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Friday, April 10, 2026

If We Have A War: Tidbits From Me

Fire Proof Bag

Here are some tidbits from me to you. This post covers practical war preparedness steps for everyday families: building a pantry, securing finances, making a communication plan, protecting your health, and keeping your household emotionally steady, all written from the perspective of someone who has lived through the Cold War, Vietnam War, the Gulf War, 9/11, and beyond. As newlyweds, Mark was sent to Basic Training in Fort Ord, California, in 1969, during the Vietnam War.

I’ve been alive since Harry Truman was president. I grew up practicing duck-and-cover drills in an elementary school classroom, not entirely sure what ducking under a wooden desk was supposed to accomplish against a nuclear weapon, but doing it anyway because the teacher said to. I watched the Vietnam War unfold on our first color television set. I’ve lived through more national emergencies, more moments where the whole country held its breath, than I can count on two hands.

Emergency Buckets, First Aid, Personal Hygiene, Food and Water

So when people around me start asking what they should do to prepare for a potential war, whether it touches our shores or not, I feel like I have something useful to say. Not because I’m an expert with credentials on the wall, but because I have been paying attention for a very long time.

Here is what I’ve learned. Take what fits your situation. Leave what doesn’t.

If We Have a War: Tidbits From Me

1. Start with your pantry, not your panic

The single most practical thing any household can do is build a steady, rotating supply of food and water. This isn’t about survivalist fantasy; it’s about being the kind of family that doesn’t need to sprint to the grocery store the moment something scary happens on the news.

Aim for four to six weeks of shelf-stable food that your family actually eats. Canned goods, dried beans, rice, pasta, cooking oil, salt, and whatever else is on your regular table. Rotate it: use the oldest cans first, replace what you use. Water storage matters too; one gallon per person per day is the standard guidance. I sure wish the world would realize one gallon per person isn’t going to cut it. I get thirsty just thinking about it. Please store four gallons per person per day. Let’s get real, you want clean underwear, water to provide hydration, water to do your cooking, and we need to maintain proper personal hygiene?

A manual can opener is not optional. Neither is a battery-powered or hand-crank radio. Manual Can Opener and Battery-Powered Radio or Hand Cranked Radio.

Buy a little extra food each week rather than doing one large panicked purchase. This is calmer and cheaper, and it means your pantry grows organically without drama.

“A prepared family doesn’t look like chaos. It looks like a full pantry, a written plan, and people who know what to do.”

2. Get your paperwork in order

This is the step most people skip, and it’s one of the most important. Know where your vital documents are. Birth certificates, Social Security cards, passports, insurance policies, medication lists, health records, account numbers, all of it should be in one place you can grab quickly, ideally in a waterproof bag or a fireproof box. Waterproof Bag

Make digital copies and store them somewhere accessible, a secure cloud folder or a thumb drive kept with a trusted family member in another location. If you have ever tried to replace a birth certificate in the middle of a crisis, you know why this matters.

While you’re at it, review your finances. Carry a small amount of cash. ATMs go dark in emergencies. Credit card systems go offline. A few hundred dollars in small bills tucked somewhere safe isn’t paranoia; it’s the same logic as keeping a spare tire in the trunk.

Be Prepared for a Hurricane + Free Printable Emergency Binder Contents

Free Emergency Binder Kit 

3. Make a communication plan that your whole family knows

When I was raising my children during the Cold War years, we had a plan. Everyone knew it. If something happened and we got separated, we had a meeting place, a backup meeting place, and a phone number for a relative in another state who could act as the family relay point.

That structure still works. Designate an out-of-area contact; someone in a different city or state, whom everyone in your household knows to call if local lines are jammed. Agree on two meeting places: one near home, one farther away if the neighborhood is inaccessible. Write it down. Put it in every person’s wallet or phone case. Children old enough to read should know it by heart.

Don’t assume your cell phone will work. Texts often go through when voice calls can’t. Know the difference, and have a backup.

