Interior Design

To Understand the Way You Eat, Take a Look at Your Fridge

October  1, 2015

Refrigerator design is more important than you think.

Today, we're giving refrigerators much-deserved thought (and offering a peek inside some of our staff's fridges).


Lauren Locke's fridge, with French doors (and Lillet!).


It turns out that how you eat isn't just about what food you buy, where you buy it, or what you make with it—it’s also about where you’re putting it. Your refrigerator is a mirror onto your eating and cooking habits. 

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But how much thought have you put into it lately? Not its dirty shelves nor why on earth there’s cereal in there (yes, our head of customer experience Lauren Kelley keeps cereal in the refrigerator—see below for proof)—but rather its layout.

Professor of history Jonathan Rees wrote not one but two books on the subject. His most recent, Refrigerator (part of a collection called Object Lessons), came out just last Thursday.


Lauren Kelley keeps Cheerios in the refrigerator.


Rees' theory is that refrigerator design is a reflection of food culture—to study how it has evolved over time and how it differs between various world regions is to analyze how people shop for and cook food in that time and place. The design of refrigerators—the shape, the color, the shelf arrangement, the fancy features (like a vegetable crisper or a "Cool Zone" or an ice maker)—reflects and affects the way we shop and eat. 

Some of the relationships Rees discusses in his book are, as he admits, obvious: 

First and foremost, there's the size. For those who have traveled between the U.S. and Europe, the most striking difference is that refrigerators here are mammoth in comparison. Fifteen or twenty years ago, a very large fridge might have meant 22 cubic feet, but now, Amazon has a whole category of refrigerators larger than 30. A big fridge means you don’t have to shop as much: You might drive to Walmart or Costco every Sunday, pack your car full of groceries, and stock up for the next couple of weeks. And for those who live far from the grocery store, that’s the most convenient option.

  
Gabi's tall and narrow steel fridge vs. Leslie's shorter, wider, plastic-coated one.


In European cities, where markets are aplenty and space is limited, there's no great big reason to have a great big fridge. The refrigerators in Paris are rail-thin compared to those in Houston; they're not a little smaller—they're half the width, and it's a sign both of the frequency with which people shop (shopping more often means storing less) and of the value of floor space. In European cities in particular, where square footage is such a high-priced commodity, the goal is to take up as little room as possible.

When editor Ali had to buy a refrigerator in Rome this past summer, she and her boyfriend physically picked it up from the store, put it in a cab, and took it back to the apartment—it was that light. Erin McDowell, who recently bought an Italian-designed Smeg fridge for her New Jersey home, also noticed how small it was compared to the refrigerator she grew up with: "The good news is, unlike a standard fridge, it's light enough to lift easily, which should make moving it easier!" 

  
Hillary's very full fridge vs. Amanda's very empty one (she admits to eating dumplings on most nights).


Beyond the size of the refrigerator, there's also the color. Steel is the fridge color in the U.S. According to Rees, this is a recent preference intended to make refrigerators more inviting to men. In a space that has been almost exclusively a woman's domain, the steel connotes industry and makes men feel, at least subconsciously, more comfortable. 

Then, there are the accessories—the accoutrements and ritzy features that, Rees says, will tell you something about how important the refrigerator is to the owner but which aren't crucial to the refrigeration technology. The real improvements in refrigerator energy efficiency happened in the 1970s, explains Rees—basic refrigerator function and design hasn't really changed in over 50 years.

   
Lindsay-Jean's fridge (she keeps flour in the freezer) vs. Karl's (he keeps Campari on the door). 


When you're upgrading your fridge or buying a new model, what you're paying for is additional square footage and/or assorted features (some refrigerators counterintuitively even spout hot water!)—not innovative technology.

Many of the expensive models "have features that serve no purpose related to keeping food fresh, like sparkling water dispensers or a hidden third door. With such features, refrigerators have become important tools for conspicuous consumption, a way to braodcast your economic status to guests in your home."

  
Our Electrolux test kitchen fridge (note the vast quantities of grapes and the parchment rolls of cookie dough).


Even Erin's Smeg came with "standard with a variety of compartments that [she] didn't really need. Large metal bottle holders (it would make a great beverage fridge in a home), built in egg holders, lots of mini dividers, etc." Erin removed most of these pieces and readjusted the shelves to suit her particular needs.

Ali's Italian refrigerator, on the other hand, consisted of only shelves (and not plastic shelves—rubber-coated metal shelves): It has no drawers, no vegetable crisper, no cheese drawer, and no freezer compartment).

  
The test kitchen butter abundance (left) and our team kitchen fridge, starring prosciutto (right). 


But Rees would rather see every person have a refrigerator with a hot water dispenser (or another extraneous accessory) than see massive 40 or 50 cubic feet fridges in personal homes: Companies "sell people bigger fridges because they want to convince them to get rid of their old fridge even when it’s still operating." 

"If things continue like that," Rees says, "that would really affect what we eat in a sense that everything will have to be able to survive for an extended period of time. It will have a bad effect on the planet and on the American palate."

So the next time you're attracted to the refrigerator with four doors and three evaporators and a platinum cooling system, consider just reorganizing your current model instead

What type of fridge do you have (and how did you select it)? Tell us in the comments! 

See what other Food52 readers are saying.

  • Vladislava Vaneckova
    Vladislava Vaneckova
  • Frank
    Frank
I used to work at Food52. I'm probably the person who picked all of the cookie dough out of the cookie dough ice cream.

2 Comments

Vladislava V. October 5, 2015
As a European, I need to say that my fridge it tiny! I know it's big enough, it's not the smallest of fridges and I'm fully aware of the fact that I'm just being grumpy. But I feed 5 people day-to-day using a 7 cubic feet fridge for that purpose. So yes, it is packed. And yes, I need to go shopping twice a week at least. The freezer is a whole different thing. The fridge only has one tiny freezer compartment ("the handy freezer" we call it) and I have a big freezer that we bought when we moved from a city to a village. Maybe even slightly bigger than the fridge. All in all, I consider myself lucky to have all this floor space for appliances.
 
Frank October 4, 2015
As is the case most of the time, Europeans have the upper hand in function over form. Americans are the "look what I have" society. I'm an American that would love to live the European lifestyle, either here or there (preferably there). I truly wish we could design our cities and lifestyles to accommodate the smaller more practical way of living on our planet. Nobody NEEDS a McMansion with walk in Sub Zero Freezers. Love these types of articles. Nice writing and a good subject.