http://goldismoney2.com/showthread.php? ... ls-storage
I was browsing another site today trying to figure out a way to keep oil from going rancid in long-term storage, and I like one of the ideas that was posted and think I may be able to take the idea a step further. A suggestion was made to blast the inside of partially-full bottles of oil with compressed gas to help force remaining oxygen out of the bottle, then capping it. I'm thinking this is less than ideal just because no matter how quickly you get the cap on (never mind the potential for oil splatters), air will get back in the bottle. So I was tossing this around in my brain tonight and got to thinking about the mason jars of bacon fat I have in my freezer at the moment (with one jar at cool room temperature in my bunker that I plan to sample in about six months).
It occurred to me that since the real issue with rancidity is exposure to oxygen, even though air itself is only 21 percent oxygen, freezing bottles of oil (more on that in a moment) and after the oil is frozen putting small CO2 pellets inside the mostly-full bottles would essentially stop any further oxidation and subsequent rancidity of the oil. Then after maybe more time in the freezer, the bottles could be removed and stored at cool room temperature in a dark area of the bunker and likely stay non-rancid for a long time.
Now, as far as bottles for long-term storage, the bottles that cooking oil typically comes in (cold-pressed extra virgin olive oil is my preference) really don't seem very airtight. As I was taking a swig from the water bottle I keep refilling every day at work, I thought that using half-liter or liter-sized water bottles (that nobody has drank out of) would be perfect. I'm looking for a cheap, used water dispenser anyway since 5-gallon bottles result in a lot less extra plastic for water storage than cases of half-liter bottles, but I can buy a case of half-liter bottles of water as needed, empty those bottles into the water dispenser, then fill the bottles with oil, freeze them, "bomb" them with CO2 pellets and have my oil ready for long-term storage as well. This might seem like a rather roundabout solution, but I think it solves a couple different problems.
Since the main factors in oil going rancid are light, heat and air, storing airtight containers in cool, dark places will take care of two of those three problems. Just how gas-permeable are, say, water bottles that they wouldn't be appropriate for long-term oil storage? And if the problem with such bottles is gas-permeability, why not vacuum-seal the oil-filled bottles in mylar to bring the problem with oxidation down to almost nothing?
If going through all of this sounds ridiculous, quite frankly I don't care how ridiculous it sounds if it stops oil from turning rancid. I wonder how many preppers will have far too little fat stored in their preps to meet the probable increased physical demands in an off-grid society.
And as an added facet of fat storage, I'm picking up another 15 pounds of soon-to-be-vacuum-sealed almonds tomorrow from Sam's Club.