4. Tend to your medications and health needs

If you take prescription medications, talk to your doctor about keeping a small emergency supply. Many physicians will work with you on this, particularly for maintenance medications. A 30-day buffer can make an enormous difference if supply chains are disrupted or pharmacies are overwhelmed. 90 days is even better.

Keep a written list of every medication, dosage, and prescribing physician in your emergency documents. If you wear glasses, have a backup pair. If anyone in your household uses medical equipment, understand its power requirements and have a plan for outages.

First aid supplies are basic and often overlooked: bandages, antiseptics, over-the-counter pain relievers, a thermometer, and any allergy medications your family needs. Know how to use what you have.

5. Think through your shelter situation

In most scenarios, including economic disruption, localized conflict, civil unrest, and even certain natural disasters, staying in your own home is the safest option. Know which room in your house would serve best as a shelter space if needed: interior rooms away from windows are generally recommended. Know where your utility shutoffs are. Understand your home’s vulnerabilities. 4 in one Tool and Carbon Monoxide-Natural Gas-Propane Detector

If evacuation ever becomes necessary, know your routes. Have two planned. Understand where you would go and how long it would take to get there. Fuel your car when it reaches the halfway mark rather than waiting for the low-fuel light; gas stations have lines during emergencies.

6. Protect the children’s sense of safety

I raised children during some genuinely frightening times in this country. What I learned is that children aren’t protected by ignorance; they’re protected by calm, honest adults who give them age-appropriate information and something useful to do.

Tell them the truth in words they can manage. Reassure them that adults are paying attention and taking care of things. Give them a small job: filling the water jugs, knowing the meeting place, and helping organize the pantry. Children feel safer when they feel capable.

Limit the news that plays in front of young children. You’re allowed to turn it off. In fact, you should.

7. Tend your community ties

Every serious crisis I have lived through has confirmed one thing: neighbors matter. The people on your street are your first line of mutual aid. Know who among them is older, who lives alone, who has young children, and who has medical needs. Check on them. Let them check on you.

Community isn’t a soft word; it’s a survival strategy. In every disaster I’ve read about, and some I’ve witnessed, the neighborhoods that fared best were the ones where people already knew each other before anything went wrong.

8. Guard your own steadiness

This is the one nobody wants to talk about, so I will. Watching frightening news around the clock is not preparedness; it’s punishment. It doesn’t make you more ready. It makes you more anxious, more reactive, and less capable of clear thinking.

Set news limits for yourself. One or two check-ins a day from reliable sources is enough to stay informed. The rest of your day should still include meals with people you love, work that matters, sleep, some form of movement, and whatever makes ordinary life feel like life worth living. Don’t sacrifice those things on the altar of constant vigilance. They’re the whole point.

I’ve lived through genuinely terrifying moments in history. We are still here. The thing that got families through hard times wasn’t perfect information or perfect preparation; it was steadiness, practicality, and the decision to take care of each other. That’s still the whole game. Start Small. Start today. A full pantry and a written plan are worth more than any amount of worry.

Final Word

I’ve lived through a great deal in my 76 years, and if there’s one thing I know for certain, it’s this: the people who come out the other side of hard times are not always the strongest or the wealthiest or the best equipped; they’re the ones who had adequate preparations, stayed calm, stayed connected, and took care of each other. That’s what I’m asking you to do. Don’t wait for the worst to happen before you start paying attention. Get your house in order, check on your neighbors, hold your family close, and don’t let fear dictate your decisions. You have more in you than you think. We all do. Thank you for reading, and thank you for caring enough to prepare, not just for yourself, but for the people around you who are counting on you to show up. Now go do something about it and help others do the same. May God bless this world, Linda

The post If We Have A War: Tidbits From Me appeared first on Food Storage Moms.



from Food Storage Moms

Top 10 Companion Planting Vegetables

Estimated reading time: 8 minutes

Top 10 Companion Planting Vegetables

If you've been gardening for any length of time, you've probably heard the term companion planting. It's simply the practice of growing certain plants together so they can help each other thrive.

