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Deep freezer organization

I was freezer diving the other night looking for some chicken and thinking I needed better organization instead of just dropping everything in there. I was thinking of some bins to organize chicken, ground beef, etc. Does anyone else do this?
XL BGE
Plainfield, IL.

Comments

  • I try, but it is an uphill battle. I keep all portioned and vac sealed meat in the bottom bin of a standup freezer, with other items on shelves with a modest level of organization. 

    For a while, I kept a meticulous record of the freezer’s contents. I loved the utility, but it was not without some effort to always keep up to date. 

    When putting portioned items in the freezer, I almost always indicate both quantity and weight along with a date and a description (E.g., Chicken Breasts (2), 1 LB, November 2024). Makes it so easy when looking at recipes and comparing against my inventory. 
  • Everything I vac sealed I label what it is, the weight and date. My issue is that it’s all mixed in with other stuff like a whole turkey, ham, and other stuff that just sits in the bottom of the chest freezer. I did a big clean out last year so I need to get some organization in place this year
    XL BGE
    Plainfield, IL.
  • I use the produce bins and drawers I have kept from old refrigerators to separate the major protein categories.
    South of Columbus, Ohio.


  • DoubleEgger
    DoubleEgger Posts: 19,140
    Large bags might be an option. More flexible than crates. 
  • Large bags might be an option. More flexible than crates. 
    A good thought. I only like see through containers, because I never use what I can’t readily see from the fridge and freezer. 
  • dbCooper
    dbCooper Posts: 2,678
    Organization is the easy part, maintaining it is harder, especially if your better half is the "stuff it in and close the door" type.  Overall it's a minor thing but frustrating.
    LBGE, LBGE-PTR, 22" Weber, Coleman 413G
    Great Plains, USA
  • caliking
    caliking Posts: 19,779
    When we had a chest freezer, we would keep frozen gallon jugs of water as a bottom layer. Helped keep things out of that black hole that is the bottom of every freezer :) milk crates are also useful for organizing chest freezers. 

    Over here, a painter’s tape label/sticker goes on the door whenever something goes in. When that item is pulled out of the freezer, the sticker gets peeled off the door. This works well for us, as you can easily see what’s in the freezer at any given time. We found this easier than maintaining a freezer inventory spreadsheet, or a white/dry erase  board. 



    #1 LBGE December 2012 • #2 SBGE February  2013 • #3 Mini May 2013
    A happy BGE family in Houston, TX.
  • dbCooper said:
    Organization is the easy part, maintaining it is harder, especially if your better half is the "stuff it in and close the door" type.  Overall it's a minor thing but frustrating.
    The chest freezer is my domain. The pantry and fridge are in a constant state of me re-organizing as she just puts things where ever. 
    XL BGE
    Plainfield, IL.
  • MaskedMarvel
    MaskedMarvel Posts: 3,417
    I gut mine about once every year. Some of that stuff needs to get eaten. So. Many. Chicken breasts!!!

    Anyway - I do a lot of pulled pork by the pound and sell it with a jar of sauce. I just got let go from my job, and I’ll have about 150 lbs getting picked up in a week or so. So - I acquired a chest freezer. It doesn’t normally run. It lives on the deck under a waterproof bag cover. And it’ll hold about 200 pounds of individually frozen pulled porks. 

    Made trying to keep the stand up freezer WAY easier. 



    Large BGE and Medium BGE
    36" Blackstone - Greensboro!


  • MaskedMarvel
    MaskedMarvel Posts: 3,417
    edited February 15
    Fridge:

    Fridge door has condiments, butter, hot sauces, some wine bottle height stuff. Easy grab high use. 
    Top shelf is drinks.
     Next down is “easy in easy out” - leftovers and stuff that can be grabbed or dropped in that don’t need to be cooked. Snacks. 
    next is jars - bbq sauces, pickles. Not condiments. Those are in the door. 
    Next is the raw shelf. Everything there has to be cooked to be eaten. And - it’s easy to clean that shelf. 

    Short drawer is easy in/out ready to eat cheeses and meats. A few specialty condiments like German mustard that looks like a tube of toothpaste. 

    Middle drawer is the low humidity - fruits. Berries. 
    Bottom drawer is high humidity - vegetables. 

