Gardening, no matter how you tackle it, is always hard work. But every seasoned gardener knows that it can get a lot harder when you’ve got to combat the seemingly countless pests and diseases that want to rob you of your harvest. Slugs, bugs, bacteria, viruses, fungi, nematodes, mammals, and more: all are waiting to ... Read more
I feel it’s appropriate to help those without food storage to inform them about my 3-month food challenge. Building a food storage inventory doesn’t have to be complicated, expensive, or scary. Whether you’re motivated by emergencies, rising grocery prices, or just wanting more financial cushion, a 3-month food supply is one of the most practical things you can do for your family. Everything you need to know, what to buy, how to store it, and how to get started, even on a tight budget, is included in this post.
This post breaks it all down simply. By the time you finish reading, you’ll know exactly what to buy, how to store it, and how to build your supply week by week without breaking the bank.
Did I mention that Mark and I are living off of our #10 cans of freeze-dried food? We decided that at our age, we may as well start eating it now. Our children won’t want all that we have stored. That’s okay, I get it. We taught them to garden, preserve food, cook from scratch, and, my favorite, to make bread. They all know how to cook from scratch; that’s a blessing.
Cooking with freeze-dried food takes more water than I had anticipated. Just giving you a heads up. Freeze-dried food takes a bit to get used to. I hope you practice now with a can or two. All of my #10 cans and pantry cans are from the company that closed, called Thrive Life. Great products, great company. It was sad to see them close.
Freeze-Dried Food
The meat is not what you would expect, my friends. It’s fine for casseroles and soups. It’s okay for tacos, but not my favorite. The chicken is chewier than I had expected. It’s fine, it’s food. I opted against any “prepared meals” because I knew I could cook from scratch. They have a lot of sodium in them, but hey, it’s quality food storage with a long shelf life.
My freeze-dried food is just what it says on the can: ground beef, chicken, onions, apples, etc. No additives. Just oxygen absorbers. I have everything I need to cook from scratch. Would I love a half of beef, of course I would. It’s not in the budget. We have everything we need to survive and stay healthy.
Why Build a 3-Month Food Storage Inventory?
Three months is the sweet spot recommended by emergency management agencies, financial experts, and preparedness communities for one simple reason: it’s enough to cover almost any realistic disruption.
Job loss or income disruption: a fully stocked pantry means your food budget is covered while you get back on your feet
Natural disasters: storms, earthquakes, and floods can cut off supply chains for days or weeks
Illness or injury: when you can’t leave the house, your pantry has you covered
Grocery savings: buying in bulk when prices are low can save families 20–30% on food costs annually
Key Insight: A 3-month food storage plan for one person costs roughly $300–$500 to build — about $25–$40 per week over 12 weeks. For a family of four, budget $800–$1,500 total.
What Food to Buy First
The golden rule of food storage: store what you eat, and eat what you store. Don’t buy a bunch of unfamiliar foods your family won’t touch in a stressful situation. Start with your everyday meals and build from there.
Here’s a breakdown of the core food categories to focus on, in order of priority:
1. Grains (Your Caloric Foundation)
White rice, pasta, oats, and flour form the backbone of your supply. They’re cheap, calorie-dense, and store for years. Buy these first and buy a lot of them.
2. Proteins
Canned tuna, canned chicken, salmon, beans, and lentils give you the protein your body needs. Peanut butter is also a pantry hero, calorie-dense, shelf-stable, and universally loved.
3. Canned Fruits & Vegetables
Canned tomatoes, corn, green beans, and mixed vegetables round out your nutrition needs and make meals feel like actual meals rather than survival rations.
4. Fats & Oils
Olive oil, coconut oil, and ghee add calories and enhance the taste of food. These have shorter shelf lives than other categories, so buy smaller amounts more frequently.
5. Flavor & Comfort Foods
Salt, sugar, spices, coffee, tea, and a few comfort items are underrated. Morale matters during hard times. Don’t build a storage inventory that’s technically nutritious but miserable to eat from.