Some plants repel the pests that plague their neighbors. Others attract beneficial insects that do things like pollination and eating pests. Some plants improve the soil, others provide shade for smaller plants, and a few can even improve the flavor of plants growing beside them.

Done right, companion planting can help you minimize pests, prevent disease, and use your garden space more efficiently. The best part is how easy it is. You don't need any skills or experience. You just need to know which plants to put together.

In this article, we put together a list of the 10 best companion planting combinations to start with. These are all tried-and-true pairings that are popular, proven, and easy for any gardener to pull off.

10. Peppers + Carrots

As carrots grow, their roots naturally loosen and aerate the soil around them, which is great news for pepper plants, whose roots thrive in well-drained, breathable ground. In return, pepper plants provide light shade that helps keep the soil cool and moist, which carrots appreciate during the heat of summer.

There's a pest-control benefit here too. Carrots attract beneficial insects like parasitic wasps and lacewings, which prey on the aphids and spider mites that love to target pepper plants. It's a great partnership that keeps your soil healthy and pests to a minimum.

9. Sunflowers + Cucumbers or Squash

If you've ever struggled with poor cucumber or squash yields, the problem might be a lack of pollinators. Sunflowers are one of the best pollinator magnets you can plant, drawing bees and other beneficial insects to your garden in large numbers. When planted near cucumbers or squash, that boost in bee activity can make a big difference in your harvest.

Sunflowers also pull double duty as a living trellis and trap crop. Vining cucumber plants will naturally climb their sturdy stalks, freeing up ground space and improving air circulation. At the same time, sunflowers tend to attract aphids, drawing them away from your cucumbers and squash before they can do real damage.

8. Lettuce + Tomatoes (or Tall Plants)

Lettuce is one of the easiest vegetables to grow, at least until summer hits. As temperatures climb, lettuce bolts quickly, turning bitter and going to seed before you've had a chance to enjoy it. That's where tomatoes come in. By planting lettuce at the base of your tomato plants, you give it the shade it needs to stay cool, slow down bolting, and extend your harvest window by several weeks.

The benefits go both ways. Lettuce acts as a living mulch around the base of your tomato plants, helping the soil retain moisture and suppressing weeds that would otherwise compete for nutrients. Tomatoes are heavy feeders, so anything that helps keep their root zone cool and weed-free is a win. If you don't have tomatoes, this same strategy works beautifully with other tall plants like corn, sunflowers, or pole beans.

7. Strawberries + Borage

If you've never grown borage, this combination might be the perfect excuse to start. Borage is a fast-growing, easy-care herb with beautiful star-shaped blue flowers that pollinators absolutely love. Plant it near your strawberries and you'll notice a significant uptick in bee activity, which translates directly into better pollination and bigger, more abundant fruit.

Beyond pollination, borage offers some solid pest protection for your strawberry patch. It's known to repel tomato hornworms and a number of common strawberry pests, helping to keep your plants healthier throughout the season. Borage also has a habit of self-seeding, meaning once you plant it, it tends to come back year after year with very little effort on your part.

6. Brassicas + Dill

Cabbage, kale, broccoli, and their brassica relatives are some of the most pest-prone garden plants. Cabbage worms, aphids, and cabbage loopers can devastate a brassica bed in a hurry if left unchecked. That's where dill earns its place in the garden. Dill is a powerhouse at attracting predatory and parasitic wasps, which are nature's own pest control, laying their eggs inside cabbage worms and effectively eliminating them before they can do serious damage.

The best part is how effortless this combination is to pull off. Dill is one of the easiest herbs to grow from seed, thrives in the same cool-weather conditions that brassicas prefer, and doesn't compete aggressively for nutrients or space. Just scatter a few seeds along the edges of your brassica bed at the start of the season and let it do its thing.

