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Sunday, April 26, 2026

Why Food Prices Are Still Going Up

Grocery Store Front

Every day, I ask myself why food prices are still going up. From farm fields to your dinner table, a perfect storm of fuel costs, global conflict, and climate stress is pushing grocery bills higher. Here is what’s happening, and what you can actually do about it.

I typically buy cases of canned food that I use often from my Sam’s Club Plus membership card. It’s typically cheaper than going into the store (watch the prices), and they deliver those heavy cases to my door. Mark and I went to Walmart yesterday to pick up a few cans of certain items that were not available from Sam’s Club. Most of the time, I buy 10 cans; it’s how I roll. Well, today we bought 6 regular-sized cans of each product. The prices had doubled, if not tripled, from the last time I purchased them. I was shocked, to say the least. How are people feeding their families? No-Knead Bread

Silicone Baking Gloves

Bowl Scrapers

Glass Bowl With Lid

Fresh Vegetables In A Grocery Store

The Checkout Line

If you’ve stood in the checkout line lately, done the math in your head, and quietly put something back on the shelf, you’re not alone. Grocery prices have climbed so steadily for so many months that many families have simply accepted it as the new normal. But understanding why food costs keep rising, and knowing what practical steps you can take to soften the financial toll, is still worth your time, especially if you’re feeding a household on a real budget.

The short answer is that there’s no single villain. Food prices are the result of a long chain, from seeds in the ground to the truck that drops off pallets at your local store, and right now almost every link in that chain is under pressure at the same time.

Key Numbers: Groceries are up roughly 30% compared to 2020. Overall, food prices are predicted to rise 2.9% in 2026. Restaurant prices rose 3.8% compared to last year.

The Big Picture: Where Things Stand Right Now

Overall food prices in the United States were about 2.7 percent higher in March 2026 compared to a year earlier. For 2026 as a whole, food prices are expected to rise around 2.9 percent, with restaurant and takeout prices climbing faster than grocery store prices. That might sound modest, but those numbers sit on top of years of prior increases. Grocery prices are up roughly 30 percent compared to 2020, which means the cumulative damage to family budgets is very real, even when year-over-year headlines look manageable.

Why Food Prices Are Still Going Up

Fuel Costs Flow Through Everything

This is perhaps the most direct pressure point right now. Diesel fuel is critical up and down the food supply chain. Tractors run on diesel, and the majority of food transported in the U.S. is moved by truck. Higher fuel costs translate into higher costs throughout the supply chain, ultimately reaching consumers at the grocery store. Perishable items like fresh produce and meat tend to feel the impact first because refrigerated trucks require more fuel to operate.

Seafood, which is typically transported by air, has also been hit immediately because of the high cost of jet fuel. So whether your family’s weekly shopping trip includes a bag of apples, a pack of chicken thighs, or a can of tuna, fuel costs have almost certainly already touched that price tag.

Global Conflict and Energy Markets

U.S. food prices are expected to increase again this year, as market pressures, such as the conflict in the Middle East, squeeze the supply chain from farm to grocery store. At least part of the increase in inflation is due to the resulting spike in oil and gas prices. When energy markets become unpredictable, the ripple effects reach fertilizer production, packaging costs, refrigeration, and transportation all at once. The COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, and the multi-year bird flu epidemic have each been shocks to the system in recent years, and their effects have never fully unwound.

Fertilizer and Farm-Level Costs

Higher oil prices don’t just affect trucks. Nitrogen fertilizer, which is derived from natural gas, becomes more expensive when energy costs rise. The increased cost of oil-derived nitrogen fertilizer could prompt farmers to apply less fertilizer to their fields, leading to lower crop yields in the fall. That in turn means less feed for livestock and could drive up the cost of beef, which already hit record highs in 2025.

Extreme Weather and Climate Stress

Longer, more unseasonable, and more severe droughts are becoming more frequent, partly because of human-induced climate change. Beef inflation has rapidly outpaced inflation for other foods, partly due to a severe drought that began in 2022, which raised feed prices and discouraged farmers from breeding cattle.

International wheat prices rose by 4.3 percent in March 2026, supported by deteriorating crop conditions in the United States amid drought concerns and expectations of reduced plantings in Australia due to anticipated higher fertilizer costs. Weather is perhaps the most unpredictable factor of all, and it can wipe out a season’s worth of progress very quickly. Many farmers are concerned with the recent low temperatures in areas growing fruit and other products. If the products got frozen, you won’t see much of that product in the stores after the usual harvest period.

