Search Smart Spending:

Cut your food costs with a stand-alone freezer

Posted Jun 22 2009, 07:46 AM by Karen Datko
Rating:

This post comes from J.D. Roth at partner blog Get Rich Slowly.

Kris and I recently bought another side of beef. Well, to be more accurate, we purchased one third of a cow. Every year, we go in with several other families to split an animal. This year, our portion of the purchase comprised:

  • 46 pounds of lean hamburger (in 24 packs).
  • About 36 pounds of roasts (in 10 packs).
  • 31¼ pounds of steak (in 20 packs).

We also received 2¼ pounds of beef tongue that we're giving to the guys at the box factory. José and Jesus tell me that lengua is delicious, but I'm not willing to prepare it myself. (If they want to make something for me, I'll eat it.)

We received a total of just over 115½ pounds of beef for $425, which is $3.68 per pound. (In December 2006, we paid $300 for 83 pounds of beef, which works out to $3.61 per pound. In November 2007, we paid $277 for 81 pounds of beef, or $3.42 per pound.)

The problem is, Kris and I can't eat this much beef. We love it (sorry, vegetarians), and we think we're getting a great deal at this price, but we're not willing to prepare beef more than once a week. This year, we recruited help. We found two other families to split our share. They each gave us $100, and we gave them one-quarter of our load.

This still leaves us with a lot of meat. Fortunately, we have a 20-year-old upright freezer, which we picked up for free from one of Kris' co-workers. This freezer is a godsend. We use it to store our beef, and plenty of other food besides. But whenever I mention the freezer, I get comments asking me how cost-effective it really is. That's a great question. I finally found time to answer it.

Using my Kill-a-Watt electricity meter, I took four readings of the freezer's power consumption.

  • After 47 hours, the freezer had consumed 3.13 kilowatt-hours of electricity (for an average use of 67 watts).
  • After 70.5 hours, it had used 4.73 kwh (67 watts).
  • After 116 hours, it had used 8.07 kwh (70 watts).
  • After 154 hours, it had used 10.69 kwh (69 watts).

For ease of calculation, let's say that our freezer seems to be using an average of 70 watts, or about 1.68 kwh per day. That's 613.2 kwh per year. Because our electricity costs us 12 cents per kwh, that's a total cost of just over 20 cents per day. It costs us about $75 a year to run the upright freezer. A newer, more efficient model would no doubt cost even less to operate.

"How do you feel about that cost?" I asked Kris once we'd computed the numbers. "Do you think it's worth it?"

"Totally," she said. "And here's why. Having the freezer gives us flexibility because it lets us stock up on things when prices are good, instead of just when we run out. If I see that butter is on sale, I can stock up."

"That's not all," she said. "Because of the freezer, we're able to buy a lot of things in bulk, which brings the cost per unit down. Like those Costco bags of shredded cheese that I use in soups, quesadillas, tacos and other stuff. I just divide it up into reasonable portions and stick it in the freezer."

"Yeah," I said. "And I guess I'm able to buy several boxes of my favorite Trader Joe's items, which means we don't have to make extra trips, which would require more gas and more time shopping."

"Right," said Kris. "Finally, don't forget the most important reason for having a freezer. It lets me preserve a lot of food from our garden. We've been using frozen jam, berries, and pasta sauce all winter. I've already added a batch of strawberry jam and 12 cups of frozen berries from this month's berry crop." I licked my lips at the thought of fresh strawberry jam as Kris continued: "I've never run the numbers, but I don't have to. I'm certain the freezer saves us more than $6 per month."

For more info about the cost-effectiveness of a stand-alone freezer, check out:

This is the first time I've really used the Kill-a-Watt to help evaluate my financial choices. For my next experiment, I'm going to measure how much electricity Kris' computer and monitor use. How much energy (and money) could we save by turning those off when they're not in use?

Related reading at Get Rich Slowly:

How to buy a side of beef

Review: Kill-a-Watt electricity usage meter

Unit pricing: Get more food for less money

Comments

 

I have never worked out what the electric costs of owning/using my freezer because I am just so thankful for the convenience. I never have to worry about whether there’s room in the refrigerator freezer when I run across a good sale or decide to stock up at the big box stores. IMO my freezer is one of the best purchases I’ve ever made.

Great tip, except for frozen beef is not quite the same as fresh. Even frozen Omaha steaks are tougher and less flavorful than fresh loss leaders at my local supermarket

:(

If it is just for the hamburger, summer is great time to buy it. I lucked into $1.99/lb recently per pound it still beats the side of beef

Agreed Elena - buy watching prices at the store, buying and stocking up what meat is on sale, I spend a lot less on meat then that a year.

But then I am also of the opinion that meat should be treated as a side not a main dish - lots of fruit and veggies for the main, a little meat and starch.

"Even frozen Omaha steaks are tougher and less flavorful than fresh loss leaders at my local supermarket"

Seriously, I have never found any of the meat available at the grocery store to be comparable to Omaha Steaks. They are flash frozen and awesome! They are also a little too expensive to have on a regular basis. :)

We have a small chest freezer and it is always full and its only the two of us. We freeze day old bread and buy the family packs of chicken, hamberger, etc(on sale) and separate them into smaller portions. Right now pork seems to running pretty cheap and we have alot of it. We also buy(on sale) and freeze peppers and fruit while they are in season. This small freezer has saved us soooooooo much money.

If you are going to purchase one try and get a chest freezer they use a lot less energy than an upright.

My mother used her big chest freezer for years, until it finally bit the dust a couple summers ago. She used to freeze veggies from the garden and stocked up on things when they went on sale. After I moved into my own apartment, my fridge had such a dinky little freezer in it. I used to stock up on things and "borrowed" freezer space from Mom. By that time she was living alone too, and didn't need the whole freezer space for herself anyway, so it worked out well for both of us. Of course they say a full freezer is more energy efficient than one that's not full, but you can always freeze jugs of water to fill up the empty space. And, a friend of mine shared a tip with me. After her husband lost his job, they were really struggling to make ends meet. She said she would try to buy extra milk when it went on sale and freeze it. She would pour a little out into another container, to allow for the milk to expand as it froze. She said it tasted fine when it was thawed out again. With a couple young kids who drank a lot of milk, this really helped them save money on milk.

Always had a seperate freezer, great, also bought 1/2 beefs, specials on pork and chicken, plus other items. Frozen meats will last 6 mos to a yr.

For hamburger beef, not pork, buy boneless roasts of about 4 lbs at $1.89 to $2.49 lb and the butcher should grind it for you free! Same plain hamburger is selling for $2.99 lb! (most grinders are for one type of meat only, beef, as it has to be cleaned to do pork). These 4 lb roasts, both beef and pork, are also so delicious cooked whole, with seasonings, in a slow-cooker! LKD

Lengua is amazing, you should have the homies hook you up with tacos after they prepare it.

There are two essential appliances in our home:  Our freezer and our Foodsaver vacuum.  

I also date everything that goes into the freezer, as contrary to what a number of people believe, frozen food cannot be stored indefinitely.

Tongue tacos? I don't think I could do it... ;)

I'm thinking of investing in a small chest freezer. My fridge/freezer is full (a blessing), and I keep seeing amazing sales this summer! It would have to be the smallest model, though, as we live in a small apartment, but I know people who still have separate freezers in small apartments.

Send a Comment

Comments must be directly related to the blog entry. Comments with offensive language will be deleted. Your e-mail address won't be displayed.

(please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):