What to Eat During a Power Outage
Check out CR's no-cook meal ideas and food safety advice
More than half of the U.S. is under the threat of long-term power outages this weekend due to the massive winter storm that’s expected to hit. There’s a lot to prepare for before the weather moves in, including planning what you’ll eat if you aren’t able to cook for days. (PB&J gets old after a while.) The food experts at Consumer Reports have some tips for eating well and keeping food safe when you lose power.
Foods to Stock Up On
Check your cabinets and pantry to be sure you have plenty of nonperishable foods on hand that don’t require cooking. Good options include low-sodium canned beans, canned vegetables and fruit (packed in fruit juice), canned fish (salmon, sardines, or tuna), breakfast cereal, peanut butter, pouches of fully cooked whole grains, nuts, whole-wheat crackers, snack bars, and shelf-stable milk or plant milk (the kind sold in aseptic boxes in the grocery aisle). If you’re low on these items, head to the store while the weather is still clear. “Don’t forget that you’ll need a manual can opener if the power goes out, too,” says Amy Keating, RD, a CR nutritionist.
Food Safety Tips
When a storm is predicted, see what leftovers you have in your fridge and plan to use them up first. “The food in your refrigerator and freezer doesn’t go bad immediately,” says Sana Mujahid, PhD, manager of food safety research and testing at CR.
If you keep the refrigerator door closed, it will maintain a safe temperature—below 40° F—for about 4 hours after a power outage, according to the Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service. (Use a refrigerator thermometer to be sure.) A full freezer will stay cold for 48 hours, or 24 hours if it’s half full. “To load up a freezer, fill containers with water and freeze them,” Mujahid says. It’s best to keep the fridge and freezer doors closed as much as possible so that the food stays cold.
Fresh Foods That Don't Need Refrigeration
Bread, butter, fresh fruit and vegetables, jelly, and hard cheeses (such as cheddar) will keep at room temperature, so if you have them in your fridge, don’t be afraid to eat them even if the power has been out for longer than 4 hours. (For information on other foods, see the list the FSIS has compiled.)
Apples, avocados, citrus fruit, carrots, celery, cucumbers, grapes, green beans, peppers, snap peas, and tomatoes are fresh foods that can be eaten raw and will be good for days unrefrigerated, so consider picking up some of them ahead of a storm.
“If the power is out for quite a while, these foods can help sustain you, and they’re also healthy sources of fiber, so they can help keep your body running smoothly,” Keating says.
8 Easy No-Cook Meals
You don’t need electricity to make these interesting and healthy meals.
Overnight oats: Mix rolled oats with water in a jar and let it sit on the counter overnight. In the morning, add peanut butter, raisins or other dried fruit, and a little cinnamon.