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Thursday, April 2, 2026

If We Have A War: Stock Up On Wheat Berries

Wheat from Lehi Mills

Please stock up on wheat berries. When most people think about emergency food storage, they think canned goods and freeze-dried meals. But seasoned preppers know the real secret weapon: wheat berries. Shelf-stable, nutrient-dense, and incredibly versatile, wheat berries may be the single most important food you can stockpile before a crisis hits. I understand those with gluten issues may not stock wheat, I get it.

Wheat Berries in a Bowl and a Bucket of Flour

If We Have A War: Stock Up On Wheat Berries

What Are Wheat Berries and Why Are They Called That?

Wheat berries get their name simply from what they are, the whole, unprocessed kernel of the wheat plant, looking very much like a small, hard berry or seed. In this context, the term “berry” refers to the grain kernel itself, a botanical term for a simple fruit with seeds. When you look at a wheat berry, you’re looking at the complete wheat kernel with all three parts intact: the bran (outer layer), the germ (the living embryo), and the endosperm (the starchy interior). Nothing has been removed, bleached, or refined. It’s wheat in its most pure, whole form, and that’s exactly why it stores so well and nourishes so completely.

Hard White Wheat Berries

Hard white wheat is one of the most popular choices for long-term food storage, and for good reason. It has a milder, slightly sweeter flavor compared to red wheat, making it ideal for baking bread, rolls, tortillas, and even pancakes. The lighter color also means baked goods come out with a softer, more traditional appearance that families tend to prefer.

Hard white wheat has a high protein content, typically around 10 to 13 percent, which produces a strong gluten structure, essential for bread that rises properly. When stored correctly in airtight containers with oxygen absorbers, hard white wheat berries can last 25 to 30 years without significant loss of nutrition or baking quality. Please note this is the only wheat I buy. I grew up on hard red wheat, and the loaves of bread were like bricks. Life has changed, my friends. Two products I add to my bread and dinner rolls:

Wheat Gluten (This softens the whole wheat bread as well). I use this in my whole wheat bread, not my white flour bread or dinner rolls)

Dough Enhancer (this makes your bread and rolls extra fluffy and soft). I always use this in my white bread, dinner rolls, and cinnamon rolls. I also use it in my whole wheat bread recipes.

Hard Red Wheat Berries

Hard red wheat is the workhorse of the wheat world and has been the backbone of American bread baking for generations. It carries a slightly earthier, more robust flavor with a nuttier finish. Hard red wheat is higher in protein than soft varieties, often reaching 12 to 14 percent, which makes it excellent for hearty sandwich breads, pizza dough, and dense, chewy loaves. The bran gives it a richer color and a deeper nutritional profile, including higher levels of iron and B vitamins. For preppers who want a single variety to rely on in a survival scenario, hard red wheat is often the top recommendation due to its versatility, yield, and long storage life.

Soft White Wheat Berries

Soft white wheat berries are a different animal altogether. Lower in protein (typically around 8 to 10 percent) and starch-rich, soft white wheat is not meant for bread baking. Instead, it shines in pastries, cakes, cookies, crackers, and flatbreads. The lower gluten content produces tender, crumbly textures that hard wheat simply can’t achieve. In a long-term survival situation, mental and emotional well-being matters just as much as physical nutrition, and being able to bake a batch of cookies or a birthday cake for your children can make an enormous difference in morale. Soft white wheat berries give you that option. They store just as well as hard varieties and add a critical dimension of variety to your emergency food supply.

Einkorn Wheat Berries

Einkorn is the ancient ancestor of all modern wheat, and it’s experiencing a powerful resurgence among health-conscious preppers and homesteaders. Dating back over 10,000 years, Einkorn has never been hybridized or selectively bred the way modern wheat has, meaning it retains its original genetic structure. This matters for several reasons. Einkorn contains a different type of gluten, smaller and weaker proteins, that many people with gluten sensitivities report tolerating far better than modern wheat. It’s also significantly higher in carotenoids, lutein, riboflavin, and certain essential minerals. Einkorn has a rich, buttery, almost nutty flavor that is genuinely delicious. It does require some adjustments when baking, since the dough behaves differently, but the nutritional and digestibility advantages make it a worthy addition to any serious food-storage pantry.

