it’s probably sanitary but still

by SteponkusCeponas

44 Comments

  1. 123Fake_St

    Yeah…looks like it. You should show this to your guests!

  2. UnNumbFool

    How in any way is using the crisper drawer in the fridge sanitary???

  3. It’s as plastic and boxy as any other plastic box, and you usually can get it out and clean before using is as a turkey vessel. If anything, this idea is really clever.

  4. PrincessPoetress

    As long as she washes the drawer out no harm, no fowl… 🤣🤣🤣

    Seriously tho, if she put it in a bowl or bucket, it’s the same thing… 🤷🏿‍♀️

  5. Slim___Pickens

    I’d be concerned about the weight limit on that drawer.

  6. buttfartsmagee

    If you open that drawer, it’s going to make a huge mess.

  7. christo324

    We did this one year in our “beer” fridge, cleaned the drawer really good, put in the bird, covered it with brine, genius. The problem came when trying to remove the drawer and the bird and the brine without spilling it everywhere. A problem we were unable to solve, which resulted in a huge goddam mess. There was much washing of hands as well as gnashing of teeth and rending of garments, and the smell of Clorox perfumed our garage almost till Christmas.

  8. PeeB4uGoToBed

    Im more worried about leaking than sanitation lol

  9. Dino_Spaceman

    I’d be less worried about sanitation and more worried about how those cheap plastic rails are holding up all that weight.

  10. FormingTheVoid

    Thanks, I hate it. But also, where else would they put it?

  11. Scrabulon

    I feel like it’d be more structurally sound to just remove all the shelves and put a brine bucket in there but 🤷🏻‍♀️

  12. KathTurner

    That’s a good idea, but I probably would’ve put it in a giant plastic bag first and then put it in the drawer.

  13. I guess we know the reliability of that fridge drawer

  14. TheGooberOne

    Other than that thing filled to the brim. I don’t see what’s wrong with it. It’s actually not a bad solution.

    Also note that there is nothing else in the fridge. This person has given some thought to how they would do this.

  15. Primo-Farkus

    That is some serious trust in the strength of those drawers.

  16. omysweede

    Used to do wet brining for years. Lots of hassle and kept my brew keg out of operation.

    Dry brine is the best, and I recommend Alton Browns recipe. 4 days brining but perfect turkey in less than 2 hours.

  17. stevenm1993

    This is both stupid and *somewhat* clever. I don’t own anything large enough to brine a turkey that big. As long as you clean the drawer well before and after, there shouldn’t be a problem. The lower drawer might’ve made more sense, though; you could pull out the top one to ladle in/out the brine before moving the turkey, so all the liquid doesn’t slosh around too much. You could even use a fluid transfer pump (just to drain it into a bucket).

  18. Magical_Olive

    The pre-cleaning seems trivial enough…it’s cleaning it out afterwards that I would absolutely hate.

  19. ManintheGyre

    It’s not stupid if it works and I’m sure with some care it will work fine. I usually use a bucket but fridge space is an issue.

    Also I highly recommend all Turkeys get a long brine bath for maximum juiciness – Alton Brown style. It makes a huge difference.

  20. exnozero

    Turkeys need to be cold and seasoned. We used to use this drawer for the same purpose of an overnight dethaw and brine.

    Now we use an old igloo cooler that’s big enough for turkey and brine. And then put some weight on top to keep the turkey down. And extra ice on top in freezer ziplock bags (so they don’t throw the brine ratio off) but after Alton brown’s recent YouTube video I think I may just buy a digital probe thermometer to make sure the brine is staying cold and add ice as needed instead.

  21. AlarmingDelivery9311

    Its posts like this ppl need to be reminded white ppl stay trying to make other white ppl feel guilty. Perfectly fine way to do something (with the right precautions) but ots gotta be posted in stupid food because someone thinks its stupid.

  22. OriginalChicachu

    Better than doing it in The Great Salt Lake, which apparently people are doing.

  23. Awittynamehere

    Clearly the “garage fridge” that’s where the experiments happen

  24. Lord_Kromdar

    I just run the brine liquid into my dishwasher line and turn it in for a rinse.

  25. Embarrassed_Fan_5723

    Actually if it’s clean this may work.

  26. Llamapocalypse_Now

    Why wouldn’t you put it in a brining bag and then put it in the drawer?

  27. Imaginary_Dig_5014

    You know thats not coming open without splashing everywhere

  28. NecessaryButNotSuff

    Is that one of them new fangled disposable refrigerators? Neat

  29. Morall_tach

    This isn’t stupid. Most people do it in a plastic trash can.

  30. LEMON_PARTY_ANIMAL

    I usually put it in a bag then in the drawer lolllll

  31. tlollz52

    My concern wouldn’t be for is the turkey gonna be fine. Its after I pull the fucker out. It’d be a major PIA to make sure you properly cleaned the shit.

  32. Norkestra

    Scp 1127

    Rating: Keter

    Containment Procedure: Subject is to be kept inside a titanium box, submerged at all times in a liquid compound primarily consisting of saltwater.

    SCP 1127 is to be annually placed into a plastic bag and heated to an interior temperature of 170° until a small device hereby called SCP 1127-A protrudes from the skin. If SCP 1127 is removed prematurely from heating, without SCP 1127-A reaching minimum extrusion length it must be immeadiately placed back into heating or risk a critical meltdown situation codenamed THANKSGIVING in which all humans within the same building as the subject experience severe aggressive outbursts and a breakdown in communication ability. The effect seems to be magnified among humans with familial ties.

  33. Hey-Ac-Acey

    As someone who lives in an active cockroach infestation(I can’t control it really). I was about to yell about bugs but then realized that not everyone has bugs in their house.

  34. Rastamancloud9

    wtf is that debris floating in there 🤢

  35. IMovedYourCheese

    It’s clean, but still stupid.

    * They are greatly exceeding the weight limit of that flimsy plastic. And the drawer isn’t meant to be watertight. One tiny leak and it’s game over.
    * Getting the turkey out will be a pain, and the juices will splash everywhere. Considering the amount they have filled I don’t see how you can even open the drawer cleanly.
    * Cleaning the fridge afterwards will be an even bigger pain, and I’m willing to bet that it doesn’t get done properly. The entire thing is going to smell forever.

    Just do a dry brine and save yourself the trouble. All the water adds nothing.

  36. mentaL8888

    Even if it doesn’t break I wonder how long the plastic will leach the smell of all those spices lol