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Food

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FOOD
After a disaster you may not receive outside help for three or more days. You may need to camp and cook outside.

• How to Store Emergency Food
• How to Use Emergency Food
• Preparing Food

How to Store Emergency Food

You may elect to purchase special foods for emergency storage; however, most items can be purchased at your local grocery store.

  • Keep foods that have a long shelf life.
  • Keep food that require little or no cooking, water, or refrigeration, in case utilities are disrupted.
  • Provide 3 or more days of pet food. Don’t forget to stock up on pet medications and prescription diets prescribed by your veterinarian.
  • Canned foods and dry mixes will remain fresh for about 2 years.
  • Certain storage conditions can enhance the shelf life of canned or dried foods. The ideal location is a cool, dry, dark place. Keep foods away from ranges or refrigerator exhausts.
  • Keep food away from petroleum products, such as gasoline, oil, paints, and solvents. Some food products absorb their smell.
  • Protect food from rodents and insects. Items stored in boxes or in paper cartons will keep longer if they are heavily wrapped or stored in airtight containers.
  • Date all food items. Use and replace food before it loses freshness.

How to Use Emergency Food

  • Use perishable food in your refrigerator or freezer before using food in your emergency supplies.
  • Discard cooked, unrefrigerated foods after 2 hours at room temperature, regardless of appearance.
  • Eat only foods that have a normal color, texture, and odor.

Preparing Food

  • A fireplace should not be used after an earthquake. Unseen damage may cause a fire or produce carbon monoxide. A charcoal barbecue or Sterno stove would be a better alternative. Do not use these stoves indoors to avoid carbon monoxide poisoning.
  • Include these items with your emergency supplies:
    o Cooking and eating utensils
    o Pots and pans
    o Paper plates, cups, and towels
    o Manual can opener

Stored emergency food should be rotated routinely.


The following items are suggestions for emergency food:

  • Water
  • Fruit and vegetable juices
  • Sport drinks
  • Multi-packages of individual serving breakfast cereal
  • Instant HOT cereal in paper packages
  • Bread
  • Canned, fruit, vegetables, pasta meals, soup
  • Crackers
  • Canned meat, poultry, and fish
  • Salt, pepper, sugar, cooking oil, your favorite spices. Careful, some spices will increase your need for water.
  • Nuts, jerky, hard candy, peanut butter, jelly


ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

American Red Cross
Food and Water in an Emergency
http://www.redcross.org/services/disaster/0,1082,0_8_,00.html

Centers for Disease Control
Emergency Water Storage and Purification
http://www.bt.cdc.gov/disasters/earthquakes/food.asp