One important note: Once dill matures and begins to flower, it can actually have a negative effect on some brassicas, so plan to succession-sow small amounts throughout the season to keep young dill growing alongside your crops.

5. Carrots + Onions

Carrots and onions are one of the most time-tested companion planting combinations in the garden, and for good reason. The strong scent of onions confuses and repels carrot flies, which locate their host plants primarily by smell. Meanwhile, the feathery, pungent foliage of carrots returns the favor by masking the scent of nearby onions from onion flies. It's a mutual defense system that nature essentially built for you.

Beyond pest control, carrots and onions make practical neighbors because they don't compete with each other underground. Onions are shallow-rooted bulbs that occupy the upper layer of soil, while carrots push straight down into the deeper layers, so they're essentially working in completely different root zones without getting in each other's way. They also share similar growing conditions, preferring well-drained, loose soil and plenty of sun.

4. Roses + Garlic

Roses are beloved by gardeners everywhere, but they come with a well-known downside: they're magnets for pests and disease. Aphids, Japanese beetles, and fungal problems like black spot can take a gorgeous rose bed and turn it into a frustrating battle almost overnight. Garlic is one of the oldest and most reliable natural remedies for all of these problems. Its pungent sulfuric compounds repel aphids and beetles on contact, and its antifungal properties have been shown to reduce the spread of black spot and other common rose diseases.

What makes this pairing even better is how little effort it requires. Garlic is one of the most undemanding plants in the garden. Just plant it in fall and let it quietly go to work all season long. It stays low to the ground, so it never competes with your roses for sunlight or space, and it actually makes a tidy, attractive border around a rose bed.

3. Cucumbers + Nasturtiums

Nasturtiums are one of the most effective trap crops, and cucumbers are one of their greatest beneficiaries. Aphids and cucumber beetles are drawn irresistibly to nasturtiums, pulling them away from your cucumber plants before they can do any real harm. Instead of spraying or picking pests off your cucumbers by hand, you let the nasturtiums take the hit, then deal with the pests on one concentrated plant rather than scattered across your entire bed.

What makes this combination so popular is that nasturtiums have almost no downsides. They grow quickly from seed, thrive in poor soil, require virtually no maintenance, and produce edible flowers and leaves that are a peppery, colorful addition to summer salads. They also attract pollinators, which gives your cucumber plants an extra boost when it comes to fruit production.

2. Tomatoes + Basil

These two have been grown together for centuries, and the reasons are almost too numerous to count. Basil's strong aromatic oils are known to repel some of the most common tomato pests like aphids, whiteflies, and tomato hornworms while also attracting pollinators that help your tomato plants set fruit. Many gardeners swear that basil improves the flavor of tomatoes grown nearby.

Beyond the pest control and flavor, this combination is just incredibly practical. Tomatoes and basil thrive in the same conditions, which means caring for them together is no more work than caring for either one alone. Basil stays compact and low-growing, so it never shades out your tomato plants, and it fits neatly between or around the base of your tomato cages.

1. The Three Sisters: Corn + Beans + Squash

Few companion planting combinations in history can match the Three Sisters. This legendary trio, corn, beans, and squash, has been grown together by Native American peoples for centuries, and it remains one of the most famous and popular companion planting methods in the world.

What makes it so remarkable is that it isn't just a pairing of two plants that happen to help each other. It's a complete, self-sustaining growing system where each plant plays a distinct and essential role. Corn grows tall first, providing a natural trellis for bean vines to climb. Beans fix nitrogen from the air directly into the soil, continuously feeding the heavy-feeding corn and squash throughout the season. And squash spreads its broad, sprawling leaves across the ground, shading out weeds, retaining soil moisture, and deterring pests with its prickly texture.

Together, these three plants create something that none of them could achieve on their own: a balanced, productive, nearly self-managing garden bed that feeds the soil as much as it feeds the gardener. Whether you have a large garden plot or just a modest raised bed, planting the Three Sisters is one of the most rewarding experiments you can try. You can learn more about it in this article.

