I started on the Kitchen Cure this past weekend with a thorough clean-out of the fridge. (See the Week 1 Kitchen Cure assignment here.) This was not the most fun of tasks. No, decidedly not. Especially after I’d emptied the contents of the fridge and stood staring in disbelief at the amount of grit and gunk coating the bare shelves. But once I scrubbed and wiped, the ultimate sensation was extreme satisfaction.
THE FREEZER: 15 Minutes
I started with the freezer, subconsciously knowing this would be the easier task. I took everything out, wiped the shelves clean and re-arranged everything back inside. Done and done.
I try to keep zones in my freezer: ready-to-eat meals, quick meal components (like a cup of leftover pilaf or frozen pasta), fruits and vegetables, and meats. But this system gradually breaks down when one zone gets over-crowded or I’m in a rush. I’m afraid my before and after pictures probably look very similar, but this is actually much more organized than it was before!
• Sacrificed - Two tubs not-very-good ice cream (as evidenced by the fact that they remained uneaten months later) and one bag of freezer-burned mystery meat.
• Saved! - I found several bags of peas and nuts that for some reason were all open. I consolidated like substances and did away with a lot of clutter. I also discovered a pound of local sausage that had gotten completely lost in the back.
• Kitchn Cure Ideas - Find some some plastic caddies to keep the foods separate and organized. I think this would help keep all my little plastic bags from migrating and also make sure nothing gets lost in the back.
THE FRIDGE: 45 Minutes
This was a bit of a beast. At first, I thought to go shelf by shelf, but I finally just decided to take everything out, clean, and then reorganize. And that’s what I did.
Glass cleaner worked best on my shelves, though I went back over the plastic molding with regular all-purpose cleaner. Getting the tiny pieces of who-knows-what out of the cracks and crevasses was annoying in the extreme, but I got it all in the end.
Maybe this is obvious, but remember that those shelves can come out. It might seem easier to clean them in the fridge, but I found it to be far less back-breaking to just take them out, wipe them over the sink, and put them back again. Sparkly!
Also, remember Sara Kate’s tip to wipe down the condiment bottles before putting them back in your pristine fridge. I was tired and almost skipped this step, but it really just takes a couple swipes with a warm rag and the sticky gunk is gone.
• Sacrificed - Two sad spring onions, a container of mystery sauce, and a bottle of not-very-good salad dressing that I bought before I realized how easy it is to make your own.
• Saved! - I found a lonely, but still good, lemon under a few bags of apricots. Cocktails tonight!
• Kitchn Cure Ideas - I definitely need to wipe down all the shelves more often. With all the food in there, I think it’s easy to miss how grungy they’re becoming. I also want to try to keep a space specifically for leftovers on the top shelf on the theory that if my husband and I can see it, we’ll eat it. We do pretty well with big containers of leftovers, but often forget about that one last serving of soup. This would help.
That’s enough for one day. Tomorrow I’ll attack the pantry. And I have a feeling “attack” is exactly the attitude I'm going to need.
How is your Kitchen Cure going?
Related: How to Organize Your Fridge
(Image: Emma Christensen)








Monterey Pitcher fr...

Garlic cloves are the worst! Their "paper" flies all over the fridge.
You don't even have to go so far as to purchase containers. We have two cardboard boxes we've repurposed in the freezer.
The first is a ziploc box that held several boxes of ziploc bags (from costco). We cut the flaps off and it became the meat box. All individually frozen steaks, pork chops, etc. go in this box. The meat box actually came about when my parents sent me back to college one semester with a bunch of individually wrapped steaks for my freezer. They put them in a box and I lazily threw the box in the freezer.
The other box is the bacon box. It's a tall box that used to hold some frozen garlic bread. We package our backing into 2 or 4-strip portions. Rather than having bacon flying all over the freezer, we have it in the bacon box.
*package our BACON. Weird typo there.
I have to clean the freezer too! It's freezing in there! Arrrgh....
These are the challenges I actually like. The ones that force me to do things I hate doing, but feel so much better afterward. Hey I found sausage too! Maybe this is a sign.....I'll leave that one alone.
