Fridge Clean Out – Vegetables Past and Present

“Woolies is empty and all the carrots are here.”

– William Shakespeare, ‘The Grocery Shop’.

Scared that a celebrity chef might drop in unannounced and ask to cook from your fridge supplies? 

Have you been placing new vegetables on top of old vegetables in your crisper, hoping the rotten ones will just disappear? 

Did you make a plan to eat healthier, then realise that you don’t even like chives?

Perhaps you just want the comfort of knowing that all the cheese you’ve been buying hasn’t formed into one solid lump and become a dairy-monster.

Let’s give that fridge a clean out, and stop that monster in his tracks!

In this post, I’ll shed some light on what happens when you buy multiple bags of kale; learn that it’s “Brussels Sprouts” not “Brussel Sprouts” and then spill the ones I bought onto the ground; make the kitchen even messier as I try to clean it; forget about the things in the fridge door, and generally play with my food.

vegetable or vegeterrible?

Obviously it’s ‘vegetable’ … unless you hate vegetables, in which case why do you have so many in your fridge? Do you just like to buy zucchini to watch them liquify in your crisper? That’s a bit weird, my friend. I mean, I do it on accident – but I wouldn’t purposefully sentence a courgette to a slow death if I didn’t ever intend to sentence it to the fast death that is being my dinner.
 
Anyway, I digress. Who hates cleaning out their fridge? Everyone! Correct. Give yourself 2 teaspoons of yoghurt. 
 
In this day and age, a fridge should really know how to clean itself. Also, it should tell you when the asparagus you bought is going to wilt, or when the 8 pouches of ham you bought on special, are about to go to ham-heaven without you having made that toastie you were going to ‘cook’ for a work lunch.
 

Sadly, the fridge that I currently have isn’t a cyborg and can’t do things that I should be doing for my own health and happiness. If you’re in the same refrigerated boat, let’s clean out our cooler cupboards together. 

I’ve waited until the end of the work week when my energy is lowest, and my vegetables are at their grossest – which I can only assume will mean this goes smoothly. 

We’re also having a food shop delivery soon, so need to make some space for new tasty treats that we promise we’ll use ‘best before’ – whatever that means.
Fishbird Draws
Fridge Clean Out
Our fridge. Complete with shadow ghost and postcard of Patagotitan.
Inside Fridge
Too many cauliflowers and an orange juice we didn't order but will drink anyway.

first thing's first ...

Fridge Clean Out - Coffee break
View from our local coffee shop.
Fridge clean out - sustenance
Pain au chocolat - don't be suspicious.
Fridge Clean Out
Nothing to see here but a little apricot danish.

Now, your fridge isn’t a cyborg – we’ve established that. But are you 100% sure that it’s not even the tiniest bit sentient after living around humans for so long? If, like me, you tend to err on the side of caution – the first step to a good fridge clean is to trick it into thinking it’s the last thing on your mind. Go out and grab yourself a coffee. If you suspect that your refrigerator is extra wily, then maybe also invest in a choc croissant and an apricot danish.

clean your fridge
Haha a bird came to the tennis.
Clean your fridge
A crime read and a hot coffee - not a fridge in sight! Also, apparently I have a 'reading claw'.

There is a slight danger, that as well as distracting your fridge from its imminent clean – you’ll also distract yourself from the chore you were supposed to be doing.

Some of us might accidentally find ourselves watching ‘Animals on the Court’ – funny clips of when birds and lizards walked onto a tennis court during an important game. Others might pick up the closest David Baldacci crime thriller and get lost in the antics of a fictional FBI Detective when we should be solving our own crimes.

time to get fresh

Ok, it’s time to face the music – or in this case, face the 3 packets of open cheese slices that have probably seen better dairy days. Why did we open more cheese when there was already cheese to be had? Who knows – probably poltergeists. There’s also one slice of very processed cheese from a mystery packet, that I’m sure has been in there for months and is just as fresh as the day it was pressed. That can’t be good.

Don’t be disheartened if, when you’re just getting on a roll, the fridge makes you drop a punnet of Brussels sprouts. Everyone’s pretty so-so about eating them anyway, and you did your best. We’ll buy some more and try again another time. You’re also probably going to find at least 3 of them behind the fridge when you move – so there’s that to look forward to.

Drag the rest of the fridge contents onto the bench, and do a stocktake. Remember “Anything that is more squish than delish, throw away. Anything that can be saved – saute away.” Not now though, saute when it’s cooking time.

 

fridge clean out
A slice of life - cheese life.
brussels sprouts
Like sprouts through the hourglass, so are the Brussels of our lives. I put a filter on this shot, as our floor grout isn't 'internet ready'.
clean your fridge
No more secrets - celery stalks for days.
fridge clean out
A little greener every day, indeed.
fridge clean out
We've never had a vampire in the house.
Fishbird Draws
Judging you on your lack of food prep. Also, waiting on scraps.

I made a decision to take all the oldest veg out of their plastic sarcophagi and keep them loose in the (newly washed) crisper. Taking the cauliflower for example, out of its wrappings – seems like it will trick me into thinking it’s less of a process to cook it, than if I also had the VERY high hurdle of having to deal with cling wrap.

Also, why do they make such large bags of spinach and kale mix? I can only assume (I do a lot of that) that it’s because nobody likes it much and they (the kale corporation) need to get rid of their greenery. We only ever seem to use half a bag at most before it gives up.

Make sure you check all the ‘use by’ dates on your condiments. Did you know that basil doesn’t last forever? Not even garlic will wait for you to eat it. Luckily they’re all still good, and we’re guaranteed continued protection from any supernatural vampiric night knocks.

fridge clean out
Carrot is as carrot does.
fridge clean out
Lots of greens - the good kind.
fridge clean out
Cauliflower bites ready to be bitten.

Sorting through your supplies is half the job. The other half is knocking your head on the inside of the fridge as you lean in to wipe out the food crumbs and sauce spills.

I found that putting the shelves and ‘fresh bin’ on the carpet after washing, gave them time to have a look out the door and appreciate a different perspective before they went back to their home. Also, I’d made quite a few puddles of fridge water on the kitchen floor by this point, and the carpet was the only dry spot.

fridge clean out
Clean and ready for another few months of holding cheese.
fridge clean out
Fresh Room. For food only - don't climb in.

you're so cool!

With a nice clean fridge, you’re ready to restock with all your favourite treats. And carrots.

We tend to use the ‘Fresh Room’ at the top for our most important food – like chocolate and old sultanas. Butter, fruit and breakfasty stuff tends to go on the first shelf, then it’s a free-for-all on the rest of the shelves. But you do you, friend.

If you didn’t ‘get a chance’ to clean the jam jars in the fridge door, don’t beat yourself up about it – jam is one of the few things that DO last forever, and you’ll be right to keep eating that without checking its dates.

Give yourself a big pat on the back, and take a cauliflower floret for later. You’re amazing. Cooler than “The Fonz” on a frosty day, and now have the fridge to prove it.

Fridge clean out
New groceries, ready to be fridge friends.
Fridge Clean Out
Get in your new house, food!

Let's Chat 🙂

Share this:

Like this:

Like Loading...
error: Thank you for not copying our images.