Pasta Types Lined Up On Countertop

If We Have A War: Please Stock Pasta

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If we have a war, please stock pasta. When the world feels uncertain, the pantry becomes a place of quiet power. Stocking pasta isn’t a statement of fear; it’s an act of love for the people who depend on you. Dried pasta is one of the most practical, nourishing, and versatile foods a family can store, and in times of disruption, it may prove to be one of the most important decisions you ever make in a grocery aisle.

Governments, emergency management agencies, and generations of resilient families all agree: a well-stocked pantry is the first line of food security in any crisis. Whether the threat is war, natural disaster, supply chain collapse, or prolonged economic hardship, families who have stored food face a fundamentally different reality than those who haven’t.

Kitchen Supplies You May Need

Three jars of Pasta In Mason Jars

If We Have A War: Please Stock Pasta

Pasta keeps for years, feeds a crowd, requires no refrigeration, cooks with little fuel, and costs almost nothing to store. No other food checks every box quite like it.

Why Pasta Deserves a Place in Every Emergency Pantry

Dried pasta has an extraordinary shelf life. Stored in a cool, dry location, ideally in sealed containers away from light and moisture, most dried pasta varieties remain safe and nutritious for two to five years, and many last even longer. Unlike canned goods that can corrode or freeze-dried meals that require special packaging, plain dried pasta in its original sealed bag asks almost nothing of you.

From a nutritional standpoint, pasta provides complex carbohydrates that give sustained energy to adults and children during physically and emotionally demanding times. It pairs with virtually anything available in an emergency pantry: canned tomatoes, olive oil, dried beans, canned fish, powdered cheese, preserved vegetables, or simply salt and water. One pound of pasta feeds a family of four, making it an exceptional calorie-to-cost investment for any household budget.

Pasta also requires minimal cooking time and fuel. In scenarios where propane, electricity, or firewood may be rationed, a pot of pasta reaching the table in eight to twelve minutes offers a significant practical advantage over grains like rice or legumes, which may simmer for an hour or more.

Finally, pasta is familiar. Children eat it. Older family members recognize it. In moments of stress and displacement, a meal that tastes like home has a value that goes beyond nutrition.

Ten Pastas Worth Stocking

Not all pasta shapes serve the same purpose. Stocking a variety ensures your family can prepare different meals, accommodate different ages and textures, and adapt to whatever ingredients are on hand. Here are the ten essential shapes every emergency pantry should contain.

Angel Hair-Capellini: Very Fine Long Strand

Angel hair is the finest of all long pasta varieties, and its delicacy makes it uniquely practical in emergencies. It cooks in two to three minutes, faster than any other pasta shape, which means less fuel is consumed per meal. It goes gently with light broths, olive oil, canned clams, or simple tomato sauces, and its thin structure makes it easy for young children and older family members to eat. Store several bags: when fuel conservation matters, angel hair will earn its place.

Spaghetti: Classic Long Strand-The Universal Standard

Spaghetti is arguably the most universally recognized pasta in the world, and it belongs at the center of any emergency reserve. Its familiarity alone provides comfort. Families who rarely cook will know what to do with spaghetti when nothing else is available. It works with every sauce in a pantry arsenal, from bolognese made with canned beef, to aglio e olio with oil and garlic, to a simple broth with pepper. Stock more spaghetti than any other shape. It’s the workhorse of the pasta world. You may need to cut up the spaghetti noodles when feeding children, since long noodle strands can be difficult to pick up with a fork.

Elbow Macaroni: Short Curved Tube-The Children’s Staple

Elbow macaroni may be the single most important pasta to stock for families with young children. Its small, curved shape is easy for small hands to manage and for little mouths to chew. Elbow macaroni forms the base of macaroni and cheese, one of the most universally accepted meals among children, and it works equally well in soups, casseroles, and pasta salads. With powdered cheese stocked alongside it, elbow macaroni becomes an almost guaranteed meal that a distressed child will actually eat, which matters more than any adult-centered consideration during a crisis.

