How to Get Started Preserving and Storing Food | Northern Homesteading (2024)

Storing up bulk amounts of food is as practical and as natural as a bird flying. It’s in nature all around us, and it’s been a staple to preserve life for most of human history. It wasn’t until the rise of modern supermarkets that most families stopped keeping excess food storage in the home.

There’s nothing hard or tricky about storing food. It’s simple and easy, and it’s often a lot of fun. Here are six different ways to preserve food for easy storage in your home.

How to Get Started Preserving and Storing Food | Northern Homesteading (1)

Dehydrating

Dehydrating is simply drying food with hot or warm air. It’s a reliable preservation technique that can be used on any food item as long as you fully dry things. It’s likely the first food preservation technique ever used. Dehydrating can be done with any heat source, but it;s most common with either just the sun or an electric dehydrator.

I have attempted sun-drying and it didn’t go all that well. It’s more suited for warmer, dryer regions than the Great Lakes area. What did work well for us is a small electric dehydrator that my wife got from her sister. It’s about fifteen inches wide, and has stackable drying shelves inside it. Electric dehydrators don’t get quite hot enough to cook food, but it will dry things quickly.

They are fairly inexpensive tio buy as a basic model, and that’s all you need. Mine uses around .50 cents to $1.00 in electricity to dehydrate a full load. It has a very small electric fan, which reduces the drying time considerably compared to the old, fanless model my mother had.

Common dehydrators make small batches of dry food within about a day. They are not good for preserving a lot of food for a large family and do require electricity. Dehydrated food can be stored without refrigeration, but it will have an altered flavor and texture. I dehydrate a lot of meat. It’s decent if used in a soup and allowed to simmer until soft. But, it’s still different.

It only takes a few minutes to prepare food and load the dehydrator, so they are very simple and take little of your precious time. I do recomend dehydrating, but perhaps not as the primary preservation method for your household.

More helpful information:

  • Best Buckets to Store Food
How to Get Started Preserving and Storing Food | Northern Homesteading (2)

Canning

Home canning is the most common preservation technique used in the world today. Any type of foods can be preserved through caning. There are nuances to canning certain types of food, but it’s simple and easy to remember. Most canning is done with reusable glass jars and a sealing lid. Canning uses heat to pasteurize and vacuum-seal the contents of a jar.

When canning, you need to know the few technical nuances to do it properly. Preserving wet foods poses more risks than preserving through dehydration because bacteria and fungus can now grow on it if it’s not treated properly or pasteurized enough. My wife and I can as our primary food preservation method. Canned foods are fresh and ready-to-eat after heating.

Canning can be done in small or large batches and takes a maximum of a few hours to complete the process. It’s the most time-consuming preservation method, but most of the processing time is just boiling water. It’s not exactly a tough task. We usually have a full batch going while doing other chores around the home.

Canning can preserve a lot of food in one day. It keeps the food in a ready-to-eat state, and almost any food can be canned easily and safely. Canned food can be stored for up to three years at room temperature without getting overly funky.

More about home canning:

  • The 3 Things You Need to Start Home Canning
  • Best Pressure Canners for Beginners (and tips for getting started)
  • 7 Water Bath Canning Tips for Beginners
  • Can I Use a Pressure Cooker for Canning?

Freezing

Freezing is the simplest method of preserving food for several months. A large freezer is fairly inexpensive to purchase and operate and will hold between fifteen and thirty pounds of food per cubic foot of freezer space. They are reliable as long as you maintain electricity and are a compact way to store non-dried foods.

There is no prep work needed to freeze things other than put in a bag or container and place it in the unit. We freeze a lot of food, particularly meat because it’s very easy. When I butcher an animal, we need to chill the meat as quickly as possible so I tend to use the freezer for our fresh meats.

But, if I fill a freezer too deep with meat that hasn’t been pre-chilled, the middle of the pile may take too long to get cold and that risks some spoilage. It has happened. That’s one reason why I like small livestock like our Pot Bellied Pigs. One or two freshly butchered will chill and freeze just fine in my chest freezer.

I have a 7 cubic foot chest freezer. The same one costs around $200 right now and it uses between $2 and $5 a month in electricity depending on the season and how often it gets opened.

I will say, one single power-outage can completely destroy your entire stock of frozen food. If you are relying on a freezer, please do consider a small generator with enough power to run the freezer. We have lost everything once from a power outage. Fortunately, there wasn’t much in there at the time.

