Long-term food reserves
Reserves for 3 months, 6 months, 1 year. Wheat stored correctly lasts 30+ years. Adapted to the Portuguese Mediterranean diet: rice, pasta, legumes, olive oil and tinned fish.
Why long-term reserves?
The 3 days of basic reserves (ANEPC recommendation) cover short emergencies — power cuts, storms, weekend isolation. But prolonged crises — pandemics, economic conflicts, supply chain failures, repeated extreme weather events — call for reserves measured in weeks or months. Studies by NASA and Brigham Young University show that white rice in airtight packaging lasts 30+ years without losing significant nutritional value. Building a long-term reserve is an investment that lasts decades.
The 3 levels of reserves
Each level serves a different purpose. Ideally, hold all three in layers: what you eat today, what you eat this month, what you eat in a year of crisis.
Short term (1-2 weeks)
Rotating pantry. Foods you eat normally, in double quantity. Pasta, rice, tinned goods, UHT milk, biscuits. Continuous FIFO rotation — first in, first out.
Cost: 50-150 € extra on the monthly shop
Medium term (3-6 months)
Extended reserve. Foods with a shelf life >1 year in original packaging: rice, dry pasta, bagged legumes, tinned goods, powdered milk, olive oil in drums. Kept in a cool, dry pantry.
Cost: 300-600 € per adult
Long term (1-30 years)
Deep reserve. Dry grains (white rice, wheat, legumes) in mylar bags with oxygen absorbers, inside airtight buckets. Untouched until an emergency. Rotation every 5-10 years.
Cost: 200-400 € per adult per year of autonomy
Sub-pages — detailed guides
Quantities + Calculator
How much to store of each food per adult per month. Interactive calculator for your family and desired duration of autonomy.
How to store
Mylar bags, PET bottles, glass jars, oxygen absorbers. Critical botulism warning for moist foods.
Where to buy in Portugal
Bulk shops (Makro, Recheio, cooperatives), prices per kg, online suppliers of mylar and O2 absorbers.
Realistic shelf lives — correct storage
Best-before dates on labels are conservative (they assume standard household storage). Scientific studies show much longer durations when stored correctly.
| Food | Label | Real (mylar + O₂) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| White rice | 1-2 years | 30+ years | The storage grain par excellence |
| Dry pasta | 2 years | 30+ years | Portuguese tradition, easy to cook |
| Whole-grain wheat | — | 30+ years | Requires a hand mill |
| Rolled oats | 1 year | 30 years | Complete breakfast |
| Dried pulses (beans, chickpeas, lentils) | 1 year | 30 years | Essential protein |
| Skimmed powdered milk | 6 months | 20 years | Calcium, vitamin D |
| White sugar | 2 years | indefinite | Kept dry, lasts forever |
| Salt | 5 years | indefinite | Kept dry, lasts forever |
| Honey | 2 years | indefinite | May crystallise but is safe |
| Tinned fish/preserves in olive oil | 2-5 years | 5-10 years | Sardines, tuna (Portuguese tradition) |
| White flour | 6-12 months | 1-2 years | Limited even in mylar |
| Extra virgin olive oil | 18 months | 2-3 years | Dark, cool. Do not freeze. |
| Brown rice | 6-12 months | 1-2 years | Oils go rancid, avoid for long term |
| Raw nuts | 6 months | 1 year | Oils go rancid |
Warning: wholegrain and oily foods
Brown rice, wholemeal flour and raw nuts contain natural oils that go rancid even in airtight packaging. For long-term reserves, prefer refined versions (white rice, white flour). For medium-term reserves (6-12 months), wholegrain versions work well.
The 4-element rule
The factor that most determines the durability of stored foods is the control of these 4 elements:
1. Oxygen
Oxygen oxidises fats (rancidity) and allows the activity of fungi and insects. Solution: oxygen absorbers (sachets containing iron powder) inside airtight packaging. Cost ~0.15 € per sachet, sold online.
2. Moisture
Moisture activates fungal spores (mould) and creates an environment for botulism. Solution: foods with <10% moisture + silica gel if needed + airtight container.
3. Temperature
Every 10°C rise doubles the rate of degradation. Solution: store at <24°C. Garage or cool pantry, never the loft (the temperature climbs sharply in summer).
4. Light
UV light degrades vitamins and oxidises oils. Solution: opaque packaging (mylar, opaque plastic buckets, lined jars). Olive oil is especially sensitive — always in a dark bottle.
Critical safety warning — botulism
NEVER store moist foods in oxygen-free packaging
Clostridium botulinum is a bacterium that produces one of the most dangerous toxins known (just 0.1 µg can kill an adult). It grows in environments without oxygen + with moisture.
- SAFE: dry foods (<10% moisture) — rice, pasta, wheat, legumes — in mylar bags with oxygen absorbers.
- DANGEROUS: any moist food (cooked rice, soup, fresh vegetables, meat) in mylar bags with absorbers. Causes botulism.
- Commercial tinned goods (cans): safe because they are sterilised at high pressure. Home-made preserves require pressure canning for low-acid foods (meat, vegetables).
If in doubt about a tin: if it is bulging, smells off, or the lid pops — discard it immediately without tasting. Botulinum toxin has no smell or taste.
Suggested timeline — start today
Month 1 (short term)
- Buy duplicates of your usual weekly shop
- Label everything with the date of entry
- Start FIFO rotation
- Investment: 50-100 € extra
Months 2-3 (medium term — 1 month of autonomy)
- Buy 25 kg of rice, 10 kg of dry pasta, 10 kg of legumes (Makro/Recheio)
- Buy 10 L of olive oil in a drum
- Buy 30 tins of preserves (sardines, tuna, beans, tomato)
- Investment: 150-200 €
Months 4-6 (medium term — 3 months)
- Triple the quantities
- Add powdered milk, honey, sugar, salt
- Buy O₂ absorbers and mylar bags to start the long-term reserve
- Investment: 300-500 €
Months 7-12 (long term — 1 year)
- Pack progressively in mylar (5 kg per bag)
- Label with date + type
- Store in airtight buckets in a cool area
- Investment: 200-400 €
Estimated total for 1 year of autonomy (1 adult): 700-1200 €. Cost per meal: ~0.30 €. An investment that lasts 10-30 years.