Why Storing Wheat Is One of the Smartest Decisions You Can Make

The importance of storing wheat can’t be overstated. Wheat berries, when kept in cool, dry, airtight conditions, are among the most calorie-dense, nutritionally complete, and cost-effective foods you can store for the long term. A single pound of wheat berries contains roughly 1,500 calories, significant protein, dietary fiber, B vitamins, iron, zinc, and magnesium. Unlike flour, which goes rancid within months, whole wheat berries retain their nutrition and freshness for decades when stored properly.

In a grid-down situation, a war, a supply chain collapse, or any other prolonged crisis, access to flour and commercially baked goods will disappear quickly. Stores will empty within days. But if you have a supply of whole wheat berries, a manual grain mill, and basic knowledge of how to bake from scratch, you can feed your family real, nourishing food indefinitely. Wheat isn’t just calories; it’s the foundation of civilization itself. Every great culture throughout history has understood that controlling the grain supply is controlling survival.

Begin building your wheat berry supply now, before you need it. Store a variety of types to cover your nutritional bases and give your family options. Rotate your stock, keep it sealed and cool, and learn how to use it. A year’s supply of wheat berries stored in five-gallon buckets with gamma seal lids and oxygen absorbers takes up very little space and costs far less than most people imagine. The peace of mind it provides is priceless. When the shelves go empty, the people who planned ahead will be the ones who eat.

Oxygen Absorbers

Please note, I don’t use oxygen absorbers. Some people use them because of where they live (humidity), I get it. I’ve never needed them. The cans of hard white wheat from Thrive Life include oxygen absorbers (they are now out of business), but I only use my wheat from Lehi Mills in Lehi, Utah. It’s cleaned six times, which is critical when you grind wheat in an expensive wheat grinder. I used to work at a Bosch store, and we learned what cheaper wheat can do to an electric grinder. Or a hand grinder for that matter.

How to Use Wheat Berries in Meals

Wheat berries aren’t just a survival food you crack open in a crisis and force yourself to eat. They are a genuinely delicious, incredibly versatile ingredient that can be used in dozens of everyday meals, long before any emergency ever arrives. In fact, the best time to learn how to cook with wheat berries is right now, while you have the luxury of a full kitchen, access to other ingredients, and the freedom to experiment. If you wait until a grid-down situation to crack open your first bucket, you’re going to be learning on the hardest possible day. Start cooking with them today.

Cooking Whole Wheat Berries

Before you can use wheat berries in most recipes, you need to cook them. The process is simple but requires time. Rinse your wheat berries thoroughly under cold water, then soak them overnight in a large bowl of water. Soaking softens the kernel, reduces cooking time, and improves digestibility by beginning to break down the naturally occurring phytic acid in whole grains. After soaking, drain and rinse them again, then add them to a pot with fresh water at a ratio of roughly one cup of wheat berries to three cups of water. Bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer, and cook for 45 to 60 minutes, until tender but still with a pleasant chew. Drain any excess water, and they are ready to use. Cooked wheat berries can be refrigerated for up to five days or frozen in portions for quick use throughout the week.

Wheat Berry Breakfast Porridge

One of the most comforting and nutritious ways to start the day is a warm bowl of wheat berry porridge. Cook your wheat berries as directed above, then simmer them in milk or water with a pinch of salt, a drizzle of honey or maple syrup, and a dash of cinnamon. Top with dried fruit, nuts, or a spoonful of nut butter. The result is a hearty, high-fiber breakfast that keeps you full for hours. In a survival scenario, this is an incredibly important quality; you need foods that stretch your energy and reduce meal frequency when supplies are limited. Wheat berry porridge does exactly that.