Lasagna: Wide Flat Sheet-The Layered Feast

Lasagna sheets are an underappreciated emergency pantry item because they signal abundance. A baked lasagna, even one assembled from canned meat sauce, powdered milk béchamel, and dried herbs, is a meal that can feed a large group from a single dish, which matters greatly when cooking for extended family, neighbors, or displaced community members. Lasagna also stores exceptionally well, and its wide surface area means it can be broken into pieces and used as a substitute in other baked pasta applications. When morale matters as much as calories, lasagna delivers both.

Rigatoni: Large Ridged Tube-The Hearty Vessel

Rigatoni is a large, ridged tube pasta that earns its place in an emergency pantry for its extraordinary ability to hold onto thick, chunky sauces. When protein is scarce, and a sauce must be stretched, beans, lentils, canned tomatoes with herbs, and rigatoni make every bite satisfying in a way that thinner pasta can’t. Its ridged surface grips sauce, its hollow center traps flavor, and its substantial size means a smaller portion feels filling. In conditions where food must be rationed, the psychological and physical satisfaction of rigatoni is a genuine asset.

Penne: Angled Short Tube-The Reliable All-Purpose

Penne is one of the most versatile short pasta shapes in existence, equally at home in baked dishes, stove-top sauces, cold pasta salads, and soups. Its diagonal cut ends and ridged or smooth exterior make it compatible with light olive oil preparations and hearty meat-based sauces alike. Penne is also the shape most likely to be eaten without complaint by both children and adults. If you’re stocking only one short pasta, penne is the most defensible choice for nutritional flexibility, recipe diversity, and universal palatability.

Fettuccine: Flat Ribbon-The Comfort Noodle

It’s a wide, flat ribbon pasta most commonly associated with rich cream-and-butter sauces, but its utility in an emergency pantry extends well beyond that reputation. Fettuccine provides a satisfying texture and chew that thinner noodles can’t offer, and it goes surprisingly well with broth-based soups, olive oil, and even simple tomato preparations. For families accustomed to Asian noodle dishes, fettuccine works as a reasonable substitute in improvised ramen or noodle soups. Its width and substance make each forkful feel like a meal, not a side dish, important when portions must be kept modest.

Farfalle: Bow Tie-The Morale Booster

Don’t underestimate the psychological value of farfalle, the bow-tie shaped pasta, in an emergency pantry. Children light up when they see it. Adults smile. In a sustained crisis where meals become monotonous, a bowl of bow-tie pasta communicates that life retains some of its playfulness. Beyond morale, farfalle is a practical, all-purpose pasta that holds up well in cold preparations, making it ideal for pasta salads when hot meals can’t be prepared. It’s a shape that stores without difficulty, cooks predictably, and delivers genuine delight in settings where delight has become rare.

Orzo: Rice-Shaped-The Soup Extender

Orzo occupies a unique position in the pasta family: shaped like a large grain of rice, it behaves like pasta but blends invisibly into soups, stews, and casseroles. This makes orzo one of the best tools for extending a limited supply of ingredients into a nourishing meal. A modest handful of orzo added to a broth with canned vegetables transforms a thin soup into something filling. Orzo is also easily tolerated by people who are ill or by older family members recovering from stress; its soft texture after cooking makes it easy to eat. Stock orzo specifically for the weeks when survival cooking, not comfort cooking, becomes the reality.

Fusilli: Twisted Spiral-The Sauce Trap

Fusilli, the spiral-shaped pasta also known as twisted or rotini, is one of the most efficient shapes for carrying sauce, second only perhaps to rigatoni among short pastas. Every twist and groove in a fusilli spiral collects and holds whatever liquid surrounds it, meaning that a thin or watered-down sauce still coats every bite with flavor. In emergency cooking, where sauces are often improvised and ingredients are stretched, this functional advantage matters enormously. Fusilli also works beautifully in cold applications, making it the preferred shape for pasta salads prepared without heat. Stock it generously alongside penne for maximum short-pasta flexibility.

How to Store Pasta for Maximum Shelf Life

Unopened commercial pasta bags typically last two to three years. To extend that meaningfully, transfer pasta into airtight glass or food-grade plastic containers after purchase, or seal them in vacuum-sealed bags. Keep stored pasta in the coolest, darkest corner of your home; a basement shelf or interior closet will always outperform a cabinet near the stove. Avoid storing pasta near onions, garlic, or any pungent items; the dried dough can absorb odors over time. Label every container with its shape and storage date, and rotate your stock by using the oldest containers first when cooking regular family meals.