    Kitchen freezer is fancy ice, ice cream and some frozen sugary stuff, occasional liquor bottles, and quick in/out meats and veg .. everything gets it’s shelf - anything that doesn’t belong gets moved to the upright deep freezer. 


    Large BGE and Medium BGE
    36" Blackstone - Greensboro!


  • MaskedMarvel
    MaskedMarvel Posts: 3,417
    edited February 15
    FREEZER-

    top shelf - soup containers. Stocks. All those things that are easy grab and can be just set in the fridge for thawing easily. There is a box of high end breakfast sausages up there too. 

    Next shelf - heaviest. Giant ass turkey. Pork butts. Brisket. Things that are chest high for lifting and bulky. Mostly meats. 

    Next down - bags of vacuumed super hot peppers and bags of smoked pork butt. The peppers are sealed about four to a bag (I use less per batch, usually) and then are in just grocery bags to keep them together, and the bags of butt are sealed by the pound and then set into aluminum half pans - five pounds per pan. There’s 35 pounds in there right now. I can tell just from counting the pans. 


    Next shelf down is ready to eat cooked - only needs thawing. We had TONS left over from our wedding. That’s what’s mostly there. The bags are not weighed, but they are stacked in a metal hotel pan that’s maybe 4” deep to keep them from going everywhere. 

    Pull out bottom wire basket/drawer is bags - mostly easy frozen veg from Costco, some chicken nuggets. That style of thing. 



    The door has each shelf for each type of meat. Chicken breasts. Pork chops. Beef. Seafood (and my jars of smoked Wagyu beef tallow).. And there’s a “cooked” shelf where it just needs to be thawed to eat. That shelf also has the freezer packs for coolers. 


    Everything is dated - sometimes we write on the vac bag, many time I just use scotch tape and fold the end over itself for easy removal. 

    FINAL NOTE - we got some of those cheap plastic organizers. For example - soda water is sideways in a plastic rack that makes it A LOT EASIER. stuff like that. 

    Good luck hope it helps. 
    Large BGE and Medium BGE
    36" Blackstone - Greensboro!


  • RRP
    RRP Posts: 26,451
    Not the answer you were looking for but this is the reason I'm such a fan of an upright over a chest style. Granted things can always get pushed to the back of a shelf, BUT the back of an upright shelf is not as deep as the bottom of a chest. Each shelf level is reserved for one kind of meat and ONLY that kind. In 58 years we have only had 3 such freezers and every one has resided in our garage and even here in IL that has never been a problem. The door has ample storage even by itself and that's where I store all the frozen soups I make plus small items. The only thing I miss in our current 21 year old one is the previous two had pull out wire baskets at the very bottom. In my next life when I buy one it will have that basket for sure unless I'm in Hell then I can't have a freezer there anyway... =)
    Re-gasketing the USA one yard at a time 
  • Love the upright @RRP rocking the pull out basket as well. It’s full of burger
    South of Columbus, Ohio.


  • Canugghead
    Canugghead Posts: 13,630
    @caliking you have room for jugs of water? amateur =)

    canuckland
  • Stormbringer
    Stormbringer Posts: 2,470
    edited February 15
    I have an Excel spreadsheet with what is in each shelf, when it went into the freezer and when it needs to be eaten by. :)
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    | Cooking and blogging with a Large and Minimax in deepest, darkest England-shire
    | My food blog ... BGE and other stuff ... http://www.thecooksdigest.com
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  • caliking
    caliking Posts: 19,779
    edited February 15
    @caliking you have room for jugs of water? amateur =)

      caliqueen couldn’t reach the bottom of that freezer without falling in :smile: 

    #1 LBGE December 2012 • #2 SBGE February  2013 • #3 Mini May 2013
    A happy BGE family in Houston, TX.
  • kl8ton
    kl8ton Posts: 6,395


    I had this going at one point. I think I got the bins from the webstaurant store. Label maker labels with peel off pretty easily if I ran out on a product.
    Large, Medium, MiniMax, 36" Blackstone
    Grand Rapids MI
  • kl8ton
    kl8ton Posts: 6,395
    I switched from chest freezers to upright for easy access. 

    With a chest freezer you could employ a bin method and stack them on top of each other. 