I also found an ungodly amount of broccoli in my freezer. I think I just kept buying it, thinking I was low, and didn't stop.
QueenOfTheFall.blogspot.com
Nsane - Cardboard boxes are a great idea! Thanks!
What I do in my freezer, a chest freezer, not a stand up, is to keep like things in cloth shopping bags, just the cheap grocery store ones.
This keeps similar things together, and stops small packages from falling down to the bottom. If something I want is near the bottom, I just have to pull a couple of bags out of the top, rather than having to dig for it.
I also use plastic bags within the cloth ones to keep items further sorted, such as all my containers of cooked ground beef together.
I use cardboard boxes in my fridge to keep my less often used condiments and such in (ones I use all the time go in the door). Then when I need one I just have to pull the box partway out and dig through it. No more rooting around in the back of the fridge for a bottle of sauce that I think might be in there.
I've purged our food stocks, but not cleaned the shelves yet. I have remedial dish washing to take care of before I can justify soaping up my cabinets.
I already feel much better, knowing exactly what food I have on hand. Horray KC!
Does anyone have recommendations for home made or greener cleansers?
With such a small place, I'm particularly concerned about keeping the kitchen sink (sans garbage disposal) from developing odor.
Great Friend - garlic stays less messy if you keep it in the butter holder in the door (plus the lid keeps the smell down and the garlic from drying out) I also keep any cut onions in there too for the same reason. They're also always easy to reach
Green cleaners: vinegar usually works, baking soda paste for stubborn stains.
I usually go through periodically to clean mine, and keep it pretty organized. Especially since I don't have a standard sized fridge, just a smaller one. I keep it pretty organized, with baking needs on one shelf and foods to eat on another shelf (freezer). In fridge, I have a rack for cold drinks, and everything else zoned. Drives my boyfriend crazy, but I can tell him where everything is.
I still have a couple of cupboards left to take care of.
KinkyGaspacho, I'd never, ever use glass cleaner, since I have a cat I love and glass cleaner contains very toxic chemicals for her. I only use it on windows, since the can't reach them.
To clean my fridge, I use a mix of white wine vinegar (that 2 euros for a 1 liter bottle here in France), some lemon juice and, if I have some left, either tea tree or lavender essential oil. Even though I'm not entirely convinced of the cleaning power of those oils, they leave a nice scent. And the vinegar is just a miracle cleaner ! Does an amazing job, and the odor is gone in a few minutes. No danger to either people or pets !
It took me all day, but it's done. I really wish I'd taken before photos...
Definitely the most daunting task in the kitchen. Last time I gave my fridge a thorough clean, it took a whole day (and I didn't even do the freezer). It does feel great to be greeted by clean, organized shelves and compartments, though.
only had time to take my before photos and the job looks so daunting after looking at them, i'm intimidated. but i want to be determined. hoping to be through by this friday. we'l see!
I don't think I've ever refrigerated garlic. Why would you do that? They last a pretty long time outside. I keep mine in a little sushi dish on the stove. Yeah it grows and shrivels.... like, several months after I purchase it.
I did this task two weeks ago in a fit of "can't stand this thing any more" - I'm kind of a minimalist, so not a lot to purge, but lots of spills to clean up, and I organized stuff so I can find things better.
I love how you found a lemon and immediately thought "cocktail"! We would be great friends :)
I finished my pantry and put everything back before I realized I forgot to put the shelf liners back. Doh! Just purged the fridge and it is HORRIFYING how many condiments we are throwing away. No more buying stuff like that at Costco. The only thing making this bearable is listening to Robyn and the Shout Out Louds!
I am not entirely done with the fridge yet, it's been busy. I did have a head start because our fridge almost died a week ago and pretty much everything defrosted. I ended up cleaning the freezer then. I cleaned the fridge door last night. Amazing how many little bottles I ended up throwing out. I found strawberry syrup that expired in 2007 :) I still have to do the rest of the fridge today. And then pantry... That scares me. Especially that we have food stored all over.
Can I just say that I thought that I wouldn't have much to throw away in my pantry or fridge, as I just moved into my apartment by myself in May? Oh, how wrong I was! Thanks for helping to keep my kitchen in line from the get-go, Kitchn friends!