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How stocked is your store cupboard

(85 Posts)
Nannykay Sun 10-Jun-18 23:23:38

I have always kept a well stocked cupboard and freezer, it’s just something my mum did so I do. I decided today was a good day to have a sort out, check use by dates rotate etc , I was happy to find one tin of peaches that was one month out of date, everything else was more than ok. So shelves cleaned and contents resorted, with the help of my daughter. It all looks very neat and tidy.

Whilst working dd teased me and said she doesn’t know anyone else who has a well stocked larder, and most of her friends parents just bought what they want as and when, and not a weekly shop like me. They certainly don’t hold extra supplies.

So the question is, if you were shut in your home, no gas/water/electric or visits to the shops, how long could you last.

Water would be our problem, I always have plenty, but if it was all we had to drink, maybe a couple of weeks if we were careful, food, perhaps a month to five weeks. Have some candles and torches not many, heating is oil tank and we normally have enough for about five or six months.

Stocked we might be, but not what you call preppers are we !

henetha Mon 11-Jun-18 10:16:55

My cupboards and freezer are well stocked. And I've got a little camping gas stove and spare cylinders, so I would probably be ok for a month or two.

MawBroon Mon 11-Jun-18 10:20:44

DD told me once my store cupboard and freezer could withstand a nuclear winter!

Need I say more?

Hilltopgran Mon 11-Jun-18 14:45:25

Nannykay, we are also on LPG gas, and have run out when OH forgets to check tank level. After the most recent escapade when gas company could not deliver for a week we found out you can tip the liquid gas from smaller domestic bottles into the tank! We are now seriously considering switching to the system where the gas company take automatic readings from your tank in the hope thst as we get more forgetful the gas company will do the checking,

nanaK54 Mon 11-Jun-18 14:55:55

Hmmm - no I don't think we would survive well, water would be the main problem as I don't buy bottled, we do have a log burner and plenty of logs so wouldn't freeze to death

M0nica Mon 11-Jun-18 15:56:56

When I was working, I developed the habit of doing one big shop every month and only top-up shopping in the intervening weeks and I still follow this pattern although both shops are a lot smaller than they were when children were at home. So I still have at least a months supply of dry goods and ambient storage goods(tins and jars) and a chest freezer in the garage with frozen meat and veg.

I do have a large vegetable and fruit garden, which provides a surplus that is frozen and consumed ovr the ensuing year.

So I suppose I can say that we could certainly last a month and possible a second month with a meals tha might be pissing key ingredients like tinned tomoatoes.

Bathsheba Mon 11-Jun-18 16:44:30

I keep plenty of supplies in - lots of tins and dry goods in the store cupboard, and fish, meat and veg in the freezers. However, with no electricity the stuff in the freezer wouldn't last and anyway, there'd be no means of cooking it without power of any kind. And with no water coming out the taps, I'd probably die of thirst before very long anyway. Do people really keep stocks of water in the UK? hmm
If we had water and power, then I'd probably be able to keep going for about 3 weeks or so. Without either, though, probably no more than a few days and I would have thought that would be the same for most people - how can anyone survive more than a few days without water? confused

Willow500 Mon 11-Jun-18 16:48:26

My freezers are packed to the gills but if the power went off that would be useless as would cooking anything. I have tinned stuff but not that much and not varied enough to make meals for more than a couple of days. Actually if the power did go off we'd be completely snookered although I do have enough candles and matches to last a year grin

Cabbie21 Mon 11-Jun-18 17:32:27

DH likes to go to the cash and carry and so we have huge stocks of things he considers essential. Of these items, I use only toilet roll and kitchen roll. We have an Aldi just across the road so we are not going to run out of anything, it is just certain favourite brands we can’t get there that he stockpiles to excess.
I never check the dates on tins, as they will keep way beyond that date.
We would be very stuck if no power.

suzied Mon 11-Jun-18 17:43:08

Well if its a post nuclear holocaust scenario we could drink the wine and gin and make ourselves a few cocktails. We'd have crisps and olives to nibble on. Not sure we'd need much else.

