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8 Signs Your Stored Foods Could Kill You

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You worked hard in your garden. You butchered your own meat. Then you went through the labor-intensive, time-consuming process of canning it, but how can you tell for sure that your food is safe to eat when you open it?

There are many things that can go wrong during the canning and preserving process and eating spoiled food can make you extremely sick and can even kill you. Today we’re going to talk about how you can tell if your food has gone bad.

Home-canned vegetables are the most common cause of botulism, according to the CDC. That sounds like a big deal, but when you look at the numbers, it makes eating home-canned food much less scary. From 1996-2008, there were only 18 cases of botulism reported to be from home-canned foods. Still, that was only the reported cases so there were likely more than that.

Living in a place near the ocean where local seafood places regularly hand out raging cases of food poisoning, I can tell you that you DO NOT want to experience this. Even if you live through it, you’ll be praying for death while experiencing it!

Now, let’s talk about how you can tell if the safety of your food has been compromised.

Look at It and Smell It

If your canned food looks cloudy or slimy or it smells “off”, don’t eat it.

Many people suffer under the misconceptions that boiling food kills all the bad bacteria or that bacteria can’t survive without air. Unfortunately, neither is always true.

Yes, boiling kills many bacteria, and many do die without air, but there are deadly ones such as the clostridium botulinum bacteria that boiling water won’t kill. You have to pressure-can low acid veggies and meat in order to kill the bad bugs. This isn’t something to mess around with – it can kill you.

The Lid Bulges

If the lid of your can is bulging up, it’s a pretty good sign that whatever is in it has gone bad. This is most likely due to the fact that you didn’t process it properly. You probably didn’t get the food hot enough to kill the bacteria in it before you sealed it up.

Though the process of canning is supposed to preserve food, most people don’t realize that they can actually seal bacteria in with the food.

Release of Pressure when You Open It

There is always going to be that little sound of depressurizing when you break the seal of your canned food but if it’s more than just a pop, you may have a problem. Buildup of gas inside the jar is a sign that there are anaerobic bacteria in it. This is the same thing that causes the lid to bulge.

You may also notice bubbles in the jar before you open it. Be extremely careful because all of these are signs of bacteria in your food.

Lid Can Be Pushed In and It Pops Back Up Again

If you push lightly on the lid of your jar and it pushes down, then pops back up again, your jar didn’t properly seal. That means that the food has basically been sitting out for however days, weeks, months or years that it’s been on the shelf.

How long would you leave food in a bowl on the table before you deemed it unsafe to eat? Not long, right? If the lid isn’t sealed, pitch it.

Mold on the Lid

If you unseal your jar and see black, blue, gray, white or green mold on it, pitch it. Even if the food doesn’t show any signs of mold, the fungus or bacteria is most definitely in there. This food may smell funky, too.

Foam on Top of the Food

This is another sign that anaerobic bacteria such as the kind that causes botulism is present in the food. Unless you want to end up in a world of hurt, or even dead, don’t eat it.

This is especially a concern in meats and low-acid foods such as green beans, beets and corn. Again, pressure-can them.

Damage to the Container

If the jar or can appears to be cracked, damaged, bulging or misshapen or the seal is damaged, throw it away. Often after a few years, the lid of the home-canned food or the entire container of store-bought food can rust or erode to the point that it allows bacteria in. Don’t risk it. You have a little more leeway with home-canned goods because you can test to see if it’s still sealed but if a store-bought can is rusty, you don’t really have any way to tell if it’s good or not.

On another note here, don’t ever buy canned goods that are damaged. Often dented cans are on sale; that’s because people in the know are aware that the safety of the food may be compromised. There are also toxins in the liners of the cans that can be released when the can is bent, so that’s another reason to pay full price if you’re buying at the store.

If you want to save money, do it by couponing, not by buying damaged goods.

Food or Juice Is Leaking Down the Can

This actually logically applies more to store-bought canned foods than home-canned foods because you’re going to see other signs such as a broken seal in home-canned foods if the food is actually leaking out of the can. Not necessarily so with store bought cans, though.

If you pick up a can and there’s food on the label or the outside of the can, inspect it closely. It could be that another can broke and spilled on it, but the can itself could be leaking, too. If you can’t see for sure, don’t risk it.

How to Dispose of Spoiled Food

In a SHTF situation, botulism could be lethal so it’s imperative that you don’t let the bacteria spread. It can be absorbed through the skin as well as ingested so you need to be extremely careful with the clean-up process. Thank goodness, good old fashioned bleach will do the trick here. At a 10:1 ratio (10 parts water to 1 part bleach), you can safely assume that the bacteria is dead.

If the jar or can is still sealed, throw the entire container away. If not, dispose of the jars, food and clean-up materials using gloves so that it doesn’t have contact with your skin. DO NOT put the food on your compost pile!

The botulinum toxin is exactly that: a toxin. It attacks your central nervous system and causes difficulty swallowing or speaking, facial weakness on one or both sides, dry mouth, drooping eyelids, trouble breathing, muscle weakness, blurred vision, fatigue, vomiting, paralysis and even death. It, and bacteria like it, are nothing to mess around with, especially in a SHTF situation.

Of course, the very young and very old are going to be more susceptible to major illness or death, but even a mild case can be avoided by recognizing the signs of food spoilage and cleaning the area properly.

Pay attention when you open your foods and take every precaution when you’re canning. As they say, the devil is in the details!

If you have any other signs of food spoilage or advice to give about canning or preserving safely, please share your information with us in the comments section below!