How Much Food You Actually Need
Here’s a simple reference table for a 3-month supply per person. Multiply by your household size.
Buying the right food is only half the equation. Proper storage can double or even triple the shelf life of your food. The four enemies of food storage are heat, light, moisture, and oxygen.
Keep it cool: Store food in the coolest area of your home, a basement, interior closet, or pantry. Avoid garages and attics. Every 10°F increase in temperature roughly halves shelf life.
Keep it dark: Light degrades vitamins and fats. Use opaque containers or keep shelves in low-light areas. Label everything with the purchase date.
Use airtight containers: Transfer bulk grains and beans from bags into food-grade buckets with airtight lids. Add oxygen absorbers for long-term storage.
Rotate Using FIFO: “First In, First Out”; put new purchases in the back, eat from the front. Check dates every 6 months.
Keep it off the floor: Shelves or pallets protect from moisture and potential flooding damage.
Best Storage Container: 5-gallon food-grade buckets with gamma-seal lids are the gold standard. They’re airtight, stackable, rodent-proof, and one bucket holds about 33 lbs of rice. You can find them at hardware stores or online for $8–$15 each. I have a lid color coding system, so I know how much of each food commodity I have in storage. I also have each container labeled so there’s no question what’s inside if I’m not available when food is being prepared using the stored item(s).
How to Get Started This Week
The hardest part of food storage is simply starting. Here’s a simple 4-step plan to get your first week going:
Audit What You Already Have: Walk through your pantry and write down what’s already there. You likely already have a good head start. Note expiration dates and identify gaps in commodities and dates.
Set a Weekly Budget: Even $20–$30 extra per week adds up quickly. Decide on an amount you can consistently commit to over the next 12 weeks.
Buy Your Grains First
This week, buy (1) 25-lb bag of white rice and 10 lbs of pasta. That’s your caloric foundation, and it’ll cost you around $20–$30. Store it in an airtight container.
Add Proteins Next Week
A case of canned tuna (24 cans) and a 10 lb bag of dried lentils. You now have the foundation of real, nutritious meals that could last weeks.
Keep going week by week, filling in vegetables, flavor builders, and comfort foods. Within 12 weeks, you’ll have a complete, solid supply.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need special “survival” food or freeze-dried meals?
No. Regular canned goods and bulk dry staples work perfectly well, cost a fraction of the price, and use foods your family already knows how to cook. Only consider freeze-dried food once your basic pantry is fully stocked.
Where do I store food in a small apartment? Under beds, in closets, behind furniture, and in storage ottomans. You’d be surprised how much a small apartment can hold with creative use of vertical space. A single tall bookshelf dedicated to food storage can hold a substantial supply for one or two people.
How do I cook if the power goes out? A two-burner propane camp stove ($30–$60) is the most practical solution for most households. Store a few extra propane canisters alongside your food supply. You’ll need a plan to use the stove outside for safety’s sake.
What about water? Water comes before food. The recommended minimum is one gallon per person per day; that’s 90 gallons per person for a full 3-month supply. Start with stackable water storage containers or large food-grade water barrels. I recommend 4 gallons of water per day per person. Please remember your pets need water.
Will this actually save me money on groceries? Yes, often significantly. Buying rice by the 25-lb bag instead of the 2-lb box typically cuts the price per pound by 60–70%. Having a full pantry also means you shop sales strategically and never make expensive last-minute grocery runs.
Building a 3-month food storage inventory isn’t about living in fear; it’s about living with confidence. When your pantry is stocked, a job loss doesn’t become a food crisis. A storm doesn’t send you scrambling. An unexpected expense doesn’t mean skipping meals.
Start small. Buy a bag of rice and a case of canned beans this week. Add a little more next week. Before you know it, you’ll have something that genuinely protects your family and saves you money in the process. The best time to build your food storage was last year. The second-best time is today. May God bless this world, Linda
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When it comes to gardening, no matter where you live, many of us will take any of the tips and tricks we can get. From old wives tales to science-backed evidence, we will try anything once to see how it works.