Doodle Mon 11-Jun-18 19:22:24

Well, I would obviously invite you all round to share your food with us and we would provide the wine grin
We have enough wine to last for months, toilet paper, tissues, kitchen rolls and more toiletries than Boots but food....no.
We have a restrictive diet with little salt, fat, sugar etc so buy little in the way of tinned foods (too much salt or sugar). I have one small tin of tomatoes, 1 tin of tuna (which might be out of date blush. However, I have just realised what we do have a lot of...porridge oats and oat bran! (So if that is what we were living on, the toilet paper would come in useful grin )

BlueBelle Mon 11-Jun-18 19:34:45

Probably a week I have about 10 tins in my cupboard half a loaf half a 2 pint bottle of milk I have a pound of butter and some potatoes and a packet of rice Some frozen food and some carbonated water a bottle of juice and about 20 loo rolls Would be moreif I d just done my weekly shop though

Marmight Mon 11-Jun-18 19:36:12

People seem to have lots of loo paper! But with no or limited water, the loos wouldn't be flushable. I could get containers of water from the river (the infant Thames) for that purpose and boil it on the BBQ for drinking. Food wise I could keep going for a few weeks from initially the freezer until it went off and then the store cupboard. I have a few weeks worth of logs and coal for the fire for warmth and possibly cooking. Otherwise I would make merry with the vast contents of my booze cupboards until the services are reconnected or the end of civilisation; at least I'd go out happy ?

Synonymous Mon 11-Jun-18 21:15:44

After the crash DH was involved in at the beginning of last year my mind became very concentrated on how I would manage if it was only me left and part of that was focussed on food. As some others have said there was never any food stored in our home as we grew up so it is probably a reaction to that. I was amazed at just how big a stash we had and so DH and I have spent most of this year trying to empty the larder and the freezers which means that at present we wouldn't survive more than about a month eating pretty well. We still have vast quantities of bottled fruit and veg and loads of cans and dried goods stashed in the larder. It is all within date and very useable except perhaps for a tin of escargots which is marked at 15/- grin They have been a family joke for a long time now and we have considered whether we should stipulate in our wills that only those who participate in the eating of them will inherit anything. Wouldn't like to be responsible for any premature deaths though so am dithering somewhat over that one and besides we wouldn't be there to witness the fun and games. hmm

SpringyChicken Tue 12-Jun-18 07:26:19

I thought our stash of food was quite reasonable until reading the posts here. Now I realise it’s meagre. Without fuel, we wouldn’t last long. We have a primus but never more than four gas canisters in stock. We’d be reduced to eating the tinned food, frozen bread and packets of biscuits, crisps and crackers. About a week’s worth maximum. But I wouldn’t want to give over any more space to food storage so we’ll continue to live dangerously!

travelsafar Tue 12-Jun-18 08:06:20

My MIL use to keep a store cupboard and was very organised regarding food, what she had, what she bought, what she replaced. It was almost like it was her job role to maintain this supply of food.
Personally i try not to keep too much in my cupboards and freezer as it gets forgotten about and then thrown out as past it's used by date.
I would rather spend my money on doing things or going out than have it spent on supplies that just sit in the house.

Now adays we have shopping 24/7 so there is no need to stock pile really.

Most of my shopping trolley when i go shopping is filled with fresh food, fruit, veg, fish and other perisables which have to be bought weekly or daily. We probably wouldnt last long in the event of a problem.

hildajenniJ Tue 12-Jun-18 09:51:03

I should have mentioned that if water supplies were cut off I'd be okay. I live beside a river.

paddyann Tue 12-Jun-18 10:19:28

a good 4 or 5 months maybe longer ,we have two freezers that I cook for and keep well stocked ,I have frozen berries for smoothies and frozen veg for emergencies. I always have a few weeks worth of bread and rolls and a couple of large cartons of milk there too .A good variety of fruit squashes...we look after GC a lot Loads of tins and dried food and rarely less than 60 bottles of wine in the rack and the odd case upstairs for refilling it.Cndles I have literally hundreds .I buy T-lights in boxes of 200 and have a great selection of scented candles of various sizes
I do have AC who freezer raid when they've worked late and cant be bothered cooking so its very handy for them too to get home cooked food quickly.

grandtanteJE65 Tue 12-Jun-18 10:49:37

I have homemade jam and fruit juice etc. to last a year in my cellar, tinned goods for a couple of months, cat food for at least that time. A month's supply of cat litter and toilet paper (six weeks to two months' in the winter, as a heavy snowfall makes shopping difficult).