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Thursday, April 9, 2026

5 Subtle Signs the Government Is Collapsing. #1 Is Happening Right Now

If you had to guess when Rome started falling, you’d probably pick a battle, a fire, or a date. Historians pick something far less exciting – the point where the government started paying its soldiers in debased coins because it had run out of real silver. The U.S. isn’t Rome. But the pattern of a […]

The post 5 Subtle Signs the Government Is Collapsing. #1 Is Happening Right Now appeared first on Ask a Prepper.



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How to Make a Bean Teepee for Pole Beans

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes

How to Make a Bean Teepee for Pole Beans

I love growing beans, but bean trellises can be cumbersome and difficult to build. Bean teepees, on the other hand, are a creative and efficient means of supporting your pole beans. And they’re easy to build!

Pole beans need to twine some kind of a support or pole, so giving them a teepee to grow on will make a nice addition to your garden. Beans germinate and grow quickly, so it won’t take long to enjoy your work!

In this article, we’ll talk about how to build a bean teepee for your pole beans. We’ll also talk about the best types of beans for your bean teepee and the supplies you’ll need to build it. Finally, we give you some of the great benefits for why you may want to build a bean teepee of your own. But first, let’s take a look at what a bean teepee really is.

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What is a bean teepee?

BEAN TEEPEE READY FOR PLANTING

A bean teepee uses a teepee-shaped frame as a support for your pole beans. As the bean plants grow, they twine up and around the teepee frame, creating a shade cover that looks like a teepee. Bean teepees can be pretty much any size you want, depending on the space you have available and the number of plants you wish to grow.

The best pole beans for your bean teepee

POLE BEAN SEEDS

You can use just about any pole bean or runner bean on your teepee. Bush beans won’t grow tall enough, so don’t choose bush bean varieties. Instead, try some fun, interesting beans, especially if you have kids! You might want to try some of these heirloom varieties:

Supplies needed for your bean teepee

BASIC BEAN TEEPEE CONSTRUCTION

You really don’t need a lot of supplies when you build your teepee. In fact, you can use just two things: poles and string. But, of course, you’ll need your favorite pole bean seeds, too. And you may need some garden amendments if your soil isn’t great.

  • Poles. These could be bamboo, PVC, garden stakes, or even something that is lightweight aluminum. You don’t need to go out and buy fancy poles if you don’t want to. Just don’t use anything too heavy and make sure it is safe. Smaller teepees only need 3 or 4 poles, but if you want larger teepees, you may want to use as many as 10. Most pole beans grow 6 to 8 feet tall, so this is a good height to make your teepee. Also, if you want more space between your vines, you can use fewer poles, but if you want your teepee to be more solid, use some additional poles to fill it in.
  • String or twine. You’ll need string or twine to keep the tops of the poles together.
  • Pole bean seeds
  • A sunny space in your garden or yard
  • Soil amendments, such as compost or organic matter

How to Build Your Bean Teepee

  1. Find the best spot for your teepee. Choose a location that gets full sun with well-draining soil. Beans can tolerate a little bit of light shade, especially in hot climates.
  2. Prepare your soil. Turn over your soil and mix in plenty of aged compost, just like you would for pole beans or bush beans.
  3. Lay your poles down in a neat pile. Wrap your twine around the top of the poles, about 6-inches to a foot from the top of the poles. Wrap the twine around tightly and then tie it off so that it holds the poles together in a bundle.
  4. Lift the poles as a single unit and stand them up in the center of your space. You may need two people to do this. One person can steady the poles while the other works on the next step.
  5. Pull the bottom of one pole out at a time to make a leg of the teepee and push it into the soil. Work your way through all of the poles, making sure they are evenly spaced and creating that rounded teepee shape. Make sure your teepee is sturdy. You can add more twine at the top if needed.
  6. Direct sow your bean seeds 1 inch deep around the base of the teepee frame. Plant one row of beans on the inside of the teepee, approximately 3-inches apart. Plant a second row on the outside of the teepee, also three inches apart.
  7. Keep the soil damp but not soggy while the beans germinate and begin to grow. It takes about 7 to 10 days for the beans to germinate.
  8. You may need to train the beans up the poles as they grow.