A reasonable starting goal for a family of four is 40 to 60 pounds of assorted dried pasta, which provides roughly 30 to 40 pasta-based dinners. At current grocery prices, that entire supply costs less than a single restaurant meal. The investment is minimal. The return, if it’s ever needed, is immeasurable. Store what you eat, and eat what you store. Pasta earns its shelf space every single week, emergency or not.

If We Have A War: Stock Up On Wheat Berries

My Favorite Spaghetti Sauce

Yes, I used to bottle my homemade spaghetti sauce, but I don’t anymore. I don’t have the strength to can anymore. This is the healthiest spaghetti sauce I’ve found. My favorite nephew, Clint S., told me about it. He reads all the labels and packaging to be healthy. It’s now the only one I’ll buy. Bonus: the price is great!

Spaghetti Sauce made by Paul Newman

Final Word

There is a particular kind of peace that comes from a ready pantry. Stockpiling pasta won’t prevent war, natural disasters, or economic crises. But it will mean that whatever comes your way, your family still sits down to dinner. The water boils. The steam rises. The smell of something warm fills the room. And for a moment, in the middle of whatever the world has become, everything is going to be all right. That’s not a small thing. That is everything.

As a side note, those plastic storage bags you have in your pantry ready to use with leftovers, prepared meals planned for later, or even to store nuts, bolts, and small tools, may become scarce and more expensive. We often forget that plastic is made from oil-based fossil fuels, and when the supply chain for those fuels is disrupted, the products made from them become more expensive. Stock up now, since we’re hearing that large oil tankers are backed up near the Middle East conflict zone. No one can tell us when the backlog will open up. Better safe than sorry. May God bless this world, Linda

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24 Comments

  1. Good idea to have pasta in your supply, especially elbow macaroni – you can use it from cold salads to hot pasta. When you get pasta put in the freezer for 3 days to kill and weevils/etc. that maybe in there.
    And to save water, which maybe limited during war/storms – cook it now then dehydrate them. Then in times to come you won’t need as much water/fuel to cook.
    Thank you for reminding us to stock-up on plastic bags – hadn’t thought about it.

    1. Doesn’t putting pasta in the freezer make it soggy coming out? I always put rice and flour in the freezer, but never pasta.

      1. No if you put the pasta in the box it comes in dry. A friend you is Italian said that she remembered having her grandmother put in the freezer right after she got home from the grocery store.

  2. We love pasta in our house, Linda. Thanks for the list. I stock a variety of pastas. My grands love my macaroni salad made with ditalini pasta. Same recipe, but they love those tiny tubes! I make my own spaghetti sauce and can it. Our garden produces so many tomatoes, so this is how I get “rid” of them. Husband and grands don’t like store-bought sauce anymore. I’ve created a monster(s)!

  3. Angel hair and I are life-long buddies. Tom make spaghetti sauce and freezes enough for 2 months at a time

  4. For Gluten Free Eaters: I will make a couple of suggestions for what we do in our gluten-free home. 1) Avoid all BANZA pasta!! It is highly contaminated to the point that it has been known not to just sneak heavy metals into your meal, but can for some sensitive people, make them sick to their stomach in short order. It is made using garbanzos, which when made from conventional chickpeas, it will be highly contaminated with Glyphosate, as well. That is why we only buy organic products untless there is none available. Don’t quote me, but I think it was reported to be LEAD contamination in BANZA products! 2) We love Sam Mills corn pasta of any type, though sometimes it can be hard to find…SOME times. You can barely taste a difference from wheat pasta after it’s cooked, except for a yellowish color. We also like the jovial grain-free cassava pasta. I am not talking about the jovial rice pasta, which we avoid for the most part. Conventional rice has a lot of arsenic and lead in it, so we don’t eat much of that unless it’s actually from Lundberg where there never were any civil war battles that left lead ammunition behind nor arsenic from old cotton fields. But I digress…. This is supposed to be about pasta, not rice! If you can get the Sam Mills corn pasta from Italy, I suggest buying a bunch of it to store!!

