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2023 Preparedness Food Storage - Week 7: Grains


Week Seven: Food


It’s a grains week. Store 6 pounds per person. Please do not store wheat if you do not like wheat or you do not know how to cook and bake with it. The key to a great food storage plan is storing the foods you normally eat. During a crisis you want familiar foods that will be a comfort to your family.


I have been asked numerous times about a gluten free diet for food storage. This is one of the many reasons I tell you to never use a list you find online that tells you specifically what to store. Store by food groups what YOUR family eats, always! If you have someone who is gluten free, store gluten free grains such as corn meal, oats, rice, wild rice, or quinoa for them and your whole family.


To answer the question about storing for diabetics, consider storing the following.


Brown Rice: Replacing roughly one-third of a daily serving of white rice with brown rice would lead to a 16 percent reduction in overall type 2 diabetes risk.


Bulgur: A bowlful of bulgur has a very low glycemic index; therefore, it does not get absorbed quickly and enables slow release of sugar that also aids weight loss.


Oats: Oats are a food that is high in fiber and therefore can control blood sugar levels. Use in place or bread crumbs in meatloaf and meatballs.


Buckwheat: Buckwheat flour instead of regular white flour for baking gives a big boost to your soluble fiber content, an important consideration in a diabetes diet.


It can be prepared like risotto and is easy to add to stews, casseroles, and salads, according to Michigan State University Extension.


Quinoa: Although quinoa is commonly thought of as a whole grain, it’s actually a highly nutritious seed that is high in protein and fiber.


Wheat Berries: Wheat berries are actually just whole, unprocessed kernels of wheat, all that wheat you stored because someone told you you needed to. Cook them as a side dish, serve them for breakfast as you would oatmeal and top with a sprinkling of nuts and berries, or toss them cooked into your salads for a nutty accent.


Barley: Barley’s fiber content increasing the number of good bacteria in the gut and releases helpful hormones increasing it’s importance for diabetics.

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