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Organizing Your Freezer

How do you organize a refrigerator freezer in a way that you can find what you want or even find what you have?

opal

Answers:

RE: Organizing Your Freezer

I have used an open ended box (open end facing toward open door) in the past. I put certain things inside the box, certain things on top, others to the left and right. Meat goes on the left and in the back (there's a mini shelf, bacon, frozen bananas, baking fruit go under it.) Ice cream on the right, bread in the middle, frozen veggies also in the middle, frozen juice, ice packs and herbs in the door. Then, don't let anyone else put stuff in the freezer!

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I also pull everything out every few months to ensure something didn't fall too far to the back and get forgotten. (07/17/2005)

By beanygurl

RE: Organizing Your Freezer

I just finished doing this with my freezer last week. I have a small chest freezer and I use small rubbermaid trunk-like containers that just fit in my freezer. Each little trunk has different foods in it, one for chicken, one for fish, one for garden beans, etc. As I defrosted the freezer with warm water, I inventoried each trunk on a sheet of paper and counted the items. I use an "X" for each item. As an example: Chicken pieces XXXXXXXX. As I take things out, I just cross out the number of "X"s so I know exactly what I have. Otherwise, you end up not using food up before it gets freezer burned and you lose all the savings from your freezer. I've been doing this for several years and it works great with very little organization. I always hated searching through a chest freezer and finding once good food that was now too far gone at the very bottom. Now I just lift out the trunks and I know exactly where to find things and exactly how much I have so when a good sale comes along, I know whether or not I should take advantage of it. (07/17/2005)

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By Pat

RE: Organizing Your Freezer

I divide my freezer into 4 parts. While looking into the freezer, there is a dividing arm that separates the bottom into 2 parts - one small and one large. There are also 2 hanging baskets. So the small part is number 1, the large part is number 2, the left basket is number 3 and the right basket is number 4. I then have a typed paper showing freezer contents that is saved into my computer. I list what I keep in each section and hang the paper with magnets on a metal cabinet next to the freezer. Magnets would probably work on the freezer side as well. This way I know I have 12 hamburger patties in section 2. If I take two out, I subtract and on the sheet handwrite 10. After a week or so I pull down the list and go to my computer saved program and retype what now shows on the paper. The used paper is then torn up into tiny wedges to use as labels for whenever I put new items into the freezer. Each item going into the freezer is labeled with the contents and date. This has saved me from finding freezer fossils.

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If I add items to the freezer, the items are handwritten on the list as well. (07/20/2005)

By Abbytha

RE: Organizing Your Freezer

I bought plastic totes that fit on the shelves, then labeled them, pork, beef etc.. It is so easy to look in the totes before you go to the grocery - and see what you already have, or don't have !I do not use the lids though, they were kind of a pain to use.(07/25/2005)

By Carol

RE: Organizing Your Freezer

I posted the following to Thrifty Fun sometime back.

We have an upright newer freezer that has several large slide outbaskets. This new freezer is much more economical than ourold freezer of 33 years!

We have several purchased baskets; I bought a larger wire basketfrom Wal-Mart and several of the plastic Square (milk carton type)containers & DH cut the top down a bit ... these will slide out easily.I also made tags and heat laminated them ... Beef, Chicken, Pork,Seafood and Miscellaneous and (punched holes) in the tags andattached to the baskets with zip ties.

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Several baskets are easy to take out of the freezer and rearrange bydates ... we do have a tendency of adding new items quickly and notpay attention to the old versus new meats on top!

The top shelf is sort of a hodge podge fruits and stocks and a fewtomatoes that we put into plastic containers that we have frozen. ALoaf of bread or a pizza.

The door is for vegetables, margarine/butter, juice, some meats likesausage, bacon, hot dogs, etc.

If you see signs on the baskets, this automatically organizes you.For us, this seems to work very well. Good Luck.(07/27/2005)

By Syd

RE: Organizing Your Freezer

I also make sure that there is a list of everything in the freezer taped right to it. That way I know whats in there how many and OF COURSE where they are (08/25/2005)

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By Amanda

RE: Organizing Your Freezer

A plastic crate added to the freezer is perfect for opened bags or new bags of frozen veggies, and the like. Having these bags all in one place makes it easy to find, and I can keep track of what I have on hand. (09/30/2005)

By Linda

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July 5, 20180 found this helpful

I have an upright freezer which I must defrost bi-annually. Love this old, but dependable freezer! Four ;sthr shelves in the freezer.

Because this freezer must be manually defrosted, from the dollar store I purchased aluminum pans (large and deep) to go on each shelf. These pans are designated to store meats-fish-poultry on one shelf; vegetables in a pan on another tray; ice cream, pastry dough, pie crusts in another tray on a shelf, etc.

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When I get ready to defrost the freezer, I put the frozen items into coolers. (I also use the styrofoam coolers that meat companies ship their products in to the consumer) Then I put old, clean beach towels on the shelves and the aluminum pans will catch the dripping water. I just keep dumping the collected water into the garage sink or on the shrubs, and put the pans back into the freezer. Entire process takes about 3 hours. The frozen food in the coolers will not defrost during that period of time. When the ice has melted (usually it is just at the top of the freezer), then I wash the interior of the freezer, dry out the aluminum pans and replenish the pans with the frozen foods.

Defrosting the freezer bi-annually causes me to rotate and use the foods on a regular basis. Like other readers who posted, I, too, sub-divide meats into portions for 2 people, wrap in press-apply sealing and then items into ziplock bags. I write on the ziplock bag with a black marking pen, what the item is, how many pieces in the bag and the date it was frozen. When I add to the items, then I can rotate existing items to the front.

I have thought about using plastic baskets or buckets to store frozen items, but because I am going to need the large aluminum pans to catch water from freezer defrosting, then I may as well use the pans to store vegetables, meats, etc. etc.

Hope this helps those with freezers they have to manually defrost.

 

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