Wheat Porridge
Print

Cooked Whole Wheat Berries

Course Breakfast
Cuisine American
Prep Time 12 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Total Time 42 minutes
Servings 6 people
Author Linda Loosli

Ingredients

  • 1 cup uncooked whole wheat berries, rinse with water in a fine strainer
  • 3 cups water
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt

Instructions

Three Ways To Cook It

  • SLOW COOKER: cook all the ingredients listed above for 8-9 hours on low in a slow cooker.
  • STOVE TOP: add the rinsed wheat and salt to three cups of boiling water and cook uncovered on the stove for one hour or until tender.
  • PRESSURE COOKER: add all of the ingredients above into your electric pressure cooker and cook on high for 30 minutes. You will use “natural release," let the pressure come down naturally.

Wheat Berry Salads

Cooked and cooled wheat berries make an outstanding base for grain salads. Their chewy texture holds up beautifully against bold dressings and doesn’t turn soggy the way pasta or rice can. Toss them with olive oil, lemon juice, chopped vegetables, fresh herbs, and a crumble of cheese for a simple, satisfying lunch. A classic combination is wheat berries with roasted root vegetables, dried cranberries, toasted pecans, and an apple cider vinaigrette. These salads travel well, hold up in the refrigerator for days, and pack an impressive nutritional punch. In a preparedness context, grain salads are also an efficient way to stretch whatever fresh or preserved vegetables you have on hand.

Soups and Stews

Adding whole wheat berries to soups and stews is one of the easiest and most rewarding ways to use them. They act similarly to barley, absorbing the flavors of the surrounding broth while adding body, chew, and nutrition to the dish. A simple vegetable soup becomes a full meal when you add a cup of cooked wheat berries. Bean and wheat berry stew is a particularly powerful combination from a survival standpoint; beans provide the amino acids that grains lack, and together they form a complete protein. This is critical knowledge for anyone relying heavily on stored food. Toss wheat berries into chicken soup, beef stew, minestrone, or a simple tomato-based broth with whatever you have available.

Grinding Into Fresh Flour

This is where wheat berry storage truly becomes transformative. With a manual grain mill, an essential piece of preparedness equipment, you can grind your wheat berries into fresh flour on demand. Fresh-milled flour is nutritionally superior to anything you can buy at a store. Commercial flour has the germ and bran removed to extend shelf life, which also removes a significant portion of the vitamins, minerals, and fiber. Fresh-milled whole wheat flour retains everything. Use it to bake sandwich bread, sourdough loaves, flatbreads, tortillas, biscuits, muffins, pancakes, and more. Hard red and hard white wheat berries are ideal for bread baking. Soft white wheat berries produce a finer flour better suited for pastries and delicate baked goods. Einkorn flour creates a rich, golden product with exceptional flavor.

Wheat Grinders Hand and Electric

Sprouting Wheat Berries

In a long-term survival situation, access to fresh vegetables and vitamin C becomes a serious concern. Sprouting wheat berries solves this problem elegantly and requires nothing more than the berries themselves, water, and a jar with a mesh lid or cheesecloth. Rinse your wheat berries, soak them for 8 to 12 hours, then drain and rinse twice daily. Within two to three days, you’ll have fresh, living wheat sprouts packed with enzymes, vitamins, and nutrients, including vitamin C, which isn’t present in dry wheat at all. Wheat sprouts can be eaten raw on sandwiches and salads, tossed into stir-fries, or blended into smoothies. This ability to generate fresh, living nutrition from a shelf-stable seed is one of the most underappreciated advantages of storing whole wheat berries.

Wheat Berry Pilaf

Think of wheat berries the way you would think of rice or farro, and you’ll never run out of ideas. A simple wheat berry pilaf can be made by toasting dry wheat berries in a dry skillet until fragrant, then cooking them in broth instead of water. Finish with sautéed onions, garlic, herbs, and a squeeze of lemon. This makes a deeply satisfying side dish that pairs with almost any protein. In a camp or off-grid cooking scenario, this same dish can be made over an open fire or a rocket stove with minimal equipment.

The Bottom Line on Cooking With Wheat Berries

The families who’ll fare best in a prolonged crisis aren’t just the ones who stored the most food; they’re the ones who stored food they actually know how to cook. Wheat berries reward that preparation. They are filling, nutritious, shelf-stable, and capable of producing an enormous variety of meals from breakfast to dinner. Learn to cook with them now. Invest in a quality manual grain mill. Practice baking bread from freshly milled flour. Teach your children how to sprout them. By the time you actually need these skills, they should feel as natural and familiar as any other part of your kitchen routine.

