baking powder, instant potatoes, dried apples, all-purpose flour, pasta, pinto beans, wheat and powdered eggs.

From this testing, we can generally conclude that if properly packaged and stored, all of these foods store fairly well, except for the powdered eggs. In general, the vitamins we have measured (thiamin, riboflavin, vitamin C, vitamin E) in properly stored foods are fairly stable over time. If you think your food storage is getting too old, the best test would be for you to try a sample and decide if it is edible to you. Some people are more picky than others about the food they eat.

What is the nutritional value of basic food storage?

A year supply of basic food storage (400 lb wheat, 60 lb dry beans, 60 lb sugar, 16 lb powdered milk, 10 qt oil, 8 lb salt) provides adequate calories but is lacking in calcium as well as vitamins A, C, B12, and E. Vitamins A and C can be found in canned or bottled fruits and vegetables as well as in some fruit drink mixes. Most vitamin C is destroyed during dehydration of fruits and vegetables, but some vitamin A remains. Good sources of vitamin A include canned pumpkin and dehydrated carrots. Vitamin B12 comes from animal sources and can be found in canned meats and jerky. Calcium comes mainly from dairy products such as powdered milk, hot cocoa mix, and pudding mix (containing dried milk). Vitamin E is found in fats and oils and can be found in nuts such as sunflower seeds and almonds.

Keeping Food For Years (Science Daily Article)

FOOD STORAGE - THE BASICS

Since the entire idea of a food storage program is that it should be available for you and yours in times of need, it is important to understand the conditions that can affect the edibles stored in your pantry.

A storage program is only as good as the quality of the food that goes into it. It cannot get any better than what originally went in, but it can certainly get worse. In the fullness of time, all stored foods will degrade in nutrients and palatability until they reach the inevitable end where even the dog won't eat them. It's because of this eventuality that every article, book, and teacher concerned with putting food by gives the same advice: Date all food containers and rotate, Rotate, ROTATE.

The first food in should be the first food out. This concept is often shortened to the acronym FIFO.

The reason for this emphasis on stock rotation is that when discussing the usefulness of foodstuffs there are really two shelf lives to be considered - the nutritional life and the palatability life. Nutritional content actually begins to fade at the moment of harvest with three major factors influencing nutrient retention: The food's initial nutrient content; the processing and preservation steps the food underwent; and the storage conditions in which it's kept. Given sufficient time, all but the most durable nutrients will dwindle away to nothing. Unfortunately, there is no good way outside of laboratory testing to know how much nutrition is left in a given food, but we can make our own determinations about other criteria which leads us to the palatability life mentioned also mentioned above.

A food's palatability life is the point at which undesirable changes occur to foods taste, texture, color and cooking qualities. This is the reason for the "use by" and "sell by" dates on many foods and for shelf lives in general. It will almost always be in excess of good nutritive life. If you don't have anything to replace old food with, it's not necessary to throw the food out just because it's reached the end of its best palatable storage life. Do, however, keep in mind that advancing age will only further decrease the useful nutrition, increase the foods' unattractiveness to being eaten and enlarge the chances that something may cause the food to spoil.

Within reason, the key to prolonging the shelf life of your edibles lies in lowering the temperature of the area they are stored in. The storage lives of most foods are cut in half by every increase of 18º F (10º Celsius). For example, if you've stored your food in a garage that has a temperature of 90º F, you should expect a shelf life less than half of what could be obtained at room temperature (70º F) this in turn is less than half the storage life that you could get if you kept them in your refrigerator at 40º F. Your storage area should be located where the temperature can be kept above freezing (32º F) and, if possible, below 72º F.

Ideally, your storage location should have a humidity level of 15% or less, but unless you live in the desert it's not terribly likely you'll be able to achieve this. Regardless, moisture is not good for your dry stored edibles so you want to minimize it as much as possible. This can be done by several methods. The first is to keep the area air-conditioned and/or dehumidified during the humid times of the year. The second is to use packaging impervious to moisture and then to deal with the moisture trapped inside. If you are able, there's no reason not to use both.

All containers should be kept off the floor and out of direct contact from exterior walls to reduce the chances of condensation brought on by temperature differences between the container and the surface it's resting against.

Another major threat to your food is oxygen. Chances are that if your foods are sealed in moisture-proof containers the containers are probably air-tight as well. This means that the oxygen can also be kept from doing its damage. If no more can get in, your only concern is the O2 that was trapped inside the container when it was sealed. Lowering the percentage of O2 to 2% or less of the atmosphere trapped inside the packaging (called head gas) can greatly contribute to extending its contents shelf life. The three main tactics for achieving this are vacuum sealing, flushing with inert gas or chemically absorbing the oxygen. Any one or a combination of the three can be used to good effect.

