Sealable Food Container

Sealable Food Container
Sealable Food Container

Shelf Life of Storable Foods

If you are looking to start a food storage program for your family, then you need to know about the shelf life of storable foods. There are four factors that affect the shelf life of storable food. The temperature of the storage area, the moisture content of the food, the storage container atmosphere, and the storage container itself. Let’s look at each of those factors.

1) Temperature of the Storage Area

Temperature has more to do with how long storable food will last than anything else. The bottom line is that if you are planning on storing your food in a warm environment, it will only last a fraction of the time it would last in a cool, dry place. Some feel that the optimum temperature is 40 degrees F or less. However, not many people will be able to achieve that. Another factor is that you a place where the temperature is relatively constant. Frequent temperature changes can also shorten the life of storable food.

In short, remember to store a cool, dry, dark place, where the temperature remains relatively constant.

2) Moisture Content of the Food

Foods with excess moisture can spoil in their containers. For long term storage, food should have a moisture content of 10% or less. This can be hard to achieve because the average person doesn’t have specialized equipment.

One option is to get freeze-dried foods, which are specially-prepared for this purpose. The moisture content of these foods has been taken care of in the preparation process.

3) Atmosphere in the Storage Container

Foods packed in air in storage containers will not store as well, as oxygen oxidizes many of the compounds in food. Nitrogen is a popular gas for storing food. It works very well.

Some people use oxygen absorber packets. Just place one in the storage container and seal. The one thing to remember is that the storage container must be able to withstand some vacuum pressure, as the absorber packet will create that as it absorbs the oxygen.

Most food units package food in nitrogen-packed #10 cans.

4) The Storage Container

To get the longest life out of your stored foods, your storage containers should have a hermetic seal (air tight). #10 Cans and sealable food-grade storage buckets work very well.

One very important fact about storage containers is that they must be food grade containers. #10 cans used for food storage often have an enamel lining. You can also buy plastic food-grade 5 gallon buckets.

If you buy a commercially-prepared food unit with #10 cans, then the second, third, and fourth factors are already addressed for you. In order to satisfy the first factor, you will still want to store the food in a cool, dry, dark place.

If you buy plastic buckets, add the food, and seal them yourself, you will need to rent a nitrogen cylinder to fill the airspace in the buckets. When you do this, the oxygen will be displaced leaving only the nitrogen.

Remember these things when purchasing or creating a supply of stored food for your family.

About the Author

Frank Salvo has been interested in long term food storage for many years. For more information, please visit http://www.squidoo.com/mountain-house-freeze-dried-food

Which dry foods like rice, lentils and beans should be stored with tight-fitting lids?

I have a series of small containers that are sealable, but all my stuff won't fit in them. I have cheap dollar store containers that aren't too bad except the lids are prone to falling off when you handle them. I live in a basement suite, and while moths haven't been a huge problem, the neighbors have stored some stuff downstairs next to me that attracted moths. I've noticed maybe one moth in the past few months down here, but I just may not have noticed them. I cook all my dried food of course. If moths got into my rice, lentils or beans would it ruin the food? I don't store sugar in the cupboards, only pasta, rice, beans, lentils, cereal, and salt. I take it moths would ruin the cereal so that should be in a tight container.

Sounds like for your situation, every dry food should be in a sealed container. Gladware is a good brand, I use tons of it. It's cheap at Wal-Mart.

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