Bean Teepee Benefits

BEAN TEEPEE IN THE GARDEN

Why should you build a bean teepee? There are plenty of reasons you might want to put one – or several – in your yard or garden.

  • Bean teepees make great use of vertical space. They are an efficient use of space in small gardens, so if you don’t have a lot of room to grow beans, you might want to try a teepee instead of a trellis.
  • Easy to harvest beans. You’ll be able to pick beans inside and outside the teepee, making them easy to reach.
  • Creates shade for cool-loving crops. If you don’t grow the teepee too thickly, you can use it to provide mottled shade for cool weather crops such as lettuces.
  • It’s a fun hiding spot for kids. If you have kids, they may just love playing in the shade of your bean teepee. It’ll make a cool hiding spot that also grows food!

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Originally published on Homestead Survival site.

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from Urban Survival Site

Freeze-Dried Food vs. Dehydrated Food

Freeze Dried Meats

Let’s talk about Freeze-Dried Food vs. Dehydrated Food! When it comes to stocking an emergency pantry, two preservation methods dominate the market: freeze-drying and dehydrating. Both extend shelf life, both keep food lightweight, and both have passionate fans. But they’re not the same thing, and the differences matter when it comes to feeding your family in a real emergency. Please be aware that both Thrive Life and NutriStore have closed.

Freeze-Dried Food vs. Dehydrated Food

What is freeze-dried food?

Freeze-drying is a two-stage process. Food is first frozen solid at very low temperatures, often below -40°F. Then it goes into a vacuum chamber where the ice turns directly into vapor without ever becoming liquid; a process called sublimation. What remains is food that has lost nearly all of its water content, typically 98 to 99 percent, while retaining most of its original shape and color, and almost all of its nutritional value.

The result looks almost exactly like the original food. A freeze-dried strawberry looks like a strawberry. A freeze-dried pea looks like a pea. And when you add water back, the texture and flavor come remarkably close to fresh. This makes freeze-dried food one of the most popular choices for long-term emergency storage, camping, and backpacking.

What is dehydrated food?

Dehydration is an older method that removes moisture through heat and air circulation. Food is sliced and placed in a dehydrator or a low-temperature oven for hours until most of the moisture evaporates. The food shrinks, darkens slightly, and takes on a chewy or leathery texture. Think of jerky, dried apricots, or sun-dried tomatoes. That is dehydration at work.

Dehydrated foods retain around 80 to 95 percent of their nutrients, depending on the type of food and the heat used. They are denser and heavier than their freeze-dried counterparts because some residual moisture remains. They are also much less expensive to produce, making them typically much more affordable for families building a food supply on a budget.

Side-by-side comparison

Factor Freeze-Dried Dehydrated
Shelf life (sealed) 25–30 years 1–5 years typical
Moisture removed 98–99% 80–95%
Texture after rehydrating Close to fresh Chewy or softer
Nutrient retention Very high Good to very good
Weight Very light Light but denser
Cost Higher Lower
Rehydration time 1–5 minutes 5–20 minutes
Home production Difficult/expensive equipment Easy with a basic dehydrator
Freeze Dried Vegetables

These are the freeze-dried items that offer the best balance of nutrition, versatility, and family acceptance. Prioritize these when building your long-term supply.

