Gaming

Fallout Fan Opens 60-Year-Old Shelter Food Rations With Surprising Results

Highlights

  • Opened a 60-year-old bread tin from a Fallout Shelter, and surprisingly, it still looks moist and fluffy, shocking onlookers.
  • Fallout fan Nicole showcases preserved shelter food items, like the bread, that have withstood the test of time surprisingly well.

Much of Fallout’s post-apocalyptic food isn’t usually something you’d smack your lips at and want to devour; it is the end of the world and all of that, so you really can’t be all that picky. With in-game items like the pre-war breakfast cereal Sugar Bombs and Nuka-blast burgers up for grabs, there’s always something at least for players to cure those hunger pangs when times get rough.


But how about post-war bread in a tin that’s been lying around for 60 years though? I know, I know, it sounds disgusting, but this Fallout fan’s shelter food rations from the Atomic Age had people in awe of how well it was preserved.

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A Blast From The Past

Youtuber and Tiktoker Nicole DiSanto, aka Mrs. Fallout, adores all things related to the post-apocalyptic Bethesda franchise, right down to its rationed food and even lives in an Atomic-style pink house from the 1950s. Being a huge collector of Fallout merch, DiSanto loves nothing more than picking up very old shelter rationed foods from places like flea markets, thrift stores, and estate sales to showcase on her channel.

She has already shown how to make the Mentats Vending Machine, a customized Pip-Boy and what a 40-year-old Fallout pineapple cake looks like but now, fans of the game can take a peek at what tinned bread from a Fallout Shelter would look like and to be honest, we were all expecting something much worse.


Opening the 60-year-old rust infused can of bread, most viewers would have thought that some runny goo would come pouring out followed by slop after all this time, but surprisingly, as the loaf plopped onto the table, it still looked really moist (I know, I won’t say that word again).

Using a fork to pry open the middle of the bread to give fans a look inside, you can see how fluffy the inside still looks. Now, it might not be something we will all run to our nearest Fallout Shelter thrift store to pick up, but all in all, that 60-year-old bread certainly looks better than some of the store bought ones after a few days that I bring home.


Talking to Newsweek last year with regard to her Fallout shelter crackers, DiSanto said “I’m glad so many people find my Fallout content entertaining,” continuing. “What’s awesome to me is not only Fallout fans enjoy it, but people with all kinds of interests who have never heard of the game have reached out and told me how much they love my content.”

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