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| Frugal Questions and Answers Frugal ideas and questions. The place to learn how to get those costs down. |
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I always wondered what it would be like if there was no more toilet paper Not a nice thought.... An old jamacian thing is to keep soap bars throughout the house. It acts as a pest deterrant. It really works! We keep them in the closets, kitchen cabinets, under the bed...we have hundreds of soap bars in the house. No spiders, no roachs, etc... Plus, we will have plenty of soap in times of trouble. |
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An expiration date on a can is more like a suggestion that an absolute. It isn't like a time bomb that goes off the day after an expiration date and now your food is poisoned! For best quality, etc. it is good to use before that date, but not always essential. The thing to watch for is bulging cans, way too high pressure come out of the can when the can opener is applied. Don't even think of eating that stuff. One of the reasons that picking up dented cans isn't a good idea as they are more prone to developing problems as the can integrity has been compromised.
Most people don't have large pantries like I do, but that doesn't mean you can't have a pantry. Most of us are storing too much clutter. Decide if you want the clutter or more food storage or toilet paper storage. So many things come down to choices and that is one of them. |
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I'm usually so exhausted after shopping that the things get thrown into the pantry in no particular order. I guess I'll have to summon more energy and actually keep things in order to make this work.
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The only way that I buy dented cans is when the store manager lets me know that the cans that are dented happened within a couple of days. One week isn't a problem. I usually will eat those items from dented cans in a hurry as to not have a problem.
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I'm a long time food storage person. Meaning I've been at it awhile. I don't pay a lot of attention to use by dates.
I've never had a problem w/dented cans. YMMV. Use at your own risk. The one thing I do watch more carefully than others is with tomato products in cans. Tomatoes being acidic can cause problems and they will spurt on you when they've been let set too long. I'm not sure of the scientific explanation for that but I do buy the majority of my tomato/spaghetti type sauces in a jar for long term storage. For shorter time plans I'll buy the cans. |
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I use a spreadsheet to keep track of foods in my pantries/freezers; that helps a bit.
My big pantry is actually a closet - it has deep (3') shelves on one side, and shallow (12-18") shelves on the other side. The deep shelves hold mostly home canned foods and my bulk food jars - oatmeal, beans, pastas, flour, tinned milk (used in cooking), gallons of vinegar, etc... The shallow shelves are all purchased items; and they are arranged on the shelves by type of product - salmon and tuna are side by side, fruits have one shelf, condiments another, canned veggies on those two, toiletries and soaps, etc... I rarely buy one of anything - it's more like 8 cans of salmon, 24 cans of tuna, 4 bottles vanilla extract, 5 cases tinned milk - I catch a good sale, I stock up. When I bring groceries home, only the perishable items get put away right away. The others get carried to the pantries, and are put on the shelves and added to the inventory sheets as I get time. As far as living for a month on the pantry; yes, easily; especially now that the garden is starting to come in for fresh foods. Last edited by Pollyanna : 04-12-2008 at 09:48 PM. Reason: I didn't answer the question :) |
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