Like many of you, we have a couple of chest freezers here on the rancho. Inevitably, we lose power during snow storms, or rain storms, or electric storms, or if the wind blows, or just about any darn reason it feels like going out. That's rural electric I guess.
Anyway, we learned long ago that if you were going to live here, contingencies had to be put in place. During the storm seasons, we store about 35% of the freezers capacity with block ice, at their bottom. We freeze water in 13 gallon plastic bags by placing them filled and tied into heavy square cardboard boxes, usually six to each freezer. They do the job nicely and the bonus of course, is that you have water when it thaws. During the last incident, we had just bought around $500.00 worth of beef, pork and poultry, when an ice storm hit and we lost the power for over a week. We used the generator once about mid week for each freezer, for about three hours, and there wasn't as much as a drop of water melted. This was during a cold winter but the house was around 70 degrees where the freezers are placed thanks to wood burning stoves and propane fired fireplaces, so I can't say how it would work under other conditions, in other climates. What I do agree with other posters here, are that the blocks are undoubtedly longer lasting than those made from smaller containers. But you have to work with what you got, or sport a big appetite.....or have one hell of a dinner fiesta!
Mrs. Oldflatfoot had been complaining that the ice was a waste of space and electric.....just up to the day we bought all that meat. I think she feels otherwise now.
Cheers;
Lefty