Food Storage Frustrations
Oct 15, 2012 10:22:53 GMT
Post by Don Cuevas on Oct 15, 2012 10:22:53 GMT
With this, I'm returning to a familiar topic: food storage containers, their selection, purchase and management.
This is just my opinion, based on my experiences: the attractive sets of storage containers, often at attractive prices, just lead to frustration and heartbreak. See below.
What's wrong with that set? You may well ask.
What's wrong is that there are no two pieces alike, so that for practical usage, it has extremely limited utility. What do you do when the 1 pint container is needed but is already in use?
The glass/Pyrex bottom is a cool feature it would seem, but in reality it's a flawed concept. Look how the ends of the lids protrude, thus hogging storage room in fridge or freezer.
Why? Because when you need to bake something, there's a strong chance that the container is already holding something in storage, and thus is unavailable.
Advice: Don't use your baking and cooking dishes for storage. Get separate containers for the latter. They are two independent functions.
They are also different shapes as well as sizes. That bodes ill for when you want to stack some in your fridge or freezer.
The DON CUEVAS FOOD STORAGE CONTAINER SYSTEM, developed after years of hard earned experience, addresses these questions in a practical way.
For a starter kit, buy 8 to 12 containers of exactly the same type, brand, shape and capacity.
Buy half as many containers that are as close to twice the capacity of the first ones. "Four to six".
Buy as many containers, again, same shape and style, of half the capacity of the first. But wait a month or two to get a better idea of your needs.
Use these for a while until you get a feel of the ebb and flow of storage containers in and out of use. Then buy supplementary containers, always of the same brand, always of the same conformation, and differing only in their capacity.
Here in Mexico, we have discovered "JOY" food storage containers. They are sturdy, the lids come in various colors (and try not to mix up the colors of lids amongst containers of the same size. It adds to confusion.) They are not too expensive.
Here's their web site, specifically the page of square food storage containers: www.joytp.com/hermeticos/cuadrados/651.html
A photo:
I see by the JOYTP.com web site that the containers come 12 to a case. That's probably how we should have bought them, especially the most useful for us, the 850 ml. size. But we didn't know.
I'll end with one more bit of advice: NEVER, EVER get a competing brand or style from the one from which you have started. It's really frustrating to search for a correct lid amidst a variegated collection.
Avoid fancy closures, such as the 4-piece snap-lock Rubbermaid item which my wife insisted on buying to hold some cured olives for our flight from Newark to Mexico City. A couple of plastic bags, one inside the other, could have done as well, at far less cost. It's possible that the container cost more than the olives. Now we have this ungainly box with fancy closure. It just is in the way, not to mention that it takes too long to open. Overengineering in action.
I looked it up on the Rubbermaid web site. It's called a Lockit.
here's a picture:
I've had my say. Now, it's your turn.
This is just my opinion, based on my experiences: the attractive sets of storage containers, often at attractive prices, just lead to frustration and heartbreak. See below.
What's wrong with that set? You may well ask.
What's wrong is that there are no two pieces alike, so that for practical usage, it has extremely limited utility. What do you do when the 1 pint container is needed but is already in use?
The glass/Pyrex bottom is a cool feature it would seem, but in reality it's a flawed concept. Look how the ends of the lids protrude, thus hogging storage room in fridge or freezer.
Why? Because when you need to bake something, there's a strong chance that the container is already holding something in storage, and thus is unavailable.
Advice: Don't use your baking and cooking dishes for storage. Get separate containers for the latter. They are two independent functions.
They are also different shapes as well as sizes. That bodes ill for when you want to stack some in your fridge or freezer.
The DON CUEVAS FOOD STORAGE CONTAINER SYSTEM, developed after years of hard earned experience, addresses these questions in a practical way.
For a starter kit, buy 8 to 12 containers of exactly the same type, brand, shape and capacity.
Buy half as many containers that are as close to twice the capacity of the first ones. "Four to six".
Buy as many containers, again, same shape and style, of half the capacity of the first. But wait a month or two to get a better idea of your needs.
Use these for a while until you get a feel of the ebb and flow of storage containers in and out of use. Then buy supplementary containers, always of the same brand, always of the same conformation, and differing only in their capacity.
Here in Mexico, we have discovered "JOY" food storage containers. They are sturdy, the lids come in various colors (and try not to mix up the colors of lids amongst containers of the same size. It adds to confusion.) They are not too expensive.
Here's their web site, specifically the page of square food storage containers: www.joytp.com/hermeticos/cuadrados/651.html
A photo:
I see by the JOYTP.com web site that the containers come 12 to a case. That's probably how we should have bought them, especially the most useful for us, the 850 ml. size. But we didn't know.
I'll end with one more bit of advice: NEVER, EVER get a competing brand or style from the one from which you have started. It's really frustrating to search for a correct lid amidst a variegated collection.
Avoid fancy closures, such as the 4-piece snap-lock Rubbermaid item which my wife insisted on buying to hold some cured olives for our flight from Newark to Mexico City. A couple of plastic bags, one inside the other, could have done as well, at far less cost. It's possible that the container cost more than the olives. Now we have this ungainly box with fancy closure. It just is in the way, not to mention that it takes too long to open. Overengineering in action.
I looked it up on the Rubbermaid web site. It's called a Lockit.
here's a picture:
I've had my say. Now, it's your turn.