    1. Hi Jess, thank you for the tips on the GF pasta. I have ever heard of BANZA pasta! LOL! It’s hard to know what to buy these days. It may say organic, but different countries have different rules on “organic”. I see so much organic food recalled, I’m getting nervous when I pick up anything that says organic. Who can we really trust. I think I follow too many recall alerts, that’s where I hear it. Such is life, we need to grow more of our own food. LOL! Linda

  5. Oops, I forgot to mention that there is another Italian gluten free pasta from Italy that you can order through Amazon: Le Veneziane corn pasta. The Italian products are generally very safe and truly gluten free. Works well and tastes just fine.

    JESS

      1. Yes, while doing a search on Sam Mills (out of Romania) Pasta d’ Oro, I ran into another new version of gluten free pasta, not too expensive and supposed quite good. It does contain rice mixed with corn, though, so you decide. It is Barilla’s new gluten free pasta that is not too expensive and is available in many grocery stores. I am going to look for that and try it, myself!

  6. We have a lot of stored pasta. We have more elbow pasta than any other, but that’s because I’m a hoarder. LOL

  7. I guess when you (me) grow up with someone that went through the Great Depression, you learn to be a “food hoarder”. Mother was born at the end of the Depression. But, she grew up in a family that went through it from the first. Her parents. I learned from both generations. I have children who only have food for one week at a time. Nothing extra. I worry, but there’s nothing I can do. I’ve tried to teach them to stock, but you can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make them drink.

  8. Linda, you have helped so many people get prepared over the years. If things go south, and our families are doing well, we have you to thank.

  9. Linda this “If we have a war” series is great!! I’m hoping a good friend of mine will pay attention when I show them to her!! Excellent job!!

    1. Hi Beth, thank you for your kind words, my sweet friend. I sure hope the world thinks about what is going on and gets ready to be self-reliant. Thank you for sharing with your friends, Linda

  10. I grew up poor. I taught myself to shop sales, use coupons, freeze and can. You Linda, taught me the finer details. What ever the good Lord sent our way we are as ready as we can be. Thank you.

  11. We stock rigatoni, rotini, shells, elbow macaroni and various straight pastas. The straight pastas are kept in the original packages, but then stored in 5 gallon buckets with a gamma lid. The others I have in a 5 gallon mylar bag inside a 5 gallon bucket with gamma lid. The in use pastas are kept “sealed” by using heavy duty chip clips, but still with the gamma lid…. Using a one cup measuring scoop I can dish out servings easily and then quickly reseal the bag and bucket.

    As long as we have electricity I cook the pasta in the microwave using the Fasta Pasta tubs. We have both sizes, the original 1, 2, 3, 4 unit tub and the family size 2, 4, 6, 8 tub. These days we normally just cook 3 or 4 units of pasta for the three of us and that still leaves leftovers. In an event I’d probably drop back to 2 units per meal.

    And to keep things interesting I not only have jarred Ragu pasta sauce, but I have #6 cans of Alfredo sauce powder, #10 cans of cheese powder and both #6 and #10 cans of tomato powder that I can turn into spaghetti sauce with some Italian herbs and other pantry herbs. So that lets us rotate between Alfredo, regular pasta and Mac & cheese.

    In any long duration event I plan on pasta or rice being the main source of calories and using meat sparingly to flavor the meals and make it interesting. Don’t want folks getting palate fatigue if possible….

    Thanks for all these war-related articles, since things can easily get out of hand. Even though the USA is geographically distant from the hotspots, cyberattacks can do serious damage to our local infrastructure without any need for any physical attacks. Sigh. Be safe out there folks, it’s getting weirder by the day.

    1. Hi DMWalsh, please check the expiration dates on the cheese powder and tomato powder. I do not stock it because it has such a short shelf life. Just giving you the heads up. Oh my gosh, how did I NOT KNOW about the Fasta Pasta containers! LOL! Guess what I am going to order ASAP??? Oh my gosh, these look awesome!!!!! I love hearing how you stock you pasta, I do mine the same way. You can never have too much pasta. Thanks again for the tip on the Fasta Pasta containers!! Linda https://amzn.to/4tqlB5H

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