Labor Shortages and Transportation Gaps

Labor, transportation, and energy prices remain structural concerns for food prices. Food companies across nearly all industries continued to see turnover increase. The food industry also still lacks enough truck drivers, and electricity prices are expected to rise in 2026 due in part to the growth of energy-intensive data centers throughout the U.S. These costs are ones that food companies eventually pass along, one way or another.

Tariffs and Trade Policy

The administration continues to discuss potential tariffs with Canada, the European Union, and other trading partners, which could drive up prices for fruits and vegetables, cheese, chocolate, spices, seafood, and many alcoholic beverages. Trade policy can shift prices in ways that are very hard for families to anticipate or plan around.

“Very rarely do food prices fall, and when they do, it is very short-lived, which is why some of these disruptions are really concerning.” David Ortega, Food Economist, Michigan State University

Is Eating Out Getting Worse?

Yes, if anything, it’s rising faster. Food-away-from-home prices were 3.8 percent higher in March 2026 than in March 2025, and are projected to rise 3.6 percent for the full year, faster than their 20-year historical average. Labor costs at restaurants are the main driver, since waitstaff, cooks, and delivery workers all need higher pay as wages rise across the economy. Home cooking remains the most reliable way to stretch a family’s food budget.

What Can Your Family Actually Do About It?

You can’t fix global energy markets or drought conditions, but you do have more control than it might feel like you do. Here are some approaches that consistently help real families spend less without eating worse.

Cook More at Home

This isn’t just a cliche. The gap between grocery prices and restaurant prices is significant and growing. Even a few extra dinners cooked at home each week can meaningfully reduce your household’s food spending over the course of a month. Simple, filling meals built around grains, legumes, eggs, and seasonal vegetables remain among the best values in the grocery store.

Buy Store Brands and Generics

Store brand products are manufactured to the same safety standards as name brands and often come from the same suppliers. On a full grocery cart, switching to store brands on even half of your items can save 20 to 30 percent. Start with pantry staples like canned tomatoes, pasta, cooking oil, and oats, and work your way through the rest.

Plan Meals Before You Shop

Impulse purchases and food waste are two of the biggest budget leaks in family grocery spending. Spending ten minutes before your weekly shopping trip to plan four or five dinners, write a list, and check what you already have at home can eliminate a surprising amount of spending over time. Batch cooking on weekends and using leftovers intentionally both help stretch ingredients further.

Prioritize Seasonal and Frozen Produce

Fresh produce that’s in season locally tends to cost significantly less than out-of-season items that have traveled long distances. Frozen vegetables and fruits are harvested and frozen at peak ripeness, often retain the same nutritional value as fresh produce, and are almost always cheaper. They also serve as a great buffer against weeks when fresh prices spike.

Use Store Loyalty Programs and Gas Discounts

Several grocery chains with fuel centers, including Albertsons, Kroger, and Safeway, award loyalty program members with fuel points for every dollar spent on groceries, with 100 points equaling 10 cents off per gallon. These programs cost nothing to join and can provide real savings on both groceries and fuel, two of the biggest recurring household expenses right now.

Consider Warehouse Memberships for Staples

For families that use large quantities of staples such as cooking oil, rice, dried beans, canned goods, or cleaning supplies, a warehouse club membership can pay for itself quickly. The key is to buy only what you’ll actually use before it expires, and to stick to categories where bulk pricing genuinely beats the grocery store. One key approach is to check the price per ounce that’s listed on the shelf price tag. Usually, larger bags or cans equate to lower prices per ounce. They may cost more in total, but you’re saving money based on the cost of each ounce purchased.

I’ve mentioned in many of my posts over the years that I look for caselot sales. We used to see them more often in the fall, but these days, the stores seem to have them multiple times a year. Make sure you buy what your family likes to eat, check the expiration dates, and buy what you have room to store at home.

Look Into Food Assistance If You Need It

If you’re struggling to afford groceries, look into help from food pantries and programs that offer free or reduced-cost meals. There’s no shame in using the resources available to families during difficult stretches. SNAP benefits, local food banks, school meal programs, and WIC all exist precisely for moments like this.

Will Prices Ever Come Back Down?

The honest answer is: in most categories, probably not. Very rarely do food prices fall, and when they do, it’s very short-lived and relates to a certain category of food. Eggs are a good example. They went up a few years ago when poultry farms were having to wipe out their flocks due to the avian flu. Once that challenge was dealt with, we’ve seen egg prices come down significantly. What families can realistically hope for is that the rate of increase slows down and stabilizes, giving wages a chance to catch up. Barring major disruptions to weather, trade, or energy markets, grocery prices should remain at moderate levels of inflation through 2026, though the range of uncertainty is wide.