Sometimes we can’t even explain why these gardening tips work, but no use in worrying about that when it comes to growing food for your family. Check out these weird gardening tips that you should know for this upcoming growing season.
If your garden is prone to rabbits, squirrels, or other critter damage, consider this unusual tip. Place the handle of plastic forks into the ground around your plants with the prongs facing up.
The shape is supposed to scare pests away and keep them from eating your plants. Use this tip to keep pets out of the garden as well!
2. Plant with Packing Peanuts
When planting in a container, add a good amount of packing peanuts to the bottom before adding the soil. This will help make the container lighter and shouldn’t hurt the plant roots. This tip is especially helpful if you plan on moving the containers around.
3. Use Pennies to Deter Slugs
One cent doesn’t go far these days, so why not use them to help your gardening? Glue pennies onto the top of the container rim, making sure the pennies touch or overlap. Slugs and snails don’t like copper and won’t cross the barrier of pennies if done correctly.
Go through your coin jar and pick out those pennies that were made prior to 1982 for pennies that contain more copper than those made today. If you don't have any copper pennies, try using copper tape. Just wrap it around your container and glue it in place.
4. Eggs to the Rescue
There are many odd gardening tips using eggs. You can save eggshells and blend them up to create a calcium-rich powder for the soil. Broken eggshells sprinkled on top of the ground will act like diatomaceous earth in deterring bugs.
After hard-boiling eggs, save the water afterward and use it to give plants a calcium-rich drink. Some gardeners even place a whole egg in the soil when planting to help boost the nutrients underground.
5. Deter Deer with Soap
If your area has a big deer population, keeping your garden safe can be a full-time job. Deer are very sensitive to smell, so some gardeners shave super scented soap around their garden to keep deer away.
Irish Spring is often the go-to favorite, which leaves bright neon green speckles around the garden. Simply shave more soap as it wears down.
6. Use Soap as a Dirt Repellent
While many gardeners wear gloves to keep their hands clean, there are some of us who prefer to feel more and use our hands directly in the soil. However, this can lead to many minutes trying to scrub out all of the dirt around nail beds.
Before gardening bare-handed, scrape your nails across a bar of soap to fill in those areas that the dirt would normally accumulate. After gardening, simply wash your hands, and you’ll have clean nails without the fuss.
7. Fight Mold with Cinnamon
When starting plants indoors, it is common for mold to appear, given the warm temperatures and sunlight. A light shake of cinnamon will help combat the mold since cinnamon is naturally antimicrobial.
Cinnamon will also work in the outside garden as well. Just make sure to not sprinkle produce with it, unless you want cinnamon cucumbers!
8. Line Containers with Diapers
Okay, this one sounds crazy, but it sounds like it would work! Place a diaper or two in the bottom of a container to help keep the plant moist but also cut down on topsoil.
The diaper will absorb the water and help the plant last out those super hot summer days. This is a great tip for those hanging baskets around the house that can drain all over the place.
9. Plant a Penny for Healthier Soil
Copper pennies are supposed to also help fight tomato blight. Throwing pennies into the garden soil that were minted prior to 1982 is best given that they have a higher copper content than modern coins. Make sure that the pennies are no deeper than 5 inches down in the soil for best results.
10. Bury Your Beer
Sacrifice your brewsky to help combat slugs and snails in the garden. Find an old plastic container and bury it in the soil so that the top of the container sits at soil level.
Fill the container with beer and check back in a few days. Slugs and snails love beer and will crawl into the container and drown. What a way to go!
11. Use Baking Soda for Sweeter Tomatoes
Sprinkle baking soda around the soil of your tomato plants to help produce sweeter tomatoes this year. Baking soda is a chemical base that will battle the acidity in the tomato plant. Make sure to only sprinkle the baking soda on the soil and not the plant.
12. Get Creative with Containers
While the stores would love you to buy new containers for your plants every year, you really don’t need to. Get creative with your plant containers to make your garden your own.