The wheat berry is one of the oldest foods in human history. It fed armies, built empires, and sustained families through centuries of hardship. It will do the same for yours

Whole Wheat Bread
Print

Whole Wheat Bread For Two

Course Bread
Cuisine American
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Let It Rise 2 hours
Total Time 2 hours 45 minutes
Servings 2 one-pound loaves
Author Linda Loosli

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 cups warm water
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1/4 cup or so of honey
  • 1/2 tablespoon salt
  • 1/2 tablespoon SAF instant yeast
  • 1/2 tablespoon dough enhancer
  • 1/2 tablespoon wheat gluten
  • 1/2 tablespoon lemon juice
  • 3-1/2 to 4 cups whole wheat flour

Instructions

  • Start adding the ingredients in the order shown above with one exception into your mixing bowl…start with 2 cups of flour and slowly add more flour until the dough pulls away from the sides of the bowl. I use a Bosch Mixer.
  • I grew up making bread without a mixer. It can be done by hand. I grew up letting my bread rise twice so I still do that. Old habits are hard to break!
  • I mix it for 10 minutes in my Bosch. Cover with greased plastic wrap until it doubles in size.
  • Punch down and form dough into two one-pound loaves. I let the dough rise one more time with greased plastic wrap.
  • Remove the plastic wrap Bake the bread at (350°F) = (76°C) degrees for 27-30 minutes. If your pans are larger you will bake your bread longer. You will love making whole-wheat bread, I promise!!

If We Have A War: Please Stock White Flour

Grocery Stores

We live in a time when the illusion of abundance is everywhere. Grocery store shelves are stocked, delivery apps bring food to your door in thirty minutes, and most people haven’t missed a meal their entire lives. That comfort is real, but it’s also fragile. Supply chains are longer and more complicated than they’ve ever been. Geopolitical tensions are rising. Natural disasters are growing more frequent and more severe. And history has shown, repeatedly and without exception, that the difference between a family that survives a crisis and a family that doesn’t often comes down to one simple thing: preparation.

Wheat berries aren’t a trendy superfood. They aren’t a new idea. They are among the oldest, most proven, and most dependable foods in the entire history of human civilization. Cultures across the world have stored grain as their first line of defense against famine, war, and disaster for thousands of years. That wisdom didn’t disappear; it just got buried under the convenience of modern life.

Stocking up on wheat berries costs very little. A twenty-five-pound bag of hard white or hard red wheat berries stored in a sealed five-gallon bucket with oxygen absorbers takes up less space than a piece of luggage and can last thirty years. A manual grain mill is a one-time investment that will outlast you and serve your children after you are gone. The knowledge of how to bake bread, cook a grain for salad, sprout seeds for fresh nutrition, and stretch a simple stew into a week of meals is knowledge that no one can ever take from you.

Final Word

You don’t need to believe the worst is coming to prepare for it. You simply need to love your family enough to act before you’re forced to. Fill your pantry. Learn your skills. Store your wheat. The time to prepare is always before the crisis arrives — never during it. The wheat berry has fed humanity through its darkest hours before. Let it be ready to do the same for you. May God bless this world, Linda

Copyright Images: Wheat Porridge AdobeStock_507346595 by By murziknata

The post If We Have A War: Stock Up On Wheat Berries appeared first on Food Storage Moms.



from Food Storage Moms

Sleep Deprivation Survival: 72 Hours Without Sleep Effects in a Crisis and How to Stay Functional

Sleep Deprivation Survival is not some macho badge of honor, and it is not a niche concern for extreme situations either. In a real crisis, whether you are dealing with a storm outage, a rushed evacuation, a sick family member, civil unrest, or just the grinding stress of staying alert when everything feels unstable, sleep ... Read more...

from Prepper's Will

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

How Your Walls Can Kill You Faster than a Crisis (It’s Not Mold!)

