Fridges

Which type of fridge do you have?


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NickyJ

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I got into a discussion recently about fridges, mostly about top freezers and side by sides. I am of the opinion that side by side fridges are now more common than top freezers, but I am interested in seeing which type is most common the OT users' households.
 
What about bottom freezers? Do they still make those? Or people with separate fridges and iceboxes?
 
What is a top freezer
What is a side by side.

I have a fridge freezer with a fridge on top of a freezer.
http://www.onyougo.com/samsung-rl36sbms-refrigerators_pi788651

Some people have a model with the freezer on top of the fridge but they are not common as people use the fridge most so do not want to bend down to get to the fridge.
 
Top freezer. Bottom freezers are allegedly more energy efficient so I might look into one of those eventually.

Side-by-side are sooo 80s. :p
 
People actually use side-by-side? I've never seen one in my life except in the corner of Leons stores.
 
I recently replaced mine, but went with a top freezer again due to space limitations in my kitchen (I have cabinets above the fridge which would inhibit tall fridges, and I have width limitations too.
 
I have a top freezer, but my parents have always had a side-by-side.
 
I'm not sure where mine fits. The freezer is on the bottom.

Spoiler :
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please don't think i'm being provocative - i would genuinely be interested to learn:

how do you think you would manage if suddenly your fridges all stopped working? say for one year?

i'm guessing that it would involve a major change in life style.

could you handle it, if you had to?
 
Top freezer. Both the old one and the recent one.

Some of the 4 degree fridges in the lab are also top freezers.
 
The only varieties I am aware of is the full hight with the fridge above and the freezer below and the under counter with a small ice box at the top.

In 36 years and redoing many kitchens for myself an others I've never seen a "side by side" or a "top freezer" excepting undercounter sized efforts.
 
Side-by-side.

Didn't realize I was a minority.
 
please don't think i'm being provocative - i would genuinely be interested to learn:

how do you think you would manage if suddenly your fridges all stopped working? say for one year?

i'm guessing that it would involve a major change in life style.

could you handle it, if you had to?

It would be a minor change in our lifestyle - we'd get by just fine. In fact, we'd probably eat healthier.

We currently have a chest freezer which we use to store fruits, stocks, and some veggies when they're not in season. So we would not have frozen fruits to eat during the winter. OK, then we'll dry them. Not a problem. Stocks we always make at the time of butchery - but I suppose we couldn't store them for very long without a refrigeration. That would have to change. The veggies we store are mostly added to stir-fries and casseroles, so I don't think that would be a big deal.

The vast majority of our food is provided by the CSA* and farmer's market. We supplement with dry goods (nuts, pasta, tofu, condiments) from a traditional grocery-type store.

Here's a list of things we normally have on hand all week long (we shop once a week) that would not last:
Half & Half (also known as light cream)
Butter
Creme Fraiche (assuming it's summer)

Wow - I really thought that list was going to be longer, but I realized that those are the only things we would have to find another way to manage. We rarely keep meat in the house, but when we do it's either cooked / cured right away or it's for the dog.

One very important thing to note: We live in NYC, and there is a very robust farmer's market program here. It operates year round, and the one that we go to has everything we need. Yes, January - March is a little bland, but we both love Cabbage & Kale, so it's not really an issue ;)

*CSA = Community Supported Agriculture. A group of people arrange with a group of farms to provide an amount of food every week or month. People pay up front, farm gets money at the start of the season lessening risk, and then they send off the food as it ripens. It's a wonderful form of economic exchange. We've been doing this for about 6 years now, and we *always* feel that we're getting the better end of the deal. Even with the hurricane damage last august we still got hundreds of pounds of fresh organic / low spray food.
 
I've not really been aware of that freezers can be at other places besides the top ^^.
(maybe german standardization :dunno:, but I really haven't seen any others)

In a full hight fridge? Why? If you access the fridge every time you make any kind of beverage or meal thats literally dozens of times a day. The freezer you need once or twice a week. Why in gods name would you put the fridge so you had to bend over to access it dozens of times a day with the freezer at counter top level. It's a time and motion catastrophe.
 
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