Kenmore ELITE 795.7103 User Manual

Page 22

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FOOD STORAGE GUIDE

Wrap or store food in the refrigerator in airtight and

moisture-proof

material

unless

otherwise

noted.

This

prevents food odor and taste transfer throughout the

refrigerator. For

doted

products,

check dote code to

ensure freshness.

Items

How to

Butter or
margarine

► Keep opened butter in o covered

dish or closed compartment.

When storing on extra supply,

wrap in freezer packaging and

freeze.

Cheese

► Store in the original wrapping

until you ore ready to use it. Once

opened, rewrop tightly in plastic

wrap or aluminum foil.

Milk

► Wipe milk cartons. For best

storage, place milk on interior

shelf, not on door shelf.

Eggs

► Store in original carton on interior

shelf, not on door shelf.

Fruit

► Wash, let dry, and store in

refrigerator in plastic bogs or in

the crisper. Do not wash or hull

fruit until you ore ready to use

them. Sort and keep fruit in its

original container, in o crisper, or

store in o completely closed paper

bog on o refrigerator shelf.

Leafy

vegetables

► Remove store wrapping and trim

or tear off bruised and discolored

areas. Wash in cold water and

drain. Place in plastic bog or

plastic container and store in

crisper.

Vegetables
with skins

(carrots,
peppers)

► Place in plastic bogs or plastic

container and store in crisper.

Fish

► Use fresh fish and shellfish the

some day purchased.

Leftovers

► Cover leftovers with plastic wrap,

aluminum foil, or plastic containers

with tight lids.

STORING FROZEN FOOD

NOTE:

Check o freezer guide or o reliable cookbook

for further information about preparing food for
freezing or food storage times.

Freezing

Your freezer will not quick-freeze a large quantity of
food. Do not put more unfrozen food into the freezer
than will freeze within 24

hours (no more than 2 to 3

lbs. of food per cubic foot of freezer space). Leave
enough space in the freezer for air to circulate around
packages. Be careful to leave enough room at the
front so the door con close tightly.

Storage times will vary according to the quality and
type of food, the type of packaging or wrap used
(how airtight and moisture-proof) and the storage
temperature. Ice crystals inside o sealed package ore
normal. This simply means that moisture in the food
and air inside the package hove condensed, creating
ice crystals.

NOTE:

Allow hot foods to cool at room temperature

for 30 minutes, then package and freeze. Cooling hot
foods before freezing saves energy.

Packaging

Successful freezing depends on correct packaging.
When you close and seal the package, it must not
allow air or moisture in or out. If it does, you could

hove food odor and taste transfer throughout the
refrigerator and could also dry out frozen food.

Packaging recommendations:

• Rigid plastic containers with tight-fitting lids
• Straight-sided canning/freezing jars
• Heavy-duty aluminum foil
• Plostic-cooted paper
• Non-permeoble plastic wraps
• Specified freezer-grade self-sealing plastic bogs
Follow package or container instructions for proper
freezing methods.

Do not use

• Bread wrappers
• Non-polyethylene plastic containers
• Containers without tight lids
• Wax paper or wox-cooted freezer wrap
• Thin, semi-permeoble wrap

A

CAUTION:

Do not keep beverage cons or plastic

food containers in the freezer compartment. They may
break or burst if they freeze.

22

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