Walk into a house built thirty or forty years ago, then walk into one today. The layout is different, the materials are different – but the biggest change is something you can’t see. It’s behind the walls, and it never turns off. Old houses were simple. You turned on a light and it was there. […]

The post How Your Walls Can Kill You Faster than a Crisis (It’s Not Mold!) appeared first on Ask a Prepper.



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DIY 5-Gallon Bucket Gardening Stand

Estimated reading time: 4 minutes

DIY 5-Gallon Bucket Gardening Stand

While growing food in the ground is the traditional way to garden, it can be pretty frustrating. You have to deal with pests, disease, too much sun, too much rain, and sometimes even too much wind if a major storm blows through. Any of these can easily kill plants you've been nurturing for months.

All of this is why bucket gardening has become so popular. You have more control over the soil, it's easier to prevent pests and disease, and you can move them around if the weather isn't ideal. To make them look even better and to use your space more efficiently, you can put them in a raised bucket garden stand.

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I've seen a lot of designs and tutorials, but this is one by Lazy Lab Acres is my favorite by far. You can watch the video below. For your convenience, I typed up the list of materials and instructions below the video.


Materials Needed:

  • 12 eight-foot 2x4s (pressure-treated)
  • 2 lb boxes of 2.5-inch exterior/deck/stainless screws
  • 5-gallon buckets (with drilled drainage holes)
  • Tools: Drill/impact driver, miter or circular saw, speed square, tape measure

Cut List:

From the first 6 boards:

  • 6 pieces at 52.5″ (long sides of shelves)
  • 15 pieces at 11.25″ (bucket spacers)

From the remaining 6 boards:

  • 4 pieces at 51″ (legs for top shelf)
  • 2 pieces at 48.75″ (horizontal supports at base)
  • 2 pieces at 34″ (legs for middle shelf)
  • 2 pieces at 17″ (legs for bottom shelf)

Instructions:

Step 1: Build the Bucket Holders (Shelves)

Each shelf uses:

  • 2 pieces at 52.5″
  • 5 pieces at 11.25″

Instructions:

  1. Lay out the 52.5″ boards parallel.
  2. Space the 11.25″ cross pieces evenly between them (~11.25″ apart) to form slots for the buckets.
  3. Secure with 2.5″ deck screws.
  4. Repeat this process to build 3 total shelves.
Bucket Holder Shelves

Step 2: Attach the Legs

Use the shelves to form a 3-tier stand:

  1. Flip what will be the tallest shelf (top shelf) upside down and attach four 51″ legs to each corner.
  2. Place what will be the middle shelf upside down and attach the 34″ legs to the front corners.
  3. Place what will be the bottom shelf upside down and attach 17″ legs to its front corners.
Attach the Legs

Step 3: Connect the Shelves

  1. Attach the middle and bottom shelves to the back legs of the top shelf structure using screws, ensuring each shelf is level and square (use speed square).

Tip: The shelves are spaced to allow ~2.5″ of clearance beneath each bucket (since buckets are ~14.5″ tall).

Connect the Shelves

Step 4: Install Bottom Horizontal Supports

  1. Lay scrap 2x4s under the base to lift it off the ground.
  2. Screw the two 48.75″ supports horizontally between the bottom of the legs to stabilize the structure.
Install Bottom Supports

Final Touches:

  • Test-fit your buckets to ensure they rest securely in the slots.
  • Optional: Add casters underneath for mobility.
  • If you use regular wood, paint or seal it for weather resistance.

You can find gear and more plans at LazyLabAcres.com.

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Originally published on Urban Survival Site.

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If We Have A War: Plant Potatoes In Your Garden

Potato Seeds For Sale at IFA Store in Riverton, Utah

If we have a war, plant potatoes in your garden. Throughout history, the humble potato has fed families through famine, war, and hardship. It’s not a glamorous crop. It grows underground, out of sight, quietly doing its work. But when times turn difficult, the family with a potato patch has something most people don’t: a steady, filling, nutritious source of food they grew themselves. This post is for every family that wants to be ready.

