Check out These Great Prepper Pantries to Improve Yours

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Prepper pantry
Canned meats are a big part of Pete’s prepping pantry.

If you’ve read this blog for more than a week, then you know I encourage people to prep and believe that storing food is one of the most important ways for a newbie to get started.  In fact, storing food make sense for everyone, not just preppers. 

I believe in the layered approach to prepping and have written about the layers of food prepping, starting with grocery items that do not require refrigeration (your prepper pantry).  Layer two is prepper staples, long-term storage items such as wheat, rice, and beans, usually stored in #10 cans and 5-gallon pails.  Layer three is freeze dried foods, which are more expensive but have a very long shelf life. I encourage you to read the prior article for more details and to see the important fourth step.

Level one step is the most important because you can prep enough to last a few weeks or even a few months without doing anything other than going to the grocery store or the wholesale club.  Plus, it’s easy to prep a little at a time and build up your prepper pantry when you buy a couple extra items every time you go to the grocery store.  For example, I just scored canned corn and canned green beans at Walmart for 38 cents per can, which is a great buy.  I wasn’t in Walmart to buy vegetables, but I snapped up six cans of each. So for about $4.50, I added some vegetables to my prepper pantry.

A Canned Food Pantry

I want to show you a couple examples of preppers who have knocked a home run when it comes to building their prepping pantry.

First, from Twitter, we have the Covert Prepper on Twitter(@covertprep) who posted this video of the canned food portion of his preps.

Wow, he has more peanut butter than some stores!  I saw vegetables, fruits, soups, pie fillings, beans, baked beans, sloppy joe sauce, canned meats, canned salmon, Chef Boyardee, a bunch of items I could not identify.  And he tells me that he has plenty of prepper staples as well.

I have a decent prepper pantry, and this made me feel that I needed to do more.  Then he told he is prepping for 20 family members, and I must admit felt relieved.  Not that it’s a competition, but you can learn from what others do and how they prep. 

These days, I have to be careful what I buy.  We have a list of at least a dozen items we are not to buy more of until we eat the ones in our prepper pantry. 

So all you new preppers, don’t panic.  You don’t need this much.  You don’t even need a fifth of that amount.  Any amount you can prep is more than you had before.  If you spend $15 or $25 a week on items like these, you will be shocked at how quickly it can add up.  And the money isn’t lost; it’s invested in your future and you can always eat the food.

A Pressure Canner Prepper’s Pantry

Another example of someone who has a very deep pantry is Alaskan Prepper who is on YouTube.  He stocks commercially canned foods and a large amount of pressure-canned jars of meats he canned himself.  Check out his video below and jump to 6:46 to skip right to see the “meat” of his pantry tour.

As you can tell, Alaskan Prepper does a lot of pressure canning.  I have watched many of his videos on canning as well as other topics, and learned from his experience. I recommend you add him to your subscription list.

One of the excellent things about this video is it shows the breadth of his preps, which go well beyond meats.  He stocks beans, butter (ghee), condiments, salt, honey, Chef Boyardee, fruit, nuts, soups, and oils.  In dry foods, he has oatmeal, dry soup mixes, sugar, drink mixes, baking mixes, mashed potatoes, coffee, spices, flour, and pancake mix.  In paper products, he has paper towels, toilet paper, feminine hygiene products, coffee filters, baby wipes, and garbage bags.

This is a very well thought out well rounded prepper pantry by a guy who has obviously been doing this for many years.

Key Takeaways

I hope those videos introduce you to the possibility that you can go a good long way down your prepping path without having to buy from specialty prepping companies.  Joining Costco or a similar club is a big help and saves money, but most of the can goods shown are also available at Walmart or via Amazon.com.

Also, note that refrigeration and freezing had nothing to do with their preps.  Neither appears to own a freeze dryer.  There wasn’t even any dehydrating going on.  Again, you can accomplish quite a bit without expensive equipment.  Pressure Canning does require an upfront investment, but everything except the lids are re-useable and it is a time-proven method of food preservation.

Another important message is that today, your preps may fill a cupboard, but if you keep working at it, then in a year or two, you might fill a closet.  One day, you may be building your own shelves in your special prepper pantry. 

As we say on our prepping philosophy page, “at some point on your preparedness journey, you will find that you have committed to the prepper lifestyle.”  When you build yourself a whole room for your preps, you know you are living the prepper lifestyle!

Prepping for Others

Finally, it’s interesting to note that individuals often prep for others.  Covert Prepper expects up to twenty people.  I expect somewhere between five and twelve, most likely seven or eight.  Alaskan Prepper has a family of four, but he also preps knowing he will be giving items to those in need.

While it would awesome if your entire family was 100percent into prepping, this is rarely the case.  It often falls to one family or family member to prep for their relatives.  In my case, I prep with the knowledge that at least one and possibly both of my adult children will bugout to my place.  Right now, they cannot afford the time and money to prep extensively for themselves.  So don’t feel alone if you are prepping without much family support.  Stick to it and your preps will win them over.

Share Your Prepper Pantry

If you want to share photos of your prepper pantry, hit me up on Twitter @PickledPrepper with a photo.  If you are not on Twitter or prefer to remain anonymous, email me via the Contact Us page and I will reach out to you.

As always, comments are welcome, below.

4 COMMENTS

    • In most cases, I eat them. Right now, we’re eating Spam that expired in “2017” and canned chicken that is dated 2018.

      Seriously, whether they are called a “best by” date, “sell by” or an expiration date, those dates are recommendations when it comes to canned food, as opposed to raw meat in your grocer’s fresh food section. The foods will be the tastiest before that date, but they do not go bad afterwards, they just lose some color and quality. For example, if you have canned soup, the potatoes might start getting mushy or absorb the flavor of another ingredient. In some cases, ingredients on the top of the can may start to become discolored if it they were sticking out of the liquid for a long time. I find you can solve this by turning your canned food upside down a couple times a year.

      While I would be cautious about eating something like salad dressing that was two years old I would not hesitate to eat canned foods that are dated a few years back. The key is the can must not be bulging or leaking and the food must smell, look and taste good. In a post-SHTF situation, if you come across some old canned food, just heat it well. High temperatures will kill most of the bacteria the cause food poisoning.

      Here’s what the FDA says: “Most shelf-stable foods are safe indefinitely. In fact, canned goods will last for years, as long as the can itself is in good condition (no rust, dents, or swelling)” at https://www.usda.gov/media/blog/2013/06/27/you-toss-food-wait-check-it-out

      So do rotate your foods and eat the oldest items first, but don’t worry if you eat those 2023 cans in 2025.

      Any other readers have any thoughts?

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