Once you have temperature, humidity and oxygen under control, it is then necessary to look at light. Light is a form of energy and when it shines on your stored foods long enough it transfers some of that energy to your food. This has the effect of degrading nutritional content and appearance. Fat soluble vitamins, such as A, D, E, and K are particularly sensitive to light degradation. It certainly is a pretty sight to look at rows and rows of jars full of delicious food, particularly if you were the one that put the food in those jars. However, if you want to keep them at their best, you'll admire them only when you turn the light on in the pantry to retrieve one. If you don't have a room that can be dedicated to this purpose then store the jars in the cardboard box they came in. This will protect them not only from light, but help to cushion them from shocks which might break a jar or cause it to lose its seal. For those of you in earthquake country, it's a particularly good idea. When "terra" is no longer "firma" your jars just might dance right off onto the floor.

Assuming they were properly processed in the first place, canned, dried and frozen (never thawed) foods do not become unsafe when stored longer than the recommended time, but their nutrient quality fades and their flavor, color and texture goes downhill. Following these rules of good storage will keep your food wholesome and nutritious for as long as possible:

  1. First In, First Out (FIFO) means rotating your storage
  2. Cooler is better
  3. Drier is better
  4. Less oxygen exposure means more shelf life.
  5. Don't shed light on your food.
Think of rotating your food storage as paying your food insurance premiums -- slacking off on rotation cuts back on your coverage. Is your food insurance up to date?
.

http://survivalacres.com/information/shelflife.html

9,285 posted on 06/29/2009 9:39:23 AM PDT by DelaWhere (Gardening: Lots of work, sweat and sore muscles - but Ooooooh the rewards! YUM!)
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To: upcountry miss

DIY Oxygen Absorbers

Most commercial oxygen absorbers are nothing more than fine iron powder mixed with a polymer grain to allow air circulation thru the powder - the rusting of the iron powder does the oxygen scavenging of the containers contents. Its that simple. Its also very easy to replicate that process.

Materials;

*Steel Wool ‘0000’ superfine (don’t use “SOS” pads)

*Salt (table salt is fine)

*Paper towels

*Stapler (a cheap “TOT” kids stapler works too)

Pending on the container size take a wad of steel wool and lay it on a open paper towel, sprinkle table salt over the steel wool and work it into the fibers, fold the towel over and staple in an envelope shape. That’s it !

The salt’s hygroscopic properties attracts moisture and activates corrosion of the fine steel wool and the rusting of the steel absorbs oxygen in the container. Just leave a wad of steel wool outside overnight to see this process in fast forward ... you don’t even need the salt for that experiment.

Keep all your unused DIY Oxygen Absorbers in air-tight freezer bags until you need them.


9,286 posted on 06/29/2009 9:43:12 AM PDT by DelaWhere (Gardening: Lots of work, sweat and sore muscles - but Ooooooh the rewards! YUM!)
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To: nw_arizona_granny

>>>Thanks for all the pumpkin and sweet potato recipes...<<<

Why not dehydrate them and make flour of them?

They would be good in simple breads and cupcakes, pancakes, LOL, food.<<<

excellent idea - will try it!

Thanks for the suggestion.


9,287 posted on 06/29/2009 9:48:41 AM PDT by DelaWhere (Gardening: Lots of work, sweat and sore muscles - but Ooooooh the rewards! YUM!)
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To: nw_arizona_granny

>>>Thanks for all the pumpkin and sweet potato recipes...<<<

Why not dehydrate them and make flour of them?

They would be good in simple breads and cupcakes, pancakes, LOL, food.<<<

excellent idea - will try it!

Thanks for the suggestion.


9,288 posted on 06/29/2009 11:17:28 AM PDT by DelaWhere (Gardening: Lots of work, sweat and sore muscles - but Ooooooh the rewards! YUM!)
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To: upcountry miss; nw_arizona_granny; All

Sorry for the multiple posts - thought there was something wrong with what I was posting, so changed it and kept trying again...

Geesh - it was FR all along...

Should have listened when you warned us UM.


9,289 posted on 06/29/2009 12:17:25 PM PDT by DelaWhere (Gardening: Lots of work, sweat and sore muscles - but Ooooooh the rewards! YUM!)
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To: DelaWhere

Thank you, DW! This is very kind of you to think of me and my furkids. I do worry about them when TSHTF and have been stockpiling both dry and wet food. However, the dry does have expiration dates that aren’t a long ways off.

I’ve been thinking of making their food for a while now, since it is so much better for them.


9,290 posted on 06/29/2009 12:36:21 PM PDT by CottonBall
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To: DelaWhere

Excellent post!

