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Preserving (rec.food.preserving) Devoted to the discussion of recipes, equipment, and techniques of food preservation. Techniques that should be discussed in this forum include canning, freezing, dehydration, pickling, smoking, salting, and distilling. |
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Folks - I'd like to partition my chest freezer into two spaces:
One partition would hold items I would use in the short term and would contain prepared/sealed meals and produce that, should the power go off for an extended period of time, we'd eat until the stuff starts to thaw. The other partition would hold things I won't need to get to, but would like to protect them in hopes the power would be restored in a reasonable period of time. Can anyone suggest how I can insulate the second partition in hopes of extending the life of its contents? - Mike |
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On Sun, 04 Jan 2004 16:04:49 -0500, Michael Horowitz
> wrote: >Folks - I'd like to partition my chest freezer into two spaces: >One partition would hold items I would use in the short term and would >contain prepared/sealed meals and produce that, should the power go >off for an extended period of time, we'd eat until the stuff starts to >thaw. >The other partition would hold things I won't need to get to, but >would like to protect them in hopes the power would be restored in a >reasonable period of time. > >Can anyone suggest how I can insulate the second partition in hopes >of extending the life of its contents? - Mike There are a few variations in the replies that can be combined. Our chest freezer has a 2" piece of rigid foam that sits over the top of the lid. It adds to the insulating value there. If you lift it up and feel the top steel it is very cold - this was the heat that was getting in there without the insulation being there. We put it on the outside, because then when you lift the lid it gets lifted with lid at the same time. If it is inside there is the issue of having to lift the thing out everytime you want to access the freezer, and I think that ther are more air disturbances inside the freezer cavity from lifting the lid, then the inner bit than just the lid on its own. There is a similar piece of 2" rigid foam insulation on the back of the freezer as well, since I cannot detect that there are any cooling pipe in contact with the outside wall of the freezer on the back wall. I do not put any insulation on the inside freeze vertical walls, since this could interfere with the ability of the refridgeration system to remove heat of items that are placed in the freezer. I don't think that there is any reason not to put insulation in the bottom of the freezer, inside or out, but since I have started the inuslation upgrades it has never been empty enough to attempt placeemnt of either measure. Most of the outer three walls, other than the back of the chest freezer (at least in mine) have cooling piping attachd to the inside of the metal, and use the exterior to radiate heat that has been extracted from the inside cavity. To insulate there, again, would compromise the operation of the refrigeration system. There are pieces of rigid styrofam cut and sitting nearby, however. When the power fails they are put into position on the three exterior walls. When not doing duty at the freezer they are part of the insualtion that we put in the basement wall recesses at windows to cut heat loss/gain in the winter/summer. We keep the freezer spare space filled with otherwise empty 2l pop bottles filled 3/4 with water. This increases the thremal mass of cold stuff when the power fails. As the freezer empties as the winter waers on a few more pop bottles get added. Then summer comes, and they are taken out one by one to act as cooler ice blocks went we have/go to bbq's. We try to freeze things in the fridge freezer. This way we can separate bulk things into usable portions before freezing. It also minimises the number of times that the chest freezer is openned in the week We usually shop on Saturday or Monday. On Wednesday or Thursday or so we try to plan what we are going to cook on the weekend as big meals, and what then forms the basis for the weeknight core of 'planned leftover' meals This allows things to be pulled out to thaw in the fridge/on the counter so that a lot of power isn't wasted defrosting things in the microwave. So we usually put things into the freezer and pull out on a one or twice a week basis only. We also can a lot of stews, etc. in the summer when veg are able to be bought at market in a 'b' grade in terms of how they look, rather than the beautiful stuff that gets sold at the supermarket. Meat sales are also a big factor. When the first round of Mad Cow pushed ground beef prices down then 9l of chili and 21l of spagetti suace were the outcome. No need to worry about openning the freezer or trying to cook a roast if the power is out. Just open a jar, put it in a pot on the Coleman stove in the open garage, and bring in dinner to serve during power failures. |
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