Cooler Tips & Advice
Using two coolers is the best arrangement. Use one for beverages that will be opened more frequently and
one for foodstuffs that will be opened less often. Food will stay fresh
much longer packed in a separate cooler. Match cooler sizes to the size of
the group and the amount of time you plan to be out. If you’re camping, a
54-quart cooler should provide ample room to store food for two or three
people for two days, especially if meals prepared later in your outing are
made from canned or dried ingredients.
Packing a cooler to maximize efficiency doesn’t require a degree in rocket
science, but a good game plan and common sense will ensure that goods stay
fresh and ice lasts as long as possible. Try these helpful tips:
-
Pre-chill drinks and foods –
Ice lasts longer when items in a cooler are already cold. For instance, a
six-pack or a gallon of liquid at room temperature melts about 1 1/2
pounds of ice just to cool down. Pre-chill coolers by placing a few ice
cubes inside an hour or so before loading your cold beverages and food.
-
Put ice in last – Cold air
travels down. Load cans and bottles first, then cover with ice for maximum
cold-keeping.
-
Use crushed or block ice –
Crushed ice cools food and drinks fast; block ice lasts longer. As an
alternative to block ice, prefreeze drinking water or juices in clean milk
jugs. They’ll help keep foods cold and provide a handy source of cold
beverages as they thaw.
-
Put foods in “chronological”
order – Pack foods that will be consumed last on the bottom and work
upward, storing first-used and often-used items on top. Store perishable
foods like meat and dairy products directly on ice. Keep foods dry by
using sealed plastic containers or zip-closure plastic bags.
-
Keep coolers out of the sun –
Ice lasts as much as twice as long in the shade. To keep warm air out and
cold air in, open the lid only when necessary and close it right away.
While traveling, pack picnic blankets, sleeping bags or clothing around
the cooler to insulate it even more.
-
Don’t drain cold water – Water
from just-melted ice keeps contents cold almost as well as ice and
preserves the remaining ice much better than air space. Drain the water
only when necessary for convenient removal of cooler contents or before
adding more ice.
Check back here now and again. We’ll be adding tips from
time to time.
|