Sealed flour, pasta, rice, and oats in original manufacturer packaging typically keep for 12–24 months past their packaging date, sometimes longer if stored cool and dry. Repackaged bulk items (rice scooped into zip-top bags by volunteers) should be used within about six months and transferred to an airtight container at home. Beans older than two years will still cook but may require longer soaking.
Are gluten-free grains available at food pantries?
Increasingly, yes. Larger pantries and those partnered with Feeding America frequently stock gluten-free oats, rice, corn products, and gluten-free pasta. Availability is inconsistent — call ahead or ask at intake whether they have a dedicated gluten-free shelf. Some celiac-specific food programs and religious-community pantries carry deeper selections.
What should I do if I find pantry moths in a bag?
Discard the affected bag immediately and inspect everything else you received that day. Freeze any dry goods you want to keep for 72 hours to kill eggs, then transfer to airtight glass or metal containers. Report the find to the pantry so they can pull the rest of that lot; infested bags usually trace to a single warehouse pallet, not the pantry itself.
Will I get enough grains to last a week?
A standard household distribution typically includes 3–5 lb of rice or pasta, 1–2 boxes of cereal, and a bag of flour or cornmeal — enough for one person for a week or a household of four for three to four days when combined with other items in the box. Mobile pantries and "produce-plus" distributions often include more bulk grains than the standard box.
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