Freeze Drying

Home freeze-drying uses an appliance with a heater, a flash freezer, and a vacuum to preserve food into a shelf-stale form. It retains a better flavor and nutritional profile than most other preservation methods, and the texture is normally better too. Freeze dryers are expensive and somewhat heavy, but they take little of your time and are incredibly simple to operate.

The downside of a freeze dryer is cost. The machine is often stound $3,000 and they normally consume roughly $2 a day worth of electricity. You can process four to six pounds of food in one batch and it takes between 1 and 3 days, depending on the food type.

I don’t have a freeze dryer. Neither my wife nor I really want one. But, they are popular. I know five people with them, including my mother. They do produce a better finished product than dehydrating and it’s better suited to true, long-term food storage. Freeze dried food is completely dehydrated and is shelf-stable without special packaging.

Personally, we just don’t want another appliance in the house. We have enough already, But, it’s a great option if you fancy it.

How to Get Started Preserving and Storing Food | Northern Homesteading (3)

Cold-Room Storage

Cold-room storage can range from a walk-in refrigerator to a root cellar. The principle is to maintain a cool atmosphere to retard decay, and to keep a somewhat humid environment to prevent produce from drying out too much. Even a basem*nt can work for cold-room storage. It’s both a storage and preservation method for whole, raw produce like potatoes, cabbage, and squash.

I have stored a lot of produce this way. Even a refrigerator is just a small cold-room. I have a spare refrigerator in my shed for storing fresh produce for the farmer’s market. We have stored cabbage in there end-of-season for nearly six months for our own use. That’s exactly how commercial growers can sell certain produce to grocery stores in the middle of winter.

I have used my shed as a makeshift cold-room in the fall and early winter. Root crops like carrots, rutabaga, onions, potatoes, and turnips all do well like that. Winter squashed (storage variety squash) last many months that way too. If I had a basem*nt, I’d use it instead. An unheated basem*nt is perfect for year-round cold, or at least cool, room storage.

It’s a great way to keep storable produce fresh in top condition over the winter months, it’s easy, and it doesn’t necessarily require any special equipment. The downside of it is that you are limited to more of the storage-type produce. Fortunately, they are both cheap to buy and easy to grow.

How to Get Started Preserving and Storing Food | Northern Homesteading (4)

Pickling

Pickling is a chemical preservation method that can be used on any type of solid food. It is usually done by immersing food in a vinegar/water brine and letting it soak in. Meats, fruits, and vegetables of all types are pickled this way. There are a few simple points to consider for food-safety, but it’s a very basic process. Some pickling is done through fermentation, creating its own acidic solution.

Most pickling uses a simple 50: 50 ratio of vinegar to water. Any common vinegar works with that ratio as long as it says 5 percent acidity (that’s the industry standard). Most experts recomend putting all home-pickled foods in a refrigerator of pasturizing it through canning. I don’t often do either, depending on what I’m pickling. We’ll talk about that sometime.

I am a huge fan of pickled foods, especially meats, and eggs. My wife likes various pickled vegetables for adding to recipes. It really does give a nice flavor, especially if you use something other than a distilled vinegar. I like tha taste of pickled foods. You can add any spices you like to the brine. salt or sugar is often added to add an extra layer of preservation.

PIckling requires little to moderate kitchen work, and a lot of vinegar. Properly pickled foods are shelf-stable, and are ready-to-eat.

More about Pickling:

  • Do Homemade Pickles Need to be Canned?
  • Storing Vinegar Long-Term (and keeping it decent)

How to Choose the Right Food Preservation Method

You can choose your preferred preservation methods based on what you want to preserve, the equipment you are willing to invest in, and the amount of work involved in the process. Also, consider the cost of both equipment and operation and the usable form the food will be in.

If you use a freezer because it’s super easy and you can freeze literally anything and everything, just remember that whatever you want to use has to be thawed first. Canning takes something of a watchful eye and it requires keeping shelves full of jars. I personally think canning is the overall best in our home.

Consider how much time a process will take. None of these really take much of your time for how much food you are preserving. Do stay within your budget. That is the most important consideration by far. Look at the options within your expendable income os your ability to save money, and then go through the remaining choices and pick the one or ones that sound best to you.

If you have any questions, ask them in the comment section below. I’ll do my best to reply.

More about food storage:

  • Category-food storage
How to Get Started Preserving and Storing Food | Northern Homesteading (2024)

FAQs

How do you preserve food for beginners? ›

You can preserve food by water-bath canning, pressure canning, freezing, or dehydrating—all are time-honored and safe techniques. Canning and preserving are great ways to save foods at their peak freshness and flavor and to stock your pantry with nutritious and delicious fare.

