⸻ KNF7 LIVE BROADCAST ⸻ Loading...
PLAY
↗ Open

Root Cellar

Emergency Preparedness & Survival Protocols

Home First Aid Field Rations DIY Schematics Grid Down

long-term storage

DIY SCHEMATICS

ROOT CELLAR BUILD

A pantry on a shelf is storage. A root cellar is infrastructure. The difference is temperature, humidity, and the length of time your food stays viable — and in a prolonged crisis, that difference is measured in months of security versus weeks. A properly built root cellar maintains 32-40°F and 85-95% relative humidity year-round using

ROOT CELLAR BUILD Read Post »

FIELD RATIONS

PANTRY STORAGE CHECKLIST — FREE DOWNLOAD

A working pantry doesn’t build itself and it doesn’t track itself. This checklist covers every tier of the storage system — water, grains, fats, proteins, salt and sweeteners, medicinal herbs, vitamins, fermentation supplies, and equipment — with columns for target quantity, what you have, what you still need, pack date, and shelf life. There’s a

PANTRY STORAGE CHECKLIST — FREE DOWNLOAD Read Post »

FIELD RATIONS

FERMENTATION

Fermentation is the only preservation method on this list that is alive. Not metaphorically. The process that turns cabbage into sauerkraut, grain into vinegar, milk into cheese, and cucumber into a pickle that will outlast your canned goods is a biological one — a controlled ecosystem of microorganisms consuming sugars and producing acids, alcohols, and

FERMENTATION Read Post »

FIELD RATIONS

DEHYDRATING

Dehydrating is the most accessible preservation method on this list. No special equipment required, no botulism risk, no pressure gauges, no nitrates. Just heat, airflow, and time. Strip the water out of food and you strip away the environment bacteria, mold, and yeast need to survive. What’s left is shelf-stable, lightweight, calorie-dense, and ready to

DEHYDRATING Read Post »

FIELD RATIONS

CANNING

Canning is the only preservation method on this list that requires you to get the science exactly right every single time. Salt curing has margin. Smoking has margin. Canning does not. The difference between a properly processed jar and an improperly processed jar is invisible — no smell, no visible mold, no warning. Just botulism,

CANNING Read Post »

FIELD RATIONS

SMOKING

Fire and smoke have been preserving meat since before humans had language to describe the process. Every culture on earth independently discovered that hanging meat over a fire did something remarkable — it lasted longer, tasted better, and kept people alive through seasons when nothing was growing and nothing was moving. That wasn’t accident. That

SMOKING Read Post »

FIELD RATIONS

SALT CURING

Salt curing is one of the oldest food preservation methods on the planet — older than written history, older than most civilizations. Before refrigerators, before canning, before freeze-drying, humans figured out that salt pulls moisture out of meat and makes it nearly impossible for bacteria to survive. That knowledge kept armies fed, ships sailing, and

SALT CURING Read Post »

Scroll to Top