Always flour and yeast in the kitchen as I bake my own bread and food in the freezer for a month to six weeks.

The wood pile has enough wood for the winter and we have kindling and briquettes as well. Spare light bulbs, torch batteries and candles in plenty.

Yellowmellow Tue 12-Jun-18 11:00:46

I think we are of an age group where our mother's instilled in us to have a store cupboard. Like many others on here, always spare loo rolls, liquid soap, bleach, you name it. Of course shops in our younger day weren't open like they are now.
I'm amazed when I go to one of my son's house, who has 2 children. He has even gone to the corner shop as there's no loo roll!
I have tried to cut back on my 'stash', but don't think I will ever be on the last of anything .

dumdum Tue 12-Jun-18 11:36:17

What is the point of 2 full chest freezers if no Leccy?? There is only so much cold baked beans one wants to eat as well, and as for uncooked pasta..tough on the old teeth! I guess tins of fruit, fish, meats might be useful.(Dog food?? He'd be OK!)

Daisyboots Tue 12-Jun-18 11:39:57

I think we are almost overstocked but as long as we still had electricity we would last for acouple of months. We need the electricity as our water comes from a borehole. When I redid my kitchen I insisted on gas hob which runs on butane gas so we always have a spare in stock . We have been using food from the freezer as we are going on holiday soon then on Sunday a friend, who breeds pigs and sheep, said she would have our half lamb ready today so the freezer will be full again.

Craftycat Tue 12-Jun-18 11:51:06

Oh heck - about 2 months at a guess. I have so much stuff in there. However most of it is ingredients for baking/cooking etc not masses of actual food but I could probably provide cakes, bread & biscuits for a very long time. Quite a lot of wine around too.
It is all stuff I regularly use though unlike an ex neighbour of mine. Her Mum gave her a 'stock cupboard basics' pack when she married & told her to always keep it up to date. I don't think she quite got the idea though as I remember her telling me- most affronted- that her DH had asked for baked beans with his dinner & she had refused as she only had the 3 required tins & would not let him 'break into her stock'. She bought another tin the next day so he could have some. Needless to say the marriage didn't last long!

cc Tue 12-Jun-18 11:52:16

I also had a mother who always had a store cupboard (a war-time bride) and as a result we keep loads of tins, jars, flour, rice, milk in cartons etc. as well as household goods.
My large freezer is also full but I realised the other day that I don't really rotate food well enough and end up with loads of BOGOFF sausages, out of date fruit, and lots of little packages of odds and ends. When I actually want to make a meal I can rarely find what I need.
So I set to and went through the whole thing (6 large drawers) and threw away anything that was out of date or not easily recognisable/usable. Result? I've sorted and labelled the drawers and can find things much more easily.
Like many of you we don't use bottled water and don't have a cold water tank so would be in trouble if the water supply was cut off - though we do live in a rainy area and have a water butt so I suppose that we could boil and strain the rain water!
We've made a point of having both gas and electric cooking appliances, I suspect that we are more at risk of losing power than water.

muffinthemoo Tue 12-Jun-18 12:00:32

I do indeed keep a stock of water, 100 litres in reusable containers and rotate fresh cooled boiled water into them regularly.

I need water for sanitation in case of burst pipe, disruption to water main, etc. I have about 48 litres bottled drinking water in addition. We drink slowly out of that stock and replenish to keep it in date.

I would rather have emergency stock of water and people think I was mental than have an emergency, three tiny kids and no water.

tanith Tue 12-Jun-18 12:09:49

I haven’t to my knowledge in my adult life had a water ‘emergency’. They cut it off for 3 hrs once to repair something but that’s it.
Has anyone actually had to go days without water in this country? Maybe I’ve been lucky but I really don’t get all this storing water business ?