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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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About this time last year I asked advise about buying a freezer. Several
kind souls insisted that I needed 12 cubic feet for two people. I got a look at that in the appliance store and it's HUGE! Now after a year of use I almost wish I'd gone a little bigger. It's amazing how a freezer changes kitchen life. I thought I'd let y'all know what a newbie freezer owner learned in the first year. * Organic meat doesn't cost more than storebought when I get it direct from the grower in bulk - a quarter of beef, half a dozen chickens, a couple of turkeys. In some cases it costs less. It tastes noticeably better than storebought, especially the hamburger. * It isn't easy finding organic farmers! Lots of them don't have web pages or advertise except by word of mouth, but they're the closest, the smallest, and offer the way better prices than the better advertised ones. I had the best luck calling local custom butchers and asking if they knew anyone. * It's amazing how much I've had to learn about meat now that I can't shop for little packets of familiar cuts. I'm learning to cook all over again. It's great fun. * I used to make a pot of soup for two, eat some one night, some the next night, some for lunch, and watch the last of it grow fur in the fridge. Now I make huge kettles of soup, eat it once, freeze half a dozen boxes, and always have a variety when I go to the freezer to thaw something for lunch. Homemade soup has plenty of good veggies and meat, too. The last of the Campbell's went to the foodbank. * Our little organic vegetable garden - a circle with a 12 foot radius - can put out 200 lbs of vegetables a year without much work or French intensive gardening or bed raising, just a little hoeing and a lot of picking and freezer prep to be sure that no bean goes to waste. The cost savings in one year paid for the seed, the seedlings, and the freezer. (I admit, the root crops and cabbages are wintering over in the garage in old cold chests. 12 cubic feet isn't enough to fit everything.) * Extra lemon peel gets frozen and comes out to sprinkle on green beans. Extra lemon juice goes into the ice cube tray one tablespoon per cube. Cilantro and jalapenos go into the ice cube tray with a drizzle of water and then go into the crock pot for chili. Little bits of all sorts of things are worth saving. * We don't buy bread any more (I make a heap every couple of months and freeze it). We don't buy convenience foods (I make meat rolls and casseroles in bulk and freeze meal-sized portions). But a lot of cooking all at once makes a lot of convenience later. We eat more homemade food with less work overall. * Cookies go into the freezer as raw dough bits ready to bake by the dozen, so we have them hot whenever we want and don't have many leftovers around. * Baking mixes made from whole meal and olive oil will keep in the freezer. Now I can have the convenience of a Jiffy mix on a sleepy morning without eating junk food. * Dad says freezers aren't efficient because Mom never knew what she had in the bottom of the old Amana. Someone here suggested an inventory. (Thank you!) A whiteboard works really well. Anything in or out gets noted by item and date. I can peruse dinner possibilities from the board instead of staring into the open freezer. (I label plastic freezer boxes with the board's dry-erase marker, too. It stays readable in the freezer but it washes right off for re-use.) * A local farmer showed me that cardboard boxes are great for keeping a chest freezer organized. Baked goods in this, chicken in that, steaks in another, the right size box for each item. If it's on the inventory board, I know right where to find it. Just thought I'd pass this on for anyone else who's wondering about that first freezer. Kathy |
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Kathy wrote:
> About this time last year I asked advise about buying a freezer. Several > kind souls insisted that I needed 12 cubic feet for two people. I got a look > at that in the appliance store and it's HUGE! Now after a year of use I > almost wish I'd gone a little bigger. It's amazing how a freezer changes > kitchen life. I thought I'd let y'all know what a newbie freezer owner > learned in the first year. > > > Kathy > Hi Kathy, I think that I replied to you saying that I'd gotten a 20 cu. ft. commercial style freezer for just the two of us. If I recall correctly (and I may not, it's hell to get old ;-) ) I got some "heat" from a few souls saying that was overkill. With hunting, fishing, 1/2's of beef and piggies, etc. coupled with the FoodSaver, I have no problem keeping that sucker occupied. -- Steve If at first you don't succeed, then skydiving isn't for you. |