Final Word

The most empowering thing any family can do is understand the forces at play, make intentional choices about where to shop, how much to spend, and how to spend it on foods you like, and remember that small changes in shopping and cooking habits really do add up. You didn’t cause this situation, but you do have more agency in navigating it than the checkout line might make you feel. Don’t forget to plant those garden items you like, such as tomatoes, green beans, and strawberries. Having a garden can also be a cost-saving step and one that promotes a healthier lifestyle.

A Quick Family Checklist: Cook at least four dinners at home each week. Switch pantry staples to store brands. Write a meal plan and shopping list before every grocery trip. Lean on frozen vegetables and in-season produce. Sign up for your grocery store’s free loyalty program. If you’re struggling, reach out to your local food bank or check SNAP eligibility. May God bless this world, Linda

Images: Grocery Store Front AdobeStock_429829305 By Maksym Yemelyanov, Fresh Vegetables In A Grocery Store AdobeStock_496564425 By nd700

Sources: USDA Economic Research Service, FAO Food Price Index, Michigan State University, FMI The Food Industry Association | April 2026.

The post Why Food Prices Are Still Going Up appeared first on Food Storage Moms.



from Food Storage Moms

Saturday, April 25, 2026

30 Food Items That You Need Now

Flour White Sugar Brown Sugar

Here are 30 food items you need now. Every family deserves the peace of mind that comes from a well-stocked pantry. Whether a storm rolls in, a paycheck gets delayed, or the world simply gets unpredictable, the families who have thought ahead and prepared are the ones who eat well and stay calm. This is your guide to the 30 items that belong in every home, every season, without exception.

None of this is complicated. You don’t need a bunker or a mountain of cash. You need a thoughtful list, a little shelf space, and the willingness to build something over time. Start with five items this week. Add more next week. Before long, you’ll have built something genuinely valuable for your family.

“A prepared pantry isn’t about fear. It’s about love. It’s about making sure the people you care about are always fed.”

Protein Foods Like Peanut Butter, Beans, Tuna, Sardines, Chicken

Why Right Now Matters More Than Ever

We’re living through a period of genuine instability in the global food supply, and most families have no idea how close to the edge the system actually runs. The average grocery store carries only about three days’ worth of food on its shelves at any given time. That isn’t a scare tactic to bring that to light. That’s simply how modern supply chains work. They are designed for efficiency, not resilience.

Here’s what’s happening right now, and why every family needs to understand.

Global crop failures are becoming more frequent and more severe. Wheat, corn, and rice, the three crops that feed most of the world, have all experienced significant regional shortages in recent years due to droughts, floods, conflicts, and extreme heat events. When harvests fail in one part of the world, prices rise everywhere. When prices rise, lower-income families feel it first and hardest.

Shipping and logistics remain fragile. The disruptions that began during the pandemic years exposed just how interconnected and vulnerable the global supply chain truly is. Port backlogs, driver shortages, fuel price spikes, and geopolitical tensions can slow or stop the movement of food across borders with very little warning. Many of the ingredients in your grocery store traveled thousands of miles to get there. Any disruption along that chain affects your family directly.

Soup Pot

Ladle

Souper Cups

Slow Cooker

Fertilizer Costs Are Higher Than Ever Before

Fertilizer costs have skyrocketed. Farmers around the world are planting less because the cost of producing food has risen sharply. Fertilizer prices surged to historic highs following the start of the conflict in Ukraine, since Russia and Belarus together supply a significant portion of the world’s potash and nitrogen fertilizers. When farmers plant less, harvests shrink. When harvests shrink, shelves thin out and prices climb.

Climate events are hitting closer to home. Wildfires, hurricanes, ice storms, and flooding are increasingly disrupting regional food distribution. You don’t have to live in a flood zone or a fire corridor to feel the effects. A single major storm can clear grocery shelves in your town within hours, leaving families scrambling for days.

Economic Pressure

Economic pressure is squeezing household budgets. Inflation has made groceries significantly more expensive for most American families over the past several years. Many households are already buying less than they used to. If a job loss, a medical bill, or an unexpected expense hits during a period of rising prices, a family without a stocked pantry is in a genuinely difficult situation very quickly.