I learned at a very young age from my great-grandmother: “If you plant potatoes, you’ll never be hungry.” She was Norwegian, so she had a beautiful accent, if you know what I mean. When I plant seed potatoes, they are usually Yukon Gold. I love their texture, and they grow well in large pots. Once you bake or mash a freshly pulled potato, you’ll taste the difference from store-bought ones. They’re so creamy, with an unbelievable flavor. Please wear gloves when working in the soil. You never know what you may find or get bitten by. Digz Gloves

Update here: finally, on March 29th, 2026, Mark and I picked up soil and all the amendments we need to start a small garden. Now we need to locate the best raised gardens we can afford. We may do buckets, not the best option, but that’s life. I can’t wait to plant tomatoes, zucchini, and yellow staightneck squash. Oh, and Cilantro, YES!! Fresh Cilantro! We have a very small area, and at our age, this is all we can physically handle. Life is good when we pick that first red tomato, right?

Soil Amendments To Plant Potatoes In Your Garden

Azomite Micronized Bag

Coco Coir Block

Earthworm Castings Organic Fertilizer

Organic Bone Meal, 3 lb.

8-Quart Organic Vermiculate

Digging Potatoes In a Pot

Why Potatoes Belong in Every Family Garden

Potatoes are one of the most calorie-dense crops a home gardener can grow per square foot of soil. A single ten-foot row can yield twenty to fifty pounds of food, depending on the variety and care given. They are easy enough for children to help plant, satisfying to dig up as a family, and versatile enough to feed everyone at the table in dozens of ways.

If you’re thinking about food security, whether because of economic uncertainty, supply chain concerns, or simply a desire to be more self-sufficient, the potato patch should be the first thing you dig. This post will walk your family through every step: from choosing and preparing your seed potatoes to planting, hilling, harvesting, and storing them for months to come. 15 Ways To Use Cheap Potatoes, Funeral Potatoes aka The Best Cheesy Potato Casserole, How To Make Mashed Potatoes

Choosing Your Seed Potatoes

Potatoes aren’t typically grown from true seeds the way tomatoes or carrots are. Instead, they are grown from what gardeners call seed potatoes, small whole potatoes, or pieces of larger potatoes that carry the eyes from which new plants sprout. You can purchase certified seed potatoes from garden centers or farm supply stores, and this is strongly recommended over planting grocery store potatoes, which are often treated to prevent sprouting.

Varieties Worth Growing at Home

Russet potatoes are the classic choice; starchy, filling, excellent for baking and mashing. Yukon Gold varieties are smooth and buttery, store well, and have thin skins that your children will enjoy. Red potatoes have waxy flesh, cook quickly, and hold up beautifully in soups and stews. For long-term food storage goals, russets and other starchy varieties will serve your family best.

Family Tip: Let your children help choose two or three varieties to plant. When harvest time comes, they’ll be far more excited to dig up potatoes they helped select and plant. Ownership over the process builds lifelong gardening habits.

Preparing Your Seed Potatoes

A few days before planting, examine your seed potatoes. Each one should have at least one or two eyes, which look like small dimples or sprouts beginning to emerge. If you have large seed potatoes, you can cut them into pieces, making sure each piece has at least two eyes. Cut pieces should be allowed to dry and cure at room temperature for one to three days before planting. This drying process seals the cut surface and protects against rot in the soil.

Smaller seed potatoes, the size of a golf ball or smaller, can be planted whole without cutting. Whole seed potatoes tend to resist rot slightly better than cut pieces, making them a good choice for beginners or gardens in wetter climates.

How to Plant Potatoes

Potatoes grow best when nighttime temperatures are consistently above 40 degrees Fahrenheit, and the soil can be worked without freezing. In most regions, this means planting in early spring, two to four weeks before your last expected frost date. Potatoes are surprisingly tolerant of light frost, so planting at the early end of this window is perfectly safe and often yields the best results.

Preparing the Soil

Potatoes thrive in loose, well-drained soil with a slightly acidic pH between 5.0 and 6.0. Before planting, loosen the soil to a depth of at least twelve inches. If your soil is heavy clay, work in compost or aged manure to improve drainage. Sandy or loamy soils that allow tubers to expand freely produce the largest yields. A light application of a balanced garden fertilizer worked into the soil before planting will give your plants a strong early start.