This article has been written by Theresa Crouse for Survivopedia.

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    Total 6 comments
    • DeAcero

      Good stuff – thank you!

      • Jarheadusmc

        Just a note for all:

        A warehouse full of canned food left from WWII was discovered in California – all the canned goods still retained their flavor, nutrition, protein, and taste.

        A ship was found in the Atlantic that was sunk in “1917″ (When canning was not even as specialized and safe as today’s methods) that was full of canned goods sitting in the waters depths for near 100 years. All the canned goods, except those with high acid content i.e. tomato’s, had still all their protein and nutritional content with some loss of color and a slight loss of taste – but still highly consumable and nutritious.

        Several University and Government studies – all available on the net to read – have determined that canned goods especially are good from 20-100 years in storage – if keep away from heat and extreme cold, i.e. dark cool basement is ideal. All Dinty More products, tuna fish, etc will last for several decades of proper storage.

        The main reason for expiration dates is “profit and turnover” from the farmer to the retailer.

        White products like sugar, flour, rice, “all beans”, salt, etc, will last for years if prepared and stored properly – first you must take them out of the plastic bags and containers and vacuum seal or put in glass jars.

        - Get a Vacuum Food Saver at Wall Mart.

        - Buy five or six gallon buckets at Lowe’s or Wal-Mart (They don’t have to be the “food grade” just any new five or six gallon bucket. You also must use lids that have the “rubber seal” in them, either the hammer down type or the one’s with the removable screw on lids. Wal-Mart does “not” have lids with the rubber seal – Lowe’s does have them with their buckets.

        - Purchase on the net: Mylar bags to fit in the buckets (although these are available in all sizes) – the one’s for the six and five gallon buckets when inserted, extend one or two feet higher than the bucket. Most sites will have reference to the proper size for buckets. Also purchase “oxygen absorbers” from the same sites and companies – charts are available on their sites. The Mylar bags and absorbers are very inexpensive.

        Place Mylar bag in bucket, fill with flour, sugar, beans, rice, salt, wheat, whatever: Then place appropriate number or size of oxygen absorber in middle and on top of food stuff. Fold Mylar bag over onto a table or hard surface, flatten, insert 1/4″ tubing into top edge of opening – iron (hot iron) seal the bag up tight to the inserted tubing, then turn vacuum sealer on until bag is sufficiently vacuumed – then quickly iron seal bag just below tubing. Then cut that section of tubing off to stay in bag: When you iron the tubing tight to the side the bag will adhere to the tubing and when you seal the bag – its just best to leave that little bit of tubing in the bag.

        Most food savers have a small vacuum hole on them or on the top where you insert the accompanying vacuum piece used for jars and the like: Buy several feet of the correct size tubing, same size as comes with the little insert: Use this on your bags.

        Several UTube videos show how to seal the bags in different ways: The above way is the cheapest but their are other very similar ways to do this.

        The final product is to buy bulk wheat, beans, flour, sugar, rice, salt, etc, and to “bucket” them in this way: What you will have is a product that will last for at least 7-10 years or more. Even if the vacuum was not perfect, but you inserted oxygen absorbers, that the bucket and food are sealed with a rubber lined lid – keeping out moisture and light – these will last for years.

        Now is the time to prepare as time is very very short to get food stuffs put away.

    • Jarheadusmc

      An additional note to my previous post: Canned meats, and vegetables, if done right, not in a hurry, will last from ten to twenty years, except foods high in acid like tomato’s will last for approx. five years at most, but meats and others will last for many many years. Vegetables must be done in a Pressure Cooker – in fact it is safer and faster to can all your foods in a pressure cooker.

      Go to a vegetable farm market and purchase your foods, vegetables, etc and go to town.

      For those who intend to prep. foods, especially canning some other notes:

      Make sure, just in case what happens is apocalyptic, which I think is going to happen, store as much as you can, and make sure you have “lids” and what ever else you need to can, for several years, including “lots of garden seeds” preferable Organic Heirloom – which you can let a few of these vegetables ripen and harvest their seeds for the following years. “Nitrogen Packed” seeds are available in #10 cans, that will keep for 20 years of more.

      From testimonies of people who have been through the depression, wars, even recent wars in Serbia and other far places – their absolute experienced and valuable recommendations. These people have noted what to store, what will most be needed or wanted, which items were the most barterable, etc.

      1. Guns and ammunition: First to protect yourself, you family and maybe your country, with what is shortly coming.
      Ammunition, for your weapons, and plenty of extra: Will be worth their weight in godl.
      2. Bic Lighters: Think about that one.
      3. Powdered Gravy: One of the most sought after items in hard times to add flavor to stored foods, rice, beans, etc.
      4. Garden seeds: Also worth more than gold.
      The rest is up to your knowledge and needs.

    • Busta Myth

      Does anybody know the SAFE limited to eat store bought canned food PAST their shown Expiry Date ?

    • James Phoenix

      Busta, it depends on the type of food. Follow the good guidelines given in this article and Jarhead’s advice, as well as your own common sense.

      My approach has always been that if it looks OK, smells OK and tastes OK then it’s probably OK to eat — served me well so far.

      The ‘best before’ dates on canned food are a guideline only and are there to encourage consumption/consumerism and to protect manufacturers from lawsuits.

      Fresh or freshly-cooked food is what you need to be most careful with as it can go bad very quickly if not properly stored.

    • VEDAT ŞAFAK YAMI

      nice infographics..

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