Thanks for posting this. I had a 12 year old can of beef stew yesterday that was very tasty.
Just a reminder that the study says “white rice”, not brown rice, which can go rancid unless you keep it refrigerated or in the freezer.
When I began prepping, “use by” and “best by” was not required to be on canned or packaged goods. So, I called the companies. Now, those dates being there makes food storage much easier.
For really long term food storage, I ordered from Walton Food to have food with a 20-25 year life and likely good past that time. That’s hermetically sealed food.
I tried sealing flour myself and you don’t want to know how that looked after a couple of years, so I dumped that and got sealed Walton flour.
I could buy actual sealed wheat from them as I have a Family Grain Mill but since it’s just me here, I haven’t done that. Maybe I should.
You probablly have actual wheat - right?
The closest my wife and I come to d-i-v-o-r-c-e is when she insists on heaving perfectly good canned food into the garbage when it passes that phony balony date on the label.
I had 2 brothers in WWII. Kenneth told about sitting in a foxhole on Okinawa in 1945 eating C-Rations, some kind of chicken recipe; and as he was “dining” he scrutinized the info printed on the can, of which this was a portion: “Omaha,Nebraska 1929.” The stuff was 16 years old, and he said it was o.k. At least as o.k. as C-Rations ever CAN be.
And what I tried to tell the girl cleaning my house.
When she got to the pantry she started tossing stuff based on the date.
I had to sit her down and explain what studies have shown and the dates are arbitray government numbers that really have no meaning or value.
At least for canned or jarred foods.
Then explained what caused food to spoil and what one of the catalysts, oxygen, is and does.
Then explained that canned food is filled to the lid and is exposed to no air.
She actually wanted to toss soy sauce that had expired. LOL
Had to explain what salt does and why it is used as a preservative.
She then asked why there was open bottle of soy sauce, various hot sauces, etc in the fridge if foodstuff that high in salt could be stored for very long times at room temp.
Not my decision, like most things that go on in the house.
She still had her programming and kept trying to toss perfectly good food. So I had to stand side by side with her and then finally asked that she just clean up the shelving and organize everything.
I left to attend to business and when I returned I opened the pantry. Damn! Looked great and she threw everything away.
I started laughing because again, I don’t get to make a whole lot decisions around here.
Besides, I have other caches in the event there is a disaster and if push comes to shove I’ll be eating and explaining why the dates on the cans are irrelevant, while they are sitting hungry.
They’ll eat eventually.
My brother-in-law spent a year in Greenland with the U.S. Army in the late 50s. They were eating “fresh” eggs in cartons that were date-stamped 1945.
I don’t believe any of the date-stamps on food or medicine as long as they are kept cool and dry.
We had some neighbors who were quite elderly (well into their 90’s) when they passed away. There were shelves full of home-canned items in the cellar (peaches, pears, some veggies, etc.) that were preserved at least 20 years earlier.
One of the family friends asked if he could have the food. We were all simply horrified...but he took it, ate it, and reported that it was excellent! Who knew...LOL!
When I was in Marine Corps boot camp we ate C rations from WWII that at the time were 28 years old. They tasted all right to me.
My wife is of the firm belief that the day (or hour/minute/second) after the use-by-day date, food becomes poisonous and you will die a slow, painful, choking death if you ingest the food. By contrast, I eat bread that has passed the ubd by months. Of course, I store it in the refrigerator, and it still tastes good. But I can’t convince my wife that eating food after the ubd won’t necessarily kill you.
Botom line, at my age my canned and dry foods have a longer shelf life than I do.