jadey (
jadey) wrote in
homeeconomics1012010-09-19 10:15 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
trash-sicles
Okay, am I the only person in the world who freezes her garbage?
Clearly not, because my mum is the person who taught me to, but I've had a few people wig when they saw frozen garbage in my freezer and now I'm trying to assure myself I'm not a complete freak.
Mum and I started doing it when we noticed that our kitchen bin was getting stinky well before trash day. Rather than empty it twice as often and store it in the big bin outside (cold in winter, lazy the rest of the time), we took some plastic milk bags and any time there was potentially smelly garbage (e.g., shrimp tails, oily napkins, chicken bones, etc.), we popped it in the freezer. It was a great solution. Now that I'm living in my own place, which doesn't have composting or even recycling (I know ;_;), it's even more vital to me to be able to keep some gunky stuff in the freezer, rather than make trips down to the outside bin all the time (lazy, and also even colder in this province).
But is this weird? Does anyone else do this?
Clearly not, because my mum is the person who taught me to, but I've had a few people wig when they saw frozen garbage in my freezer and now I'm trying to assure myself I'm not a complete freak.
Mum and I started doing it when we noticed that our kitchen bin was getting stinky well before trash day. Rather than empty it twice as often and store it in the big bin outside (cold in winter, lazy the rest of the time), we took some plastic milk bags and any time there was potentially smelly garbage (e.g., shrimp tails, oily napkins, chicken bones, etc.), we popped it in the freezer. It was a great solution. Now that I'm living in my own place, which doesn't have composting or even recycling (I know ;_;), it's even more vital to me to be able to keep some gunky stuff in the freezer, rather than make trips down to the outside bin all the time (lazy, and also even colder in this province).
But is this weird? Does anyone else do this?
no subject
But I'll have to try and do that because the reason I rarely buy shrimps is precisely the way it makes the bin stink something awful. I guess I could manage to free some place in my freezer but plastic bags are hard to come by these days... Anyway, thanks for the tip!
Re: huh
Re: huh
huh
Re: huh
no subject
We do it for liquids we need to get rid of but are too chunky to pour down the drain. It's actually a pretty brilliant idea.
no subject
no subject
It's one of those things that's a good idea in theory but in practice made me want to strangle her.
My mom used to put bacon fat in the fridge to chill before throwing it out, but she didn't like dealing with any spills so she stopped doing that.
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
I don't because my apartment building has a chute in the hallway for tossing garbage down, so mine never builds up. The big smelly pile waiting for trashday is down in the cellar somewhere not near me.
no subject
no subject
I hadn't thought of it, but it sounds like a good idea. My mom keeps a gallon pitcher with a tight lid; it sits on the counter, and she puts the smelly stuff in there until trash day. It works pretty well... until you have to open it and dump something in. Phew! *holds nose*
I keep my apple cores in a plastic bag in the fridge until trash day. (Apple every night, to reduce acid reflux -- it works!) I'm very lazy and don't cook much -- eat a big lunch out when I'm working, then just the apple for supper -- but I keep telling myself that I've got to start cooking again; cheaper to make my lunches than buy them. I'll remember your tip.
.
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
no subject
no subject
* Sometimes deer ate it. Usually it was the possum that lived in the bottom of the wellhouse or the raccoon that lived in the top of the wellhouse that ate it.
no subject