None of this is meant to frighten you. It’s meant to be honest with you. The families who come through uncertain times well aren’t the ones who panicked. They’re the ones who paid attention, planned quietly, and built a small reserve while times were still relatively good. That’s exactly what this list is for.

You don’t need to solve the global food crisis. You just need to take care of your family. And right now, the most practical and loving thing you can do for the people under your roof is to make sure that no matter what happens out there, something good is waiting for them in the kitchen.

30 Food Items That You Need Now

The Grains and Starches

  1. White Rice. Stores for 25 to 30 years properly sealed. Feeds a family for days on very little money.
  2. All-purpose or bread flour. Bread, pancakes, thickening soups. The most versatile item on this list.
  3. Rolled Oats. Breakfast for weeks. High in fiber and keeps children full through the morning.
  4. Pasta. Dried pasta keeps for years and cooks fast. Buy several shapes and sauces to keep things interesting.
  5. Cornmeal. Cornbread, polenta, and porridge. An underrated staple that stretches any meal.
  6. Crackers. A morale booster for children. Pairs with peanut butter, canned fish, or cheese for a real meal.

Proteins That Last

  1. Canned Beans. Black beans, kidney, chickpeas. Protein-rich, filling, and ready to eat straight from the can.
  2. Dried Lentils. Cook in 20 minutes without soaking. One of the most nutritious foods you can store.
  3. Canned Tuna or Salmon. Full of protein and omega-3s. Children take to tuna salad or rice bowls surprisingly well.
  4. Peanut Butter. High-calorie, high-protein, and loved by every child. Buy natural or conventional; both are excellent.
  5. Canned Chicken. Versatile enough for soups, wraps, pasta, and casseroles. A true pantry workhorse.
  6. Nuts and Seeds. Almonds, sunflower seeds, walnuts. Healthy fats and protein in a handful that keeps you going.

Fats, Oils, and Sweeteners

  1. Olive Oil. Cooking, dressing, preserving. A bottle of good olive oil makes simple food taste like something special.
  2. Coconut Oil. High smoke point, long shelf life. Excellent for baking and frying when other fats run out.
  3. Honey. The only food that never expires. Sweetener, cough remedy, and energy source all in one jar.
  4. White and Brown Sugar. Baking, preserving, and morale. Sugar keeps indefinitely, and its importance during hard times is real.

Vegetables and Fruits

  1. Canned Tomatoes. The backbone of hundreds of recipes. Diced, crushed, and whole belong in your pantry at all times.
  2. Canned Corn. Children eat it without complaint. A reliable side dish that adds color and sweetness to any plate.
  3. Canned Pumpkin. Full of vitamins. Puree for soups, stir into oatmeal, or bake into muffins your family will love.
  4. Dried Fruits. Raisins, apricots, and dates provide sweetness, fiber, and energy. Great for snacking children.
  5. Applesauce. A comfort food that keeps well. Use as a snack, a baking ingredient, or a side for young children.

Flavor, Preservation, and Function

  1. Salt. Preservation, flavor, and survival. You can’t cook without it. Buy more than you think you need.
  2. Baking Soda and Powder. Together, these let you bake bread, muffins, and pancakes without yeast or a trip to the store.
  3. Dried Herbs and Spices. Garlic powder, cumin, oregano, and paprika transform plain rice and beans into a genuine meal.
  4. Soy sauce or tamari. A splash adds depth to grains, stir-fries, and soups. Children often prefer it to plain seasoning.
  5. Apple Cider Vinegar. Preserving, dressing, and cleaning. One bottle has a dozen uses in a household during uncertain times.

Beverages and Dairy Alternatives

  1. Powdered or Instant Milk. When mixed with water, it becomes milk for cooking, baking, and for children who need calcium daily.
  2. Evaporated Milk. Creamier than powdered. Use in soups, mac and cheese, and baked goods that your family already loves.
  3. Coffee and Tea. Adults need routine and comfort during periods of hardship. A warm cup costs almost nothing and matters enormously.
  4. Drinking Water or Filters. Store at least one gallon per person per day for three days. Nothing on this list matters without water. I suggest four gallons of water per person per day.

The goal isn’t to fill your pantry in a single afternoon. The goal is to build steadily, thoughtfully, and with your family in mind. Rotate your stock, replace what you use, and keep expiration dates in check. A pantry stocked with these 30 items can feed a family through job loss, illness, storms, supply disruptions, and the ordinary chaos of life with children.

“You don’t have to predict the future to prepare for it. You just have to take the next small step today.”