Both of them. ;)


9,291 posted on 06/29/2009 2:09:30 PM PDT by CottonBall
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To: DelaWhere

Geeez!! Thought I was the only one that couldn’t handle my puter. Anyway, thank you so much. This info is just what I have been looking for. Will bookmark for when and if my garden dries out and starts producing


9,292 posted on 06/29/2009 3:49:53 PM PDT by upcountry miss
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To: nw_arizona_granny; DelaWhere; TenthAmendmentChampion; CottonBall; Red_Devil 232; All
Now more than ever,,,,

Video: Gibbs Refuses To Uphold Obama Pledge To Not Tax People Making Under $250k

here's the link:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-bloggers/2281927/posts

video does not like my dial-up or vice versa , so hopefully a hispeed freeper will view and comment..

9,293 posted on 06/29/2009 3:52:24 PM PDT by Eagle50AE (Pray for our Armed Forces.)
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To: DelaWhere
>>> Displacing the oxygen with nitrogen: Air is purged out by inserting a nitrogen wand into the bucket. <<

any ideas on the “nitrogen wand”..

Thank you for the drying info

one more question.. do you have a squash/zucchini/onion pickle recipe and process you use?, I have several but a lot of variance in the soak/boil/HWB process...

9,294 posted on 06/29/2009 4:08:24 PM PDT by Eagle50AE (Pray for our Armed Forces.)
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To: Eagle50AE
video does not like my dial-up or vice versa , so hopefully a hispeed freeper will view and comment..

Ok, Eagle, I'll do my part and comment (since you are kind enough to point out these great threads to us).

Summary: Gibbs tapdancing all over the place, refusing to answer. Started with a question about will Obama veto a health bill that raises taxes on those making over $250K. Gibbs said he gets this question once a week, there's flexibiity on the part of Congress, yada yada yada. Another reporter (or perhaps the same) said Obama made a flat pledge on the campaign trail and what about that. Gibbs said it is a hypothetical question since there are any number of different bills and proposals out there. Another reporter says it is not hypothetical since Obama made a pledge. Gibbs states that they are going to let the process work its way through. Laughter and guffaws from the press. Someone asks if Obama is reversing his most conspicuous promise now. More dancing around, stating the bill is not even close.

Are these actually the same liberal journalists we've had to endure for years? I *almost* like them.
9,295 posted on 06/29/2009 5:17:57 PM PDT by CottonBall (uestio)
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To: JDoutrider; Marmolade; DelaWhere; nw_arizona_granny; TenthAmendmentChampion; upcountry miss; ...

Howdy my canning mentors!

I was in a frenzy today and bought lots and lots of round steak today at Vons for $.99! Can’t remember when I last saw that price around here for round steak. What’s the best way to prepare it for canning? I was thinking little cubes, like for stews, lightly browning, and then can. Or perhaps bigger chunks?

I took care of about half the peaches on our little dwarf tree today also. Got about 12 jars. Except every single one is floating! They are still very pretty, with the bright orange and pinkish half peaches showing - but on the top of the jar. I guess I won’t give ‘em away like I had planned. Perhaps some jars of round steak will work out better for gifts for my mountains neighbors (being sarcastic here).


9,296 posted on 06/29/2009 5:21:46 PM PDT by CottonBall (uestio)
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To: CottonBall

I haven’t done meat yet, and won’t get to it for some weeks but what I read says that you should NOT use flour to brown the meat.

From what I’ve read, you either raw pack the meat with no liquid or cook the meat until medium rare and can it with some broth and/or water.

Let me know what you do about cutting up the meat cause I’d like to know for when I try.


9,297 posted on 06/29/2009 6:33:19 PM PDT by metmom (Welfare was never meant to be a career choice.)
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To: Eagle50AE

>>>do you have a squash/zucchini/onion pickle recipe and process you use?,<<<

I like the bread & butter style (the girls all like plain and dill) The ones I did, included cauliflower and broccoli along with carrots too. I used the pickling lime and some salt for a day, as I like them nice and crisp, rinsed them three or four times, including some soaking and then just followed the B&B recipe.(if you don’t rinse them really well, the lime counteracts the vinegars acidity) Makes them nice and crisp. So I used the lower temp processing and they are great! I will put a whole jar in a serving dish and the three of us will clean it out in one meal - sort of like another vegetable dish.

Here is the USDA version (sans the broccoli and cauliflower)

BREAD AND BUTTER PICKLES

*
6 lbs of 4 to 5-inch pickling cucumbers
*
8 cups of thinly sliced onions (about 3 pounds)
*
1/2 cup canning or pickling salt
*
4 cups of vinegar (5 percent)
*
4-1/2 cups of sugar
*
2 tbsp mustard seed
*
1-1/2 tbsp celery seed
*
1 tbsp ground turmeric
*
1 cup pickling lime (optional- for use in variation below for making firmer pickles)

Yield: About 8 pints

Procedure: Wash the cucumbers. Next, cut off about 1/16-inch of the blossom end and discard. Cut them into 3/16-inch slices. Combine cucumbers and onions in a large bowl. Add salt. Cover with 2 inches crushed or cubed ice. Refrigerate 3 to 4 hours. Add more ice as needed.

