Cut the Clutter

Home > Other > Cut the Clutter > Page 15
Cut the Clutter Page 15

by Dorling Kindersley


  1–2 cubic feet (30–60 liters).

  Soup, chicken

  Soup, lentil

  Size Your kitchen’s built-in cabinetry and floor plan will determine the maximum size of a new refrigerator. Measure the available space, and shop with a tape measure. You’ll Use a slash mark to record each freezer meal or

  avoid falling in love with a gleaming behemoth that’s just a frozen item stored in the freezer. Cross out each

  fraction too tall for the space available!

  item as used.

  A refrigerator’s depth is important, too; you’ll need to Item in

  Item out

  make sure that there’s enough room to open doors fully in your kitchen space. Note whether doors open to the right or left; some refrigerator models feature adjustable doors. When judging depth, be sure to allow for an adequate clearance

  ▲ Track freezer contents with a simple write-on, wipe-off from the kitchen wall. A refrigerator needs 4–6in (10–15cm) whiteboard or make a freezer inventory list. A free printable form is available from OrganizedHome.Com.

  of air space for air circulation over the compressor coils.

  FOOD

  117

  FREEZER FOOD STORAGE GUIDELINES

  Food item

  Time at

  Packaging tips

  Food item

  Time at

  Packaging tips

  0°F

  (–18°C)

  0°F (–18°C)

  BAKED GOODS

  MEAT, POULTRY, AND FISH

  Bread, baked

  12 months

  Beef, raw ground

  3–4 months

  Bread dough,

  2 weeks

  Beef, roast

  6–12 months

  (yeast, unbaked)

  Beef, steak

  6–12 months

  Quick breads

  3 months

  Wrap loaves tightly

  Beef, sausage

  1–2 months

  (nut

  bread,

  in

  plastic

  wrap,

  banana

  bread)

  then

  insert

  in

  zipper

  Beef, cooked dishes

  2–3 months

  freezer

  storage

  bags

  Pork, raw ground

  3–4 months

  to

  avoid

  moisture

  loss.

  Pork, chops

  4–6 months

  Rolls, unbaked

  2 weeks

  Pork, roast

  4–6 months

  Rolls, baked

  12–15 months

  Pork, sausage (fresh)

  1–2 months

  Muffins 3

  months

  Pork, sausage (smoked) 1–2 months

  Pancakes or waffles

  6 months

  Ham, fully cooked

  1–2 months

  Do not freeze ham

  (whole or half)

  slices or canned ham;

  DAIRY PRODUCTS

  freezing

  will

  affect

  texture

  and

  flavor.

  Butter, salted

  3 months

  The “salty” taste of

  salted butter may

  Casseroles with ham

  1 month

  intensify

  with

  freezing;

  Bacon 1

  month

  store

  unopened

  butter

  packages

  in

  moisture-

  Chicken, whole

  12 months

  If freezing for more

  proof

  freezer

  wrap

  or

  than 2 months,

  freezer

  storage

  bags.

  over-wrap

  original

  packaging

  with

  Butter, unsalted

  6–9 months

  freezer

  wrap

  or

  Margarine 12

  months

  freezer

  food

  storage

  bags.

  Cheese (Cheddar,

  4 months

  Thaw in refrigerator.

  Swiss,

  Jack)

  Chicken, parts (raw)

  9 months

  Cheese, cottage

  3 months

  Thaw in refrigerator.

  Chicken, parts (cooked) 4 months

  Cheese (Roquefort,

  3 months

  Freezing will affect

  Turkey, whole

  12 months

  blue)

  texture,

  crumbling.

  Casseroles, poultry

  2–3 months

  Cream (heavy,

  2 months

  Cream will not whip

  Fish, fresh (whole,

  6 months

  Freeze fresh fish

  half-and-half,

  light)

  after

  freezing.

  filets, or steaks)

  in sealed containers

  Eggs (raw and

  6–12 months

  Do not freeze eggs

  or wrap to prevent

  out of shell)

  in shell; freezing will

  moisture

  loss.

  affect

  texture.

  Fish, cooked

  3 months

  Freeze in covered

  container.