You can use literally anything that will hold some soil and not blow away. Just make sure that you use something that you don’t mind getting wet. From used water bottles to plastic food containers to old boots, you can use anything to plant, and it’s easy on the budget!
13. Popsicle Sticks for Labels
It is important to know what kind of seed you planted in the garden, both if it does well or dies. Labeling the garden should be easy enough to change out from year to year. Gather up those kids’ popsicle sticks and reuse them to make easy plant markers. Just write the plant variety on it and toss it at the end of the growing season.
14. Use Tires as Barriers
Most homesteads have a few old tires lying around. Use those tires for good to help cut down on weeds and congestion. Consider planting strawberries in a tire to create a semi-permanent container in the garden.
For those plants that need a bit of a barrier in the lawn, cut the lip of the tires off to create a rubber collar that is easy to mow around.
15. Plant with Coffee Filters
Placing a coffee filter or two at the bottom of a container can help in multiple ways. A coffee filter will allow the water to drain well but keep the dirt in place. This is especially helpful for houseplants where you want to keep the mess to a minimum.
Coffee filters in the bottom of a container also help when transplanting a plant later on. The filter will keep the roots from growing or sticking to the container, making it easy to lift the plant out.
16. Water Thirsty Plants with Wine Bottles
While you may not want to spray your garden with your favorite red or white, you can reuse the glass bottles to help benefit the garden. Simply fill up the bottle with water and quickly turn it upside down into the soil near the roots of a thirsty plant.
The water will slowly hydrate the ground, keeping the plant hydrated on those super hot summer days. This trick also works with beer or glass pop bottles as well.
17. Grow Strawberries in Gutters
Summertime is equivalent to juicy strawberries! Why not use your garden space better and add a touch of whimsy to your homestead? Planting strawberries in elevated gutters keeps ground critters away.
The long container also helps deter weeds and the berries can hang over the sides of the gutter for easy picking. Consider adding a net to the berries to keep birds away if necessary.
18. Plant Containers in the Ground for Bossy Plants
For those plants in the garden that tend to creep and spread quickly, consider planting them in a container in the ground instead. This will help limit the size and growth of the plant without hurting its overbearing tendency.
When the plant dies, simply lift the entire container out of the ground for easy clean up.
19. Use Recycled Items for Vertical Gardens
One of the best uses of space in any kind of garden is to grow vertically. Plants aren’t picky about what container they are in, so you might as well save some pennies and use what you already have.
Vertical gardens can thrive using a few recycled containers, some twine, or even old picture frames and some chicken wire. There is no limit when it comes to growing a vertical garden. For those plants in a standard garden that like to climb, consider using anything to help them grow, like old wood stakes, fence posts, string, chains, or broken tool handles.
20. Grow Plants Upside Down for Space‑Saving Success
If you’re tight on ground space or want to try something different with your tomatoes, peppers, or vine plants, try growing them upside down! Hang a bucket or planter with a hole cut in the bottom and plant the seedlings so they grow downward. This surprising method can reduce pests, cut down on weeds, and make watering easier.
Don’t toss those coffee grounds or banana peels! Blend them into a “garden smoothie” and water your soil with the nutrient‑rich mixture. The grounds add nitrogen, and banana peels can offer potassium and other trace nutrients that many plants love. It’s a tasty treat for your garden that most gardeners overlook.
22. Repurpose Old Tires for Candle Container Gardens
Instead of letting old tires sit in the yard unused, turn them into unique mini gardens! Stack them, fill them with compost and soil, and plant flowers or shallow‑rooted vegetables like lettuce or herbs. The rubber helps retain warmth and define your planting space while keeping weeds at bay.
23. Coffee Grounds Around Plants for Pest Control
Sprinkle used coffee grounds around the base of your plants to naturally deter certain pests like ants and slugs that don’t like crawling over the rough, bitter surface. The grounds also help improve drainage and add organic matter as they break down.