Combine remaining ingredients in a large pot. Boil 10 minutes. Drain and add cucumbers and onions slowly reheating to a boil. Fill jars with slices and cooking syrup, leaving 1/2-inch headspace. Adjust lids and process according to the recommendations. For more information see Table 1 or use low-temperature pasteurization treatment. The following treatment results in a better product texture but must be carefully managed to avoid possible spoilage. Place your jars in a canner filled half way with warm (120º to 140ºF) water. Then, add hot water to a level 1 inch above the tops of the jars. Heat the water enough to maintain 180 to 185ºF water temperature for 30 minutes. Check with a candy or jelly thermometer to be certain that the water temperature is at least 180ºF during the entire 30 minutes. Temperatures higher than 185ºF may cause unnecessary softening of pickles.

Variation for firmer pickles: Wash cucumbers. Cut 1/16-inch off blossom end and discard. Cut into 3/16-inch slices. Mix 1 cup pickling lime and 1/2 cup salt to 1 gallon water in a 2- to 3-gallon crock or enamelware container. Avoid inhaling lime dust while mixing the lime-water solution. Soak cucumber slices in lime water for 12 to 24 hours, stirring occasionally. Remove from lime solution, rinse, and resoak 1 hour in fresh cold water. Repeat the rinsing and soaking steps two more times. Handle carefully, as slices will be brittle. Drain well.

Storage: After processing and cooling, jars should be stored 4 to 5 weeks to develop ideal flavor.

Variation: Squash bread-and-butter pickles. Substitute slender (1 to 1-1/2 inches in diameter) zucchini or yellow summer squash for cucumbers.
Table 1. Recommended process time for Bread-and-Butter Pickles in a boiling-water canner.
Process Time at Altitudes of
Style of Pack Jar Size 0 - 1,000 ft 1,001 - 6,000 ft Above 6,000 ft
Hot Pints or Quarts 10 min - - - - - - - -15 - - - - - - — - 20

This document was extracted from the “Complete Guide to Home Canning,” Agriculture Information Bulletin No. 539, USDA. Revised 1994.


9,298 posted on 06/29/2009 7:23:30 PM PDT by DelaWhere (Gardening: Lots of work, sweat and sore muscles - but Ooooooh the rewards! YUM!)
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To: DelaWhere

PING


9,299 posted on 06/29/2009 7:25:17 PM PDT by RVN Airplane Driver ("To be born into freedom is an accident; to die in freedom is an obligation..)
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To: Eagle50AE

I don’t waste my time on Baghdad Bob Gibbs.... (remember Baghdad Bob... Saddam’s press person...) Every time I hear or see Gibbs, that is who I think of.

Well,(speaking of politics) you are getting me started on my lone Congressman... The one whose offices I have called and told that I no longer call him a RHINO, and now call him something much worse. Over his vote for the C(r)ap and Tax bill that he admits he only read parts of before voting for it. If it weren’t such an insult to the soil, I would call him DIRT for Democrat in Republicans Toga.

Three more weeks and I will be addressing him on MY turf when he comes down to the State Fair... I don’t cut him much slack! (Michael Castle one of the 8 R’s who voted for that monstrosity and are responsible for it passing the House) Then his webpage says relies on information from CAP (Center for American Progress - The Ultra Liberal BS spinners that he now apparently bows to instead of the voters) how EVERY State will see thousands of new jobs from this bill... I informed him that The Heritage Foundation and the CBO have a very different take on the outcome with many thousands of NET losses of jobs and taxes (now called trades) out the yazoo - ON EVERYONE! (Think you will ever see your ‘offset’?)

Then he goes on about wind power being our ‘great resource’ - More BS... If he had ever looked at the wind resources maps, he would see that the whole state is poor to marginal at best for wind power. Grrrrrr.

Oh, and forget the 5 days to revise your vote - they are in recess till it is too late for that...

I wish we had a ‘recall’ provision...

LOL Eagle50AE pushed the anger button there... (Maybe I was just all loaded, primed and cocked - just looking for an opportunity to explosively unload)

Breathing deeply now... Blood Pressure almost back down...

One thousand and one, One thousand and two.......


9,300 posted on 06/29/2009 8:19:12 PM PDT by DelaWhere (Gardening: Lots of work, sweat and sore muscles - but Ooooooh the rewards! YUM!)
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