Proteins

  • Freeze-dried chicken: works in soups, pasta, rice dishes, and casseroles
  • Freeze-dried ground beef: rehydrates well for tacos, chili, and pasta sauce
  • Freeze-dried shrimp: surprisingly versatile and lightweight
  • Freeze-dried eggs: essential for breakfast and baking; scrambled eggs rehydrate well
  • Freeze-dried cheese: great for morale, melts acceptably after rehydration

Fruits (often eaten dry as snacks)

  • Strawberries: a family favorite, especially for children
  • Blueberries: high in antioxidants, easy to eat straight from the can
  • Bananas: sweet, filling, and popular with picky eaters
  • Peaches and mangoes: add variety and sweetness to oatmeal and cereals
  • Apples: work well dry or rehydrated, pair well with oats and grains

Vegetables

  • Peas and corn: mild flavor, accepted by most children
  • Broccoli and green beans: nutritious and rehydrate well in soups
  • Bell peppers: add color and flavor to many dishes
  • Sweet potatoes: filling, nutritious, and naturally sweet
  • Spinach: blends easily into soups and sauces without detection

Complete meals (pre-packaged)

  • Macaroni and cheese: universally accepted by children, easy to prepare
  • Chicken noodle soup: comforting and familiar during stressful situations
  • Beef stew: hearty and calorie-dense for cold conditions
  • Pasta primavera or pasta with sauce: a reliable crowd-pleaser

These are the dehydrated staples that provide the most value per dollar and form the backbone of a practical emergency pantry. Many can also be made at home.

Grains and starches

  • White or brown rice: stores extremely well, forms the base of countless meals
  • Rolled oats: versatile for breakfast, baking, and thickening soups
  • Pasta: inexpensive, filling, and easy to prepare with minimal water
  • Dehydrated potato slices or flakes: quick to prepare, accepted by children
  • Quinoa: higher in protein than most grains, stores well

Legumes

  • Pinto beans: essential for chili, burritos, and soups
  • Black beans: versatile and protein-rich
  • Lentils: cook faster than most dried legumes, no soaking required
  • Chickpeas: filling and useful in soups, stews, and salads
  • Split peas: make excellent, hearty soups with minimal ingredients

Fruits and vegetables

  • Raisins and dried cranberries: portable, no preparation needed
  • Dried apricots and prunes: calorie-dense and nutritious
  • Dehydrated carrots and celery: flavor staples for soups and stews
  • Sun-dried tomatoes: add depth and umami to any savory dish
  • Dehydrated onions and garlic: essential for flavor in almost every cooked meal

Proteins and dairy

  • Beef or turkey jerky: high protein, no preparation, great for on-the-go
  • Dehydrated powdered milk: useful for cooking, baking, and feeding young children
  • Powdered butter: adds richness to rice, pasta, and baked goods
  • Dried beans and lentils: inexpensive protein that stores for years

Shelf life and storage tips

If you’re building a long-term emergency pantry intended to last decades, freeze-dried food wins by a wide margin. Properly sealed cans of freeze-dried food are commonly rated for 25 to 30 years. Dehydrated foods are excellent for short- to medium-term storage, with most commercially dehydrated products having shelf lives of 1 to 5 years.

Both types of food last longest when stored in cool temperatures below 70°F, away from direct light, and in low-humidity environments. Opened cans and pouches should be sealed tightly and used within a few weeks to a few months. Mylar bags and oxygen absorbers extend the life of home-dehydrated food considerably.

Nutrition and taste

Freeze-drying preserves nutrients exceptionally well because the process doesn’t use heat. Vitamins, minerals, and even delicate antioxidants survive almost intact. When your family rehydrates a freeze-dried meal during a stressful situation, it’ll look and taste recognizable, which matters more than most people expect when morale is low.

Dehydration uses heat, which degrades heat-sensitive vitamins such as vitamin C. That said, most minerals and many vitamins survive the process well. From a flavor standpoint, dehydrated foods carry a more concentrated, sometimes sweeter taste. Children who are picky eaters may take longer to adapt to differences in texture, especially with rehydrated vegetables.

A note for families with young childrenKids often do better with freeze-dried foods in emergencies because the texture and appearance more closely resemble what they’re used to eating. If you’re building a supply with picky eaters in mind, including some freeze-dried fruits and complete meals can make a significant difference in helping children eat during stressful times.

