When talking to people about stocking an emergency pantry, people
often say they don't know where to start or how to calculate what they
will need for their family. That can be a daunting process if you look
at it as the big picture. What I suggest is to break things out into
smaller, more easily-handled tasks. I think that the best place to start
is to look at what you cook at home right now and write it down in a
notebook that you have designated for this project. Mark down what you
and your family eat, breakfast, lunch, dinner and snacks, how much you ate at eact meal, remember to
note condiments that you used and what beverages you had. Also make
note of how often you eat out and what you eat when you do go out for a
meal. Save your shopping lists and your cash register receipts, put them
in an envelope that you have taped to the back inside cover of your
notebook. Keep diligent notes for a month. This information will be used
to help you make a plan for beginning your emergency pantry.
During the month that you are collecting data about what you eat, you
can begin to look around for an area that you can designate to hold you
pantry supplies. I know that this may actually be the hardest part of
the process... Many people live in apartments with little storage, or in
homes, but are up to the gills in stuff and have no where to put
anything. This might be a good time to take stock of what you have and
what you need, to de-clutter and pass along things you don't use or that
are just taking up space. If you are an apartment dweller, does the
apartment complex give you a storage locker or outdoor shed
that you can store some of your possessions in to make room for your
food stockpile inside the where it is climate controlled? Can you spare 6
inches of floor space and pull your couch out from the wall, so that
you can store some supplies behind it? My son did this in his
apartment. He made room behind the couch by pulling it out several
inches,(6-8"), then used the area he made to hold some of his storage
goods. He kept the end tables up against the wall to hide the gap,; I
never even noticed that he had done so until he pointed it out.
Consider under-used spaces like the top shelves in closets, how about
that dead space at the back of a kitchen base cabinet that you have to
be a contortionist to get into? Can you put your bed on risers and use
the space under the beds? Do you have a closet you can retask by
de-cluttering? How about a garage? Do you have a designated junk/storage
room that you can organize and use part of ? At one point in our lives,
we used some of our storage as furniture... instead of an end table we
had a crate of stockpiled good that we topped with a piece of plywood
and covered with a pretty table cloth and a lamp. No one ever noticed,
unless we pointed it out to them. The same thing could be done for a
coffee table. We did away with our bed frame and used our 2 gallon long
term storage buckets, covered by a dust ruffle to hold up our boxspring
and mattress... it worked fine and we never had to clean under the bed!
How much space you can carve out will determine how much of a stockpile
you can realistically put aside as a reserve.
I have
already written a blog post on this subject, but I feel like more detail
would be helpful, so I will elaborate and hope to not repeat myself. To
read the first blog post on this subject, go here.
For simplicity of illustration, lets suppose that you found adequate
space for your emergency pantry goods, inside your living space, with
easy access. Now it is time to take all the notes you have been
compiling on your eating and shopping habits and turn them into a
comprehensive list of your most often used food items. From the list of
meals that you prepared during the month, write down the ingredients
that you used for each of the recipes. Once you have done this for all
the recipes, you should start to see some patterns emerge. Are there
ingredients that were used in the majority of the recipes you prepared?
Make a list of these items on a separate Item page, one food item per
line. Each time an item appears in the recipe notes, make a mark next to
it on the Item list. This Item List will tell you which foods you use
the most. Look at your cash register receipts to see if there are repeat
items on them, if there is a repeat item on the receipts that is not on
your Item List, add it to the list. What you want to end up with is a
list of items that you can use as a shopping list to begin your
emergency pantry.
At this point you will be able to
see what foods your family most commonly eats. These foods, coupled with
some staple items like sweeteners, salt, oil or shortening, flour and
seasonings, will be the base that you will build your pantry stock on.
Now you are ready to start adding these items to your regular shopping
list. Start with the foods on the Item List that are used the most. If
there is an item on your regular shopping list that is also on your item
list, then put a star next to it on your shopping list and purchase two
of those items instead of one. In the case of fresh meats or produce,
purchase your fresh items for immediate use and a shelf stable version
of the same item for you stockpile. For example, if you have meat on
your menu frequently, then buy whatever meat you will use for your meals
this week and then add at least on can of some kind of shelf stable
meat, poultry or fish to your stockpile. It may not be fiscally
possible, every time you shop, to get doubles of all the things that
match on your grocery shopping list and the Item List. So on each trip
try to add at least a few things to your pantry stock, starting with the
things that are used the most and moving down the list from there. This
is a great time to plan your weekly menus by watching for sales, and
clipping coupons for items that you regularly buy, to keep the costs of
stocking up to a minimum.
In order to make sure that
you are covering all the important bases, here is a list of items that
would be important to have in an emergency. Shelf stable milk, either
asceptic boxes, evaporated canned milk, or dried milk powder, shelf
stable fats, like coconut oil , ghee, canned shortening, and to a lesser
degree olive oil or vegetable oil. These fats need to be rotated out of
stockpile and into the kitchen regularly, since they can go rancid.
When you use your kitchen supply of oil up, then shop from your pantry
stockpile
to replace kitchen stock and replace the emergency supply on your
regular grocery trip. Shelf stable meats, poultry and fish, need to be
in your pantry stock, to take the place of fresh meats, etc. if there is
no way to get to a store. Sweeteners, flour, grains, canned vegetables,
canned soups and stocks, pasta, rice, and spices and seasonings, can
help to round out a menu should you have to depend on your emergency
pantry to put meals on the table. I don't stock any beverages except
bottled water in my emergency pantry. Since water is very important to
health, especially in stressful situations and fruit juices and bottled
drinks don't have a long shelf life, I put my emergency dollars
elsewhere.
These are the beginning steps to
establishing an emergency pantry. There is still much left to do, but if
you start by buying shelf stable versions of the foods that you eat the
most, then you will be well on your way to having a stockpile of food
that you can depend on in an emergency.
In my next post
on stocking an emergency pantry, I will discuss how to get the most out
of your stockpile dollars. Until next time!
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