I should have gone through the freezers before my last grocery shopping. I would have saved several dollars this week by not buying more of what we have on hand, example -- frozen vegetables and fresh fruit. In fresh fruit, I bought a whole watermelon and a couple of bunches of bananas at WinCo on Friday morning. We could have used the frozen fruit we have in smoothies and as fruit servings for at least a week. I found a large bag of blackberries, 3 gallon-sized bags of apple chunks, and a bag each of raspberries and blueberries at the bottom of the freezer. I also found 10 bags of frozen peas and multiple open bags of various frozen vegetables, including 2 open bags of spinach and 2 open bags of corn.
So, what I did
Friday afternoon was rainy and dark, a perfect afternoon for going through the garage chest freezer and apartment-sized upright freezer.
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We sorted on the garage floor. |
I didn't thaw the chest freezer. We need to eat down some of the contents before I can thaw it, as I don't have other freezer space to hold foods while this freezer defrosts. But I did organize this freezer really well, I think, especially as I did it using basic items we have at home, mainly thick plastic grocery bags (bags work well as they will mold to each other and stack), a Sharpie, and duct tape. We sorted and bagged almost everything, labeling each bag as we went. Our rule was that bags have to be able to tie closed, so contents won't spill out and undo all of our sorting.
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budget freezer sorting "containers" and "labels" |
We divided this freezer into 3 columns. The left column is loaded with stacked bags of fruits and vegetables. I put the bag of opened packages of various vegetables on the top, so we will go to that bag first when looking for vegetables to use in lunches and dinners.
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See how well the plastic bags can stack? |
The center column contains all of my two daughters' foods. They often make lunches in advance for themselves, so they can grab something ready-made quickly. They also have more particular tastes for foods than either my husband or I have, and will buy specific items just for themselves. So their foods do take up a sizable amount of freezer space. The right column is only partially bagged. It also has the hanging freezer bin that contains primarily nuts and seeds. Stacked on the very right are containers of cherries packed in sugar for pies and 3 bags of different types of corn flour and meal. Corn meals and flours become buggy quickly in my experience.
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finished sorting and organizing for the time being |
I moved all of the butter to the small freezer. I did thaw this freezer before our last beef delivery. Here's that freezer. All of the beef is on the top shelf. That's most of a very recent 30-lb delivery of beef. The middle shelf has 3 whole chickens, a single chicken leg and single chicken thigh, plus some containers of stock. The bottom shelf has breakfast sausage and more stock, plus two partial boxes of heat and eat foods, fish sticks and egg rolls (egg rolls now gone). And the door compartment now holds about 10 pounds of butter.
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small freezer -- beef on top, chickens middle, not shown bottom shelf |
The big task now is to form a plan to use the odds and ends as well as the current surpluses of foods of which we anticipate accumulating new stock in the coming months, like fresh produce, pumpkin/squash seeds, meat and pumpkin broths.
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berry pancake topped with blackberry syrup |
- chopped apples in spiced, sautéed apples both Friday and Monday night for dinners
- pumpkin seeds, lots of bags of them. I roasted up a baggie for a snack on Saturday
- 4 egg rolls, we had them with dinner on Saturday
- cooked pinto beans and 2 partially used bags of corn, mixed together, sautéed in beef fat with onions and spices for Saturday's dinner
- a container of whey, used in a batch of blueberry and blackberry pancakes for Sunday breakfast topped with blackberry syrup (berries and syrup from the freezer)
- some chicken stock used in making grits to go with meatloaf for Monday's dinner
- cornbread and whole wheat bread, small amount of beef gravy in meatloaf for Monday's dinner
- more butter than I had thought, enough to last through summer at least
- one container of yogurt starter. I'll have to make another batch of yogurt and freeze more starter.
- a single cupcake (to the victor go the spoils -- that cupcake is mine!)
- two frozen things of dough for croissants
- a half chocolate croissant
I'll continue using up odds and ends, particularly as I tackle the other two freezer spaces. (More odds and ends in those two freezers.) Tomorrow night's dinner will be an interesting experiment. I'll let you know how that one goes. I'll sort and organize the kitchen freezer and spare fridge's freezer later this week.
Whew! What a job this is.
Wow, you found a lot of good things to eat in your freezer! I also have used bags to organize a chest freezer. At one time I ended up with a bunch of lightweight reusable grocery bags in various colors, so that's what I used. I put meat in one color, fruit in another, etc. so it was easy to find what I needed.
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