    Find bins that just fit in your chest freezer and organize the meats in the bins (or vegetables if you're wasting freezer space on those). You can then quickly pull out bins to freezer dive. It becomes a 30 second affair instead of frozen hands and 5 minutes of digging in the mountain of frozen meat as you grab that 20 lb brisket off the bottom of the freezer and the rest of the contents caves in to fill the void. 
    Large, Medium, MiniMax, 36" Blackstone
    Grand Rapids MI
  • johnmitchell
    johnmitchell Posts: 7,355
    @kl8ton Sweet.I trust you have a backup generator 
    Greensboro North Carolina
    When in doubt Accelerate....
  • RRP
    RRP Posts: 26,451
    kl8ton said:


    I had this going at one point. I think I got the bins from the webstaurant store. Label maker labels with peel off pretty easily if I ran out on a product.
    IMPRESSIVE How big is that sucker? And where do you have it located?
    Re-gasketing the USA one yard at a time 
  • danhoo
    danhoo Posts: 720
    I use cloth grocery bags for anything smaller than 5 lbs. 


    current: | Large BGE |  Genesis 1000 | Genesis E330 | 22 inch Kettle | Weber Summit Kamado
    sold:| PitBoss pro 820  WSM 22 
  • lkapigian
    lkapigian Posts: 11,549
    I’ll be switching to a upright for sure for my next one , that being said my chest freezer is strictly for extra sausage , bones for stock etc , rarely make food from frozen 
    Visalia, Ca @lkapigian
  • caliking said:
    When we had a chest freezer, we would keep frozen gallon jugs of water as a bottom layer. Helped keep things out of that black hole that is the bottom of every freezer :) milk crates are also useful for organizing chest freezers. 

    Over here, a painter’s tape label/sticker goes on the door whenever something goes in. When that item is pulled out of the freezer, the sticker gets peeled off the door. This works well for us, as you can easily see what’s in the freezer at any given time. We found this easier than maintaining a freezer inventory spreadsheet, or a white/dry erase  board. 


    I may have to try the painters tape labels!!

    we have an upright as many have already said. That’s a game changer 
  • JohnInCarolina
    JohnInCarolina Posts: 34,668
    kl8ton said:


    I had this going at one point. I think I got the bins from the webstaurant store. Label maker labels with peel off pretty easily if I ran out on a product.
    What’s that, about one week’s supply at your house?
    "I've made a note never to piss you two off." - Stike

    "The truth is, these are not very bright guys, and things got out of hand." - Deep Throat
  • kl8ton said:
    I switched from chest freezers to upright for easy access. 

    With a chest freezer you could employ a bin method and stack them on top of each other. 

    Find bins that just fit in your chest freezer and organize the meats in the bins (or vegetables if you're wasting freezer space on those). You can then quickly pull out bins to freezer dive. It becomes a 30 second affair instead of frozen hands and 5 minutes of digging in the mountain of frozen meat as you grab that 20 lb brisket off the bottom of the freezer and the rest of the contents caves in to fill the void. 
    You know the struggle. Wow, that pic of your freezer is impressive. 
    XL BGE
    Plainfield, IL.
  • shtgunal3
    shtgunal3 Posts: 6,134
    @kl8ton impressive! What’s in the Melissa shelf?

    ___________________________________

     

     LBGE,SBGE, and a Mini makes three......Sweet home Alabama........ Stay thirsty my friends .

  • kl8ton
    kl8ton Posts: 6,395
    @kl8ton Sweet.I trust you have a backup generator 
    I do. 
    Large, Medium, MiniMax, 36" Blackstone
    Grand Rapids MI
  • kl8ton
    kl8ton Posts: 6,395
    @RRP
    I don't know how big it was. I bought it used. I looked up similar units and maybe it was 49 cubic feet?  It was in the garage. Barely fit under the 8 foot overhead door. 

    @shtgunal3 haha! Not pieces of someone I murdered. It was for space I lent to SIL. We bought a couple steers that forced the freezer purchase. 

    All in all it was a very expensive endeavor. I probably had 3 grand in service work and shelves and bins. Two or three "emergency service calls" as I didn't just have another freezer to put the stuff in while this one was repaired.  If I were to do it again, I would buy new. The money I saved buying one and a half steers, I spent on keeping the freezer going and organized. I never fully trusted that machine. Buying SRF or prime stuff at the butcher counter is cheap in comparison. 
    Large, Medium, MiniMax, 36" Blackstone
    Grand Rapids MI