Cost and home production

Freeze-dried food is more expensive to produce and therefore more expensive to buy. A family-sized emergency supply can run into several hundred dollars or even thousands. The process requires specialized industrial equipment that most households can’t replicate at home without investing $2,000 to $5,000 in a home freeze-dryer.

Dehydrated food is far more budget-friendly. Many families dehydrate food at home with a basic electric dehydrator that costs between $50 and $500. You can dehydrate seasonal produce when prices are low, preserve garden harvests, and build a meaningful food supply without a large upfront expense. For families on a budget, dehydrating is often the most realistic starting point.

Which one should your family choose?

The honest answer is that most well-prepared families benefit from having both. A layered approach gives you flexibility and resilience that a single method can’t. Start with dehydrated staples like rice, beans, oats, and pasta to fill the bulk of your pantry affordably. Then add freeze-dried proteins, fruits, and complete meals to extend your shelf life, improve nutrition, and give your family familiar comfort foods when it matters most.

The most important step is simply getting started. A modest, well-chosen supply built over time is far better than a perfect plan that never gets off the ground.

I Can No Longer Recommend Freeze-Dried or Dehydrated Foods in #10 Cans

Please let me explain. It’s a personal preference because food is so expensive NOW, so are the commercially processed #10 cans. I believe they are safer, but canned goods at the store will work just fine. If your pantry is stocked, you’ll survive without those expensive cans of meat, fruits, and vegetables. I’ve been stocking since I got married almost 57 years ago. Things have changed, and the prices have escalated.

I started stocking #10 cans back in 2013, from Thrive Life. I became a consultant so I could get the cases at a lower cost. Our friends traveled the world, and I stocked my shelves. We took vacations, but food storage was more important to me. If you read my book, you know why. “Prepare Your Family For Survival”. I want to thank you from the bottom of my heart for purchasing my book. It didn’t do as well as my publisher was hoping. You have to think about it this way: if you were at Barnes and Noble, and a Cupcake Book was next to the “Prepare Your Family For Survival” book, the cookbook would win. I wish my publisher had added different hashtags on Amazon, but they were from New York and had zero clue about preparedness.

Canned Foods I Highly Recommend You Store

Frequently asked questions

Can I make freeze-dried food at home?

Technically, yes, but it requires a home freeze-dryer, which currently costs between $2,000 and $5,000. For most families, it’s more cost-effective to purchase commercially freeze-dried food and focus home preservation energy on dehydration. Please keep in mind that if you buy a Home Freeze-Dryer, you still need to purchase the food, Mylar bags, cans (if available), oxygen absorbers, and jars.

Do these foods need water to prepare?

Most do. This is an important planning consideration. Make sure your emergency supply includes ample water storage or a reliable water purification method. Many freeze-dried fruits and vegetables can also be eaten dry directly from the container as snacks.

Are there foods that dehydrate better than others?

Fruits, vegetables, herbs, jerky, and grains dehydrate very well. Foods with high fat content, like full-fat dairy or avocado, don’t dehydrate reliably and can go rancid. Freeze-drying handles a broader range of foods, including full meals, dairy, and eggs.

How do I know if my stored food has gone bad?

Off smells, visible mold, unusual discoloration, or a rancid taste are all warning signs. Commercially sealed cans that show no damage and have been stored properly are generally safe within their rated shelf life. When in doubt, throw it out.

How much food should I store for my family?

Emergency preparedness experts generally recommend starting with a 72-hour supply, then working toward a 30-day supply, and eventually a 90-day supply. A general guideline is to store roughly 2,000 calories per person per day, adjusted for children and activity level. Please note: I don’t count calories. There, I said it. LOL!

Final Word

Whether you choose freeze-dried, dehydrated, or a mix of both, the goal is the same: making sure your family has safe, familiar food when it matters most. Start small, build steadily, and remember that any supply is better than none. Preparedness is not a one-time purchase; it is a habit, and one your family will be glad you built. May God bless this world, Linda

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