  MISCELLANEOUS

  Ice cream, ice milk

  2 months

  Pasta, cooked

  3–4 months

  Milk 1

  month

  Allow

  room

  for

  Rice, cooked

  3–4 months

  expansion

  in

  freezer

  container;

  freezing

  Soups and stews

  2–3 months

  will

  affect

  flavor

  and

  (vegetable

  texture

  of

  milk.

  and/or

  meat)

  118

  CYCLES OF AN ORGANIZED HOME

  Cut food costs with

  pantry

  power

  It’s the secret weapon of a frugal kitchen: a well-planned pantry. By creating a reserve of bought-on-sale foodstuffs and household supplies, a pantry saves time, money, and stress in the kitchen. Think you don’t have room? If there’s so much as a spare roll of toilet paper tucked beneath a sink, your home holds a pantry.

  A pantry’s not a place, it’s an attitude!

  What’s the goal of establishing and maintaining a pantry?

  Stocking the pantry

  It’s two-fold: household convenience and protection against Whether it’s Chef Boy-ar-dee brand ravioli or Wolfgang Puck’s unexpected events. A well-planned pantry means that the upscale condensed soups, build your pantry to suit your family, household will never run out of commonly used products such your finances, and the storage space you have available.

  as toilet paper. More important, a pantry is a reserve against Single-income households with young children will build hard times. Whether it’s job loss, illness, or natural disaster, a pantries replete with cold cereal, formula, disposable diapers, pantry ensures that the family will continue to be fed, clean, and child-friendly snack foods. Empty nesters with an active and comfortable in the face of adversity.

  social life and his-and-hers diets will lean toward pickled asparagus, low-sodium veggies, and tiny jars of cocktail nibbles Beginner, intermediate, or advanced?
>
  for pick-up appetizers and hostess gifts. Dedicated home bakers A beginner’s pantry focuses on convenience and contains will include specialty flours, gluten, and dried buttermilk back-up products for each storable item used in the home.

  powder in their pantries, while non-cooks will rely heavily on The standard is simple: for each open bag, box, or carton, the microwave entrees and freezer pizza. And just about every pantry contains a second, back-up product. A good first goal: family can stockpile basics for kitchen and bath, such as toilet a three-day supply of food and hygiene supplies adequate to paper, toothpaste, detergent, and paper napkins.

  support your family plus one additional person.

  More robust pantries serve additional aims. In case of Check the grocery list

  emergency, a mid-range pantry can feed a family for a period Where’s the best place to discover your family’s pantry of two weeks to a month. This pantry includes substitutes for preferences? Your grocery list. If you buy it, use it, and it can fresh foods, such as powdered milk, dried fruits and vegetables, be stored, it’s a pantry candidate. Building a pantry from the and protein products.

  grocery list is also a powerful antidote to Pantry Mania: the The most comprehensive home pantries are designed to indiscriminate purchase of case lots of canned turkey chili meet long-term food storage needs. For instance, members or house brand soups that no one in the household will eat.

  of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (LDS) are An expansive view of the pantry principle also allows for taught to maintain a one-year supply of food and clothing for freezer storage and a limited amount of refrigerator real estate.

  their families. To do so, these premier pantry managers stock Carrots, potatoes, oranges, and apples enter the pantry zone versatile foodstuffs with long shelf life, such as whole wheat when bought on sale and tucked into corners of the vegetable berries, together with a variety of preserved and dried foods.

  bin, while freezer convenience entrees qualify, too.

  FOOD

  119

  Pantr

  To work the pantry principle, you’ve got to get

  ▪ A dedicated pantry area can be a big help.

  organized! Maximum pantry power requires that

  Set aside a cabinet or shelf to hold pantry items.

  you know what you have, how long it will keep,

  Organize them by category, stacking cans and

  and how to store it safely.

  y

  boxes. Flat-bottomed plastic baskets support and

  contain bags of dried beans, rice, or pasta.

  organization tips

  ▪ Starting a pantry does not require complex

  ▪ Complete pantry meals are one exception to

  organization. Create it by buying twice as many of

  the “store by category” rule. On a section of pantry each item as needed for weekly use, then store the

  shelf, assemble all the makings for three to five

  extras. When you’ve used up the mayo in today’s

  pantry meals: a family-sized can of clam chowder,

  tuna salad, retrieve the back-up jar from the pantry, an extra can of chopped clams, and the box of

  and add “mayo” to the week’s shopping list.

  oyster crackers shelved together make it easy to

  ▪ The beginner’s pantry can often be stored

  spot the empty spaces after use, and restock.

  side-by-side with opened or in-use items. For

  ▪ Larger pantries require more storage space

  example, stack the open box of detergent on top

  and may be sited in multiple locations around the

  of the pantry box or line up cans of chicken noodle

  house, depending on different foods’ storage needs.

  soup front to back on the canned goods shelf.