Digging the Trenches and Planting

  1. Dig a trench four to six inches deep. If planting multiple rows, space them at least thirty inches apart to allow room for hilling later.
  2. Place your seed potato pieces cut-side down, eye-side up, every twelve inches along the trench. This spacing gives each plant enough room to develop a full cluster of tubers.
  3. Cover the seed potatoes with three to four inches of soil. Don’t bury them too deep at this stage; you’ll add more soil as the plants grow.
  4. Water gently and thoroughly after planting. The soil should be moist but not waterlogged.
  5. Sprouts should begin breaking through the soil surface within two to four weeks, depending on soil temperature.

The Importance of Hilling

Hilling is one of the most important practices in potato growing, and it’s something the whole family can participate in. Once your potato plants are about eight inches tall, mound soil up around the base of each plant, covering the lower stems and leaving only the top few inches of foliage exposed. Repeat this process every few weeks as the plants continue to grow taller.

Hilling serves two important purposes. First, it encourages the buried stems to produce more tubers, increasing your overall yield. Second, it keeps developing potatoes covered and out of direct sunlight. Potatoes that are exposed to sunlight turn green and develop solanine, a mildly toxic compound that makes them bitter and unsafe to eat in large amounts. A well-hilled potato patch produces cleaner, larger, and more plentiful tubers.

Watering Guide: Potatoes need consistent moisture, roughly one to two inches of water per week. The most critical watering period is during flowering, when tubers are forming underground. Uneven watering during this stage can cause hollow or misshapen potatoes. Drip irrigation or soaker hoses work especially well for potato beds.

Harvesting Your Potatoes

Potatoes can be harvested at two different stages, depending on your needs. New potatoes are small, thin-skinned, and tender; they’re ready about two to three weeks after the plant stops flowering. These don’t store well, but are absolutely delicious when eaten fresh. For storing potatoes, wait until the plants have fully died back and the skins have hardened.

Knowing When Full-Size Potatoes Are Ready

The clearest sign that your potatoes are ready to harvest is when the green tops of the plants yellow, wither, and die back completely. This usually happens 70 to 120 days after planting, depending on the variety. After the foliage dies, leave the potatoes in the ground for an additional two weeks. This curing period allows the skins to toughen and thicken, which dramatically improves their storage life.

How to Dig Without Damaging Your Crop

Choose a dry day for digging. Wet soil clings to potatoes, making them harder to clean without causing nicks and bruises. Use a garden fork rather than a spade, inserting it about a foot away from the base of each plant to avoid puncturing the tubers beneath. Lift gently and let the cluster come up out of the ground. Then let your children run their hands through the loosened soil to find every last potato hiding beneath the surface; this is genuinely one of the most joyful moments in the entire garden year.

Handle harvested potatoes gently. Even small cuts or bruises on the skin can lead to rot during storage. Set them aside on the soil surface or in a basket, keeping them out of direct sunlight.

Curing After Harvest: Before storing, cure your potatoes by laying them in a single layer in a cool, dark, well-ventilated space for one to two weeks. A garage, shed, or covered porch works well. During this time, the skin hardens, small cuts heal over, and the starch converts slightly, improving both flavor and storage quality. Don’t wash potatoes before curing; brush off loose dirt and leave them be.

Storing Potatoes After Harvest

Properly stored potatoes can last four to six months or longer, which is what makes them such an extraordinary food security crop. The enemies of stored potatoes are warmth, moisture, and light. All three cause sprouting, shriveling, or rot. The ideal storage conditions are temperatures between 38 and 45 degrees Fahrenheit, darkness, and airflow.

Best Storage Methods for Families

A root cellar, if you have one, is the traditional and ideal solution. Cool basements, unheated garages, or insulated storage sheds can also work well in most climates. Store potatoes in wooden crates, cardboard boxes, or burlap bags that allow air to circulate. Never store them in sealed plastic bags or airtight containers, as trapped moisture accelerates rot.

Don’t store potatoes near apples or other fruit. Fruit produces ethylene gas as it ripens, which causes potatoes to sprout prematurely. Keep potatoes separate from onions as well; storing them together shortens the life of both.