How do pioneers preserve food? ›

Colonists preserved food using eight basic methods: fermentation, burial, drying, curing, cooling, freezing, pickling, and canning. Fermentation happens when starches and sugars react with microorganisms and produce alcohol. Fall harvest arrives, grapes are plucked from the vines and apples from the orchards.

How do you can food in Mason jars? ›

The mechanics behind canning are fairly simple. You fill a clean jar with prepared food, apply the flat lid and the threaded ring to the jar, and submerge the filled jar in boiling water for a prescribed amount of time. (Times vary widely, depending on what you're canning.)

Which is the simplest method of preserving food at home? ›

Freezing

Freezing is one of the simplest, most convenient, and least time-consuming ways to preserve fresh produce.

How do you store food in the woods? ›

You can suspend your food from a high, sturdy tree limb. At some backcountry campsites you'll find bear poles, a major improvement over tree branches. With this system, you'll find a tall metal pole with large hooks at the top from which you can hang your food bag or entire backpack.

What foods should I store for survival? ›

  • Meats & Beans. Canned meat, chicken, turkey, seafood. and other protein-rich foods, such as. ...
  • Vegetables. Canned vegetables and vegetable juices. ...
  • Fruits. Canned fruits and fruit juices. ...
  • Milk. Canned, boxed or dried milk and shelf- ...
  • Grains. Ready-to-eat cereal, crackers, pretzels, ...
  • Water. Enough for 1 gallon per day.

How do you store food for long term survival? ›

Using Preservation Methods

Food preservation methods like canning, dehydrating, and vacuum sealing can help extend the shelf life of your food and ensure it stays safe to eat. Canning involves preparing the ingredients, loading them into jars with special lids, and heating the jars to create an airtight seal.

How long will food last in a Mason jar? ›

The general guideline is to can only the amount of food that will be used within one year. The food will be safe as long as the jar remains sealed, if it has been properly canned. However, the quality of the food deteriorates the longer it is in storage, i.e., a change in texture, color and flavor.

Is it safe to store food in old Mason jars? ›

ANTIQUE/VINTAGE JARS

After that, you will experience more breakage because of the wear and tear of normal use. Because of this, it is not recommended to use vintage or antique canning jars for food preservation. Instead, enjoy those jars as vases, canisters or just a nice touch to your home décor.

Why do mason jars keep food fresh? ›

Because mason jars are air tight, they keep the produce from spoiling as quickly. I have not had to throw out any produce for quite some time now.

How do the Amish preserve food? ›

For generations, Amish families have prepared for the winter and spring seasons by canning, a method by which they seal food in glass jars to preserve it for future use.

How do Native Americans store their food? ›

The most common methods of food preservation were drying, often combined with smoke, and salt. Some birds and mammals were buried, and eaten in a state of fermentation that Europeans found to be unpalatable. These are in current practice.

How did Native Americans keep food fresh? ›

Smoking. One of the most popular ways for Native Americans to keep their meat for longer was by smoking it. While salting was generally known as a good preservative option, salt was usually hard to come by which meant that smoking was one of the leading ways to preserve fish, bison and other meats.

What are the 3 main methods of preserving food? ›

Among the oldest methods of preservation are drying, refrigeration, and fermentation. Modern methods include canning, pasteurization, freezing, irradiation, and the addition of chemicals.

What are 5 cheap ways to preserve food? ›

Cheap food preservation methods include canning, pickling, fermenting, drying, cellaring and making your own vinegar from potato peels or other produce.

What is this fast and easiest way to preserve food? ›

Refrigerating, freezing, and dry storing are the trifecta of quick preservation. As I mentioned while describing their pros and cons last week, produce preserved in these ways requires minimal prep and handling. Most of the tools and packaging you need are likely already in your home.

What is the best method to preserve food? ›

Both freezing and deep-freezing are the most effective methods of preservation and the techniques that change the organioleptic and nutritional properties of the product the least. Likewise, both allow the food to be preserved for long periods of time, up to several years in some circ*mstances.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Errol Quitzon

Last Updated:

Views: 6157

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (59 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Errol Quitzon

Birthday: 1993-04-02

Address: 70604 Haley Lane, Port Weldonside, TN 99233-0942

Phone: +9665282866296

Job: Product Retail Agent

Hobby: Computer programming, Horseback riding, Hooping, Dance, Ice skating, Backpacking, Rafting

Introduction: My name is Errol Quitzon, I am a fair, cute, fancy, clean, attractive, sparkling, kind person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.