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![]() Kathy wrote: > About this time last year I asked advise about buying a freezer. Several > kind souls insisted that I needed 12 cubic feet for two people. I got a look > at that in the appliance store and it's HUGE! Now after a year of use I > almost wish I'd gone a little bigger. It's amazing how a freezer changes > kitchen life. We have three. I resisted DH on the last one - figured we'd never use it. It's now full of whole turkeys we bought at the Holidays for $0.12/lb. ![]() -L. |
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![]() > Hi Kathy, > > I think that I replied to you saying that I'd gotten a 20 cu. ft. > commercial style freezer for just the two of us. If I recall correctly > (and I may not, it's hell to get old ;-) ) I got some "heat" from a few > souls saying that was overkill. With hunting, fishing, 1/2's of beef and > piggies, etc. coupled with the FoodSaver, I have no problem keeping that > sucker occupied. > > -- > Steve I looked at the 20 footer in the appliance store and thought you were out of your mind. But I'm sorry. I take it all back now! ![]() Kathy |
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![]() "Kathy" > wrote in message news ![]() > About this time last year I asked advise about buying a freezer. Several > kind souls insisted that I needed 12 cubic feet for two people. I got a look > at that in the appliance store and it's HUGE! Now after a year of use I > almost wish I'd gone a little bigger. It's amazing how a freezer changes > kitchen life. I thought I'd let y'all know what a newbie freezer owner > learned in the first year. (snip) Hi Kathy! Congratulations! I am preparing to buy my first home after years and years and years in apartments. The two things I look forward to the most are plenty of counter space and a FREEZER!!! How nice it would be to not have to shop on an almost daily basis because you can't keep anything in the crappy freezer for more than two days! Hmmm.....funny how priorities change. I got wayyyyy too excited by your post!! ![]() |
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Kathy wrote:
>>Hi Kathy, >> >>I think that I replied to you saying that I'd gotten a 20 cu. ft. >>commercial style freezer for just the two of us. If I recall correctly >>(and I may not, it's hell to get old ;-) ) I got some "heat" from a few >>souls saying that was overkill. With hunting, fishing, 1/2's of beef and >>piggies, etc. coupled with the FoodSaver, I have no problem keeping that >>sucker occupied. >> >>-- >>Steve > > > I looked at the 20 footer in the appliance store and thought you were out of > your mind. But I'm sorry. I take it all back now! ![]() > > Kathy > > LOL, join the club but I believe that there's a waiting list! Honestly, I wish I'd have gone bigger. -- Steve If at first you don't succeed, then skydiving isn't for you. |
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On Thu, 20 Jan 2005 18:32:52 GMT, "Kathy" > wrote:
>About this time last year I asked advise about buying a freezer. Several >kind souls insisted that I needed 12 cubic feet for two people. I got a look >at that in the appliance store and it's HUGE! Now after a year of use I >almost wish I'd gone a little bigger. I think I remember warning you that you'd want bigger n people were recommending. ![]() It makes all sorts of savings possible. ![]() -- Siobhan Perricone Humans wrote the bible, God wrote the rocks -- Word of God by Kathy Mar |
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-L. wrote:
> Kathy wrote: > >>About this time last year I asked advise about buying a freezer. > > Several > >>kind souls insisted that I needed 12 cubic feet for two people. I got > > a look > >>at that in the appliance store and it's HUGE! Now after a year of use > > I > >>almost wish I'd gone a little bigger. It's amazing how a freezer > > changes > >>kitchen life. > > > We have three. I resisted DH on the last one - figured we'd never use > it. It's now full of whole turkeys we bought at the Holidays for > $0.12/lb. ![]() > > -L. > At one point my mom had 3 full-sized freezers in operation and 2-3 fullsized refrigerator/freezers, and a small fridge in 'the barn.' |
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On Sat 22 Jan 2005 09:37:18a, jem called across the abyss...
> At one point my mom had 3 full-sized freezers in operation and 2-3 > fullsized refrigerator/freezers, and a small fridge in 'the barn.' > Big family? Or maybe that's where she stored the bodies! <g> Wayne |
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