Check your stored potatoes every few weeks through the winter. Remove any that are soft, shriveled, or showing signs of rot immediately. One rotting potato left unchecked can quickly spread to its neighbors. A well-tended storage bin, checked regularly, will feed your family well into the following spring.

What to Do With Potatoes That Begin to Sprout

If stored potatoes begin to sprout, simply snap off the sprouts and use the potatoes as soon as possible. A slightly sprouted potato is still perfectly safe to eat as long as the flesh is firm and there’s no green coloration. Once a potato begins to feel soft or hollow, it’s past its best condition and should be discarded or composted rather than eaten.

Sprouted potatoes that are still firm can also be saved and used as next year’s seed potatoes, closing the loop on your family’s growing cycle and reducing the cost of next season’s garden.

The Nutritional Power of the Potato

Potatoes have an undeserved reputation in modern diet culture as unhealthy. The truth is that a plain potato is one of the most nutrient-dense foods that exists. It’s the additions of heavy butter, sour cream, and processed toppings that add calories without nutrition. A potato eaten simply is a genuinely excellent food for the whole family.

A medium-sized potato with the skin on contains approximately 160 calories, 4 grams of protein, and 37 grams of complex carbohydrates. It’s naturally fat-free and provides a remarkable array of vitamins and minerals that support the health of growing children and adults alike.

Vitamin C: A single potato provides nearly half the daily recommended intake. Essential for immune defense and healing.

Potassium: Potatoes contain more potassium than a banana, supporting heart health and proper muscle function.

Vitamin B6: Supports brain development in children and helps the body convert food into usable energy.

Iron: Provides meaningful iron, especially important for growing children and pregnant mothers.

Magnesium: Supports bone health, nerve function, and healthy blood pressure regulation.

Dietary Fiber: The skin is rich in fiber, which supports digestive health and helps the family feel full longer.

Folate: A B vitamin critical for cell repair and healthy development, particularly important during pregnancy.

Resistant Starch: Cooked and cooled potatoes contain resistant starch that feeds beneficial gut bacteria.

The protein in potatoes, while modest in quantity, is actually quite high in quality. It contains a favorable range of amino acids, making it more nutritionally complete than the protein found in many grains. Historically, populations that relied heavily on potatoes, along with dairy products like milk, maintained their health during very difficult periods. This isn’t an accident. The potato is, by design of nature, a remarkably complete food.

Always leave the skins on when possible. The skin of the potato contains a significant portion of its fiber, vitamins, and minerals. Scrubbing and cooking potatoes with the skins intact, rather than peeling them, preserves far more of their nutritional value for your family.

Passing This Knowledge to Your Children

There is something quietly profound about watching your children understand where food comes from. The potato patch is one of the best places to begin that education. When children plant a wrinkled, unimpressive-looking seed potato in cold spring soil, tend the growing green tops through the summer, and then plunge their hands into the loosened earth and pull out potatoes in autumn, something changes in them. They begin to understand effort, patience, and reward in a way no classroom can fully teach.

Whether times become difficult or remain comfortable, the skills and habits your family builds in the garden have value that can’t be measured in pounds per row. Knowing how to grow, harvest, and store food safely is one of the most genuinely useful things you can pass on to the next generation.

Start this season. Find a patch of ground, loosen the soil, and plant your seed potatoes. Your family will eat well from them, and the act of growing them together is worth more than any harvest.

Final Word

Quick Reference Summary: Plant in early spring, 4 to 6 inches deep, 12 inches apart in rows 30 inches wide. Hill when plants reach 8 inches tall, and again every few weeks. Water consistently, especially during flowering. Harvest when tops die back completely, wait 2 more weeks, then dig on a dry day. Cure for 1 to 2 weeks before storing. Store at 38 to 45 degrees F, in a dark, ventilated area. Check monthly and remove any rotting potatoes promptly. Growing food is an act of hope, and potatoes are one of the most hopeful things you can plant. May God bless this world, Linda

The post If We Have A War: Plant Potatoes In Your Garden appeared first on Food Storage Moms.



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