  Root vegetables and apples need to be cool and

  ▪ Rotate the contents of the pantry by placing dry; canned goods can tolerate greater temperature

  just-purchased items at the back of the stack or

  fluctuations. A written inventory can remind

  row; use the front items first.

  forgetful cooks of the location of pantry items.

  pantry storage guidelines ▲ see pages 120–121.

  120

  CYCLES OF AN ORGANIZED HOME

  PANTRY STORAGE GUIDELINES

  Food item

  Storage time Packaging tips

  Food item

  Storage time Packaging tips

  Baking powder

  18 months

  Unopened

  Herbs and spices,

  6 months–1 year Discard spices when

  6 months

  Opened

  dried

  their scent fades;

  Baking soda

  2 years

  Unopened

  store in airtight

  6 months

  Opened

  containers

  Beans and peas, dried

  18 months

  Honey

  1 year

  Biscuit mix

  12–18 months

  Infant formula

  12–18 months

  Breakfast cereals,

  6–12 months

  Unopened

  Jelly, jam and preserves

  1 year

  Unopened in

  ready-to-eat (corn flakes) 2–3 months

  Opened

  original packaging

  Breakfast cereals,

  1 year

  Juice, canned citrus

  6 months

  hot (oatmeal, farina)

  Juice, canned non-citrus

  1 year

  Brownie mix

  1 year

  Marshmallows

  3 months

  Cake mix

  1 year

  Mayonnaise

  4 months

  Unopened in

  Canned fruit

  1 year

  original packaging

  Canned vegetables

  1 year

  Meat and poultry,

  12–18 months

  canned

  Catsup, chili sauce,

  1 year

  barbeque sauce

  Milk, condensed

  1 year

  Chocolate chips,

  12 months

  Milk, non-fat dry

  6 months

  semi-sweet

  Milk, sweetened

  1 year

  Chocolate, unsweetened 18 months

  condensed

  Cocoa

  Indefinitely

  Molasses, unopened

  1 year

  Unopened

  6 months

  Opened

  Coconut, grated

  1 year

  Unopened in

  original packaging

  Nuts, unshelled

  8 months

  Coffee, ground

  2 years

  Oils (canola oil,

  18 months,

  Unopened

  corn oil, vegetable oil)

  6–8 months

  Opened

  Coffee, instant

  1 year

  Unopened in

  Store in cool place

  original packaging

  Oil, olive

  9 months

  Cornmeal, regular

  1 year

  or self-rising

  Olives

  1 year

  Cornstarch

  18 months

  Pancake mix

  6 months

  Crackers

  6 months

  Pasta, dried

  2 years

  Store opened pasta

  in sealed containers

  Flour, cake

  6 months

  or airtight jars

  Flour, white

  10–15 months

  Opened in

  Pea
nut butter

  6–9 months

  airtight container

  Pickles

  1 year

  Commercially

  Flour, whole wheat

  6–8 months

  Opened in

  prepared, unopened

  refrigerator

  in original packaging

  Gelatin

  12–18 months

  Popcorn,

  1–2 years

  Grits, instant

  8 months

  unpopped kernels

  Grits; regular

  10 months

  Potatoes, instant

  18 months

  FOOD

  121

  Food item

  Storage time Packaging tips

  Food item

  Storage time Packaging tips

  Pudding mixes

  12–18 months

  Sugar, brown

  4 months

  Rice, brown

  1 year

  Sugar, granulated

  2 years

  Rice, mixes

  6 months

  Sugar, powdered

  18 months

  Rice, white

  2 years

  Syrup

  1 year

  Salad dressing

  10 months

  Unopened in

  Tea, bags

  18 months

  original packaging

  Tea, instant

  3 years

  Salt

  Indefinitely

  Tea, loose

  2 years

  Sauces, condiments,

  1 year

  Unopened

  Tomato sauce or paste

  12–18 months

 

‹ Prev