Start this week. Pick five items from this list that you don’t currently have and add them to your next shopping trip. Then do it again. In two months, you’ll have something real, something your family can depend on, something that lets you sleep a little easier at night. That’s the whole point.

50 Essential Pantry Items I Would Stock Today

Food Storage Matters-We Must Be Self-Reliant

Final Word

Nobody wants to think about hard times. It’s human nature to assume that the life we have today will more or less continue tomorrow. But the families who have lived through a job loss, a natural disaster, a health crisis, or a prolonged power outage will all tell you the same thing. They wish they had prepared sooner. Not because they were pessimistic. Because they loved their families and wished they had done more while they had the chance.

A stocked pantry won’t solve every problem life throws at you. It won’t pay your mortgage or keep the lights on. But it will do something quietly powerful. It will make sure that, no matter how hard things get or how uncertain the days ahead become, the people sitting at your table will be fed. They’ll have warm meals and familiar flavors. They’ll have the comfort of knowing that someone thought ahead and took care of them. That comfort isn’t a small thing. During genuinely hard stretches, a bowl of rice and beans made with love, from ingredients you had the wisdom to store, can feel like the most important meal in the world.

So don’t wait for the headlines to get worse before you act. Don’t wait until the shelves are already bare or the storm is already forming. There’s no perfect time to prepare. There’s only now. Your family is worth the effort. They always have been. May God bless this world, Linda

The post 30 Food Items That You Need Now appeared first on Food Storage Moms.



from Food Storage Moms

The 12 Best Beef Cow Breeds to Raise

One of the most rewarding, and also most challenging, endeavors you can engage in as a homesteader is raising beef cattle. Cows need a lot of everything: a lot of food, a lot of room, and most importantly a lot of care. There are tons to do and lots to know, and choosing the right ... Read more

The 12 Best Beef Cow Breeds to Raise can be read in full at New Life On A Homestead- Be sure to check it out!



from New Life On A Homestead

Friday, April 24, 2026

How to Make Roman Concrete

Estimated reading time: 3 minutes

How to Make Roman Concrete

Have you ever heard of Roman concrete? Concrete has been around for thousands of years, and it’s been used to build some of the most durable and iconic structures known to man.

But did you know that the concrete used by the Romans in the ancient days was far more tough and durable than the concrete we use today? After all, there’s a reason old Roman structures are still standing 2000 years later.

It’s actually the Romans who are credited with first discovering concrete. Roman concrete is essentially a mixture of volcanic ash and rock with limestone, such as the kind found in ordinary seashells.

This concrete was not only used to construct some of Rome’s most famous buildings, but it was also used to create structures along the shoreline and in harbors where it has resisted the nonstop assault of saltwater waves for thousands of years.

Let’s put it this way: Roman concrete is the most durable kind of concrete, and what’s better, is that you can make it on your own with little more than limestone (or seashells), volcanic ash and rock (such as pumice), and basic tools like a concrete form and tamping tool.

As this video by Corporals Corner explains, here is how to make your own Roman concrete:

  1. You will need limestone and volcanic ash or volcanic rock.
  2. If you cannot locate limestone, ordinary seashells serve as a good alternative.
  3. Heat up your limestone for at least two to four hours.
  4. Break down the limestone into a powder.
  5. Add the limestone powder to a bucket, and pour in enough water to create a paste, with roughly the same consistency as playdoh.
  6. Add in your volcanic ash to the mixture – for every one pound of limestone, you want two pounds of volcanic ash.
  7. Mix the volcanic ash and the limestone thoroughly together.
  8. Fill up your concrete form with two layers of the above mixture, and consolidate the layers using your concrete tamping tool.
  9. Make sure to flatten the mixture out so it fits evenly in your concrete form.
  10. Allow the sample to cure for about seven days and then remove it from the concrete form.
  11. Check the samples to make sure they are hardened and ready to go.
  12. Repeat the above process for as much Roman Concrete as you would like!

If you found these instructions confusing, watch the video by Corporals Corner below where he goes into greater detail.

Originally published on Urban Survival Site.

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The post How to Make Roman Concrete appeared first on Homestead Survival Site.



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The Power of Daily Rituals When the World Feels Unstable

If you are a student of survival, I probably don’t have to tell you how important the psychological aspects of survival are. In all but the briefest survival ordeals, most of those who die, do so because they gave up. Once a survivor loses the psychological battle, the loss of the physiological war soon follows. […]

from Survivopedia