About three weeks ago, I was cooking a shepherd’s pie.
I will now pause to address the concerns raised by the UK cooks every time this is mentioned. In UK, shepherd’s pie is made with minced lamb and cottage pie is made with minced beef. In US, any dish that involves layers of corn or beans, followed by ground meat/meat substitute topped with mashed potatoes and then cheese is called a shepherd’s pie.
There we go, the grand battle over minor cultural differences is avoided. Where was I?
I was making Gordon’s shepherd’s pie, opened a bag of shredded cheese, dipped my hand in there and felt something slimy. The cheese didn’t pass the smell test so I tossed it. I had just bought it a couple of days before, but what are you going to do? I opened a new bag and went on with cooking.
Three days later, I was making an egg scramble for breakfast. Nothing special, some sliced sausage browned, mushrooms, eggs, favorite seasoning with some garlic scrambled in the same pan, and a bit of cheese on top.
The new bag of cheese had gone bad.
This was not normal. Typically, the cheese doesn’t go bad in our fridge. Sometimes it dries, but we usually consume it before it goes sour. This was sour.
I open the fridge. The temperature indicator is at 35 degrees. I look at it. I touch things. They seem cold but maybe not cold enough? I get my cooking thermometer, turn it on, stick it in the fridge, and promptly forget about it.
An hour later I go in to grab something and check the thermometer. 55 F.
Any temperature above 40 degrees means we are growing bacteria at an exponential rate.
I open the crisper drawers where the produce is. Rot City. The Brussel sprouts went bad, and they never go bad. There is eggnog in this fridge. The eggnog my eggnog-fiend husband has been drinking for the past few days. There are leftovers. There are… You get the picture. I clean the fridge out.
My only refrigerator option is the small fridge in the craft room, which we use as a beverage fridge. It doesn’t hold much, but I can get new eggs, new milk, and new coffee creamer and put it in there.
The kitchen fridge is a Subzero 640, meaning it is 48 x 84 x 24 inches, and the previous owners built the kitchen around it. It is 27 years old and hideously expensive. I know this because two summers ago we paid way too much money to repair the freezer. We opted for the repair because buying a new fridge was prohibitively expensive and due to the pandemic, there were shortages, and we would have to wait months for one.
We were assured that the repair would hold, but we were warned that the lifespan of this fridge is about 20 years. The freezer is still working.
We try to get a repair. There is exactly one factory technician working on these in the area and there is a wait.
Replacing the fridge with a different, cheaper model, is not an option. Refrigerators come in two basic types – freestanding and built in. Our fridge is built in and if we replace it with the freestanding fridge, not only would it not fit into the cabinet, protrude, and have venting issues, but the island would prevent the doors from comfortably opening.
The election is coming up. The tensions are high. For reasons that I will go into below, the fridge is a pressure point for me. I have to have a working refrigerator.
On top of that, we are editing this book that needs way too much work and we are behind in our writing schedule. This adds stress, because if we don’t finish soon and write something else, we are going to have budget issues next year. I’m already stressed beyond all reason, and I need this fridge disaster like a hole in the head.
We talk about it and despite the awful cost – I’m not going to tell you how much, because I don’t want to cause a collective BDH heart attack – we decide to replace it. We can’t keep throwing $2,500 at it every year or two to repair it. This is the kind of emergency that savings are for.
I start researching and find out that SubZero has a new model with the exact same dimensions. If I can find a unit, it’s a straight swap. I call around to the local dealers. Great, we find a unit in stock and they can deliver it on Friday, election week.
The dealer sends a link to pay. I pay.
Payment pending. We will text you the receipt.
What does this mean? What do you mean, it’s pending? It should be an instant draft.
Maybe it takes a bit. I email the dealer, letting him know the payment is made, because I desperately want that fridge to be installed on Friday.
Several hours later the dealer emails back. I don’t see anything on my end.
I don’t have the receipt. I call to the bank. The bank says things like, “we don’t know anything about anything” and “what is money?”.
I can’t cancel the payment. The portal I sent it through has no customer service support. I’m rapidly approaching the limit of my ability to even.
24 hours later, the payment processes. The fridge is coming on Friday.
By this point the results of the election are out and everyone is calling me. The political ban on the blog is still in effect, so I will not go into it, but long story short, it’s stress city.
The entire Friday I can’t concentrate because the fridge is coming. Finally, I get a notification that they are 45 minutes out.
This is going to get a little bit personal. When Gordon and I were very young, we lived in a little shack in the mountains of North Carolina and we were poor. Not middle class poor, not paycheck to paycheck poor, the “not sure where the food is going to be coming from” poor. It was winter, we bought a month’s worth of meat, and then a storm hit and the power was out for 5 days. We had to get a big black garbage bag and throw it all out.
As I’m typing this, I can picture it in my head. I remember what we were wearing. It is branded on my brain. So I have a hard time cleaning out the freezer. It takes a bit of will power. But the fridge will need to come out, so I get my husband and we clean out the freezer and throw away some old food that’s been in there for far too long. Into a black garbage bag it goes. ::deep breath::
The delivery crew arrives, and then Gordon call me into the kitchen. There is a board under the fridge that was put there so there is no gap. It is mortared in. It will require a general contractor to remove. The fridge will not be installed today.
Gordon says, “I can see why they put it in there. They were like ‘this fridge will last us 20 years’.”
I don’t say anything.
Gordon starts gently rubbing my back, and I look at him and say, “I can’t.”
And he says, “It will be okay.”
And this little voice in my head says, “No, it’s not okay, and by the way, you threw out all that old fish for nothing.”
My options are very few. I can have a bitchy moment, but it will not get the fridge installed and the installers didn’t sign up for my freak out. The installers assure me that if we let them drop off the fridge, they probably will have availability to come back here on Monday. I sigh and I nod, and I bail as the new fridge, still in a giant box, is left in our garage.
I call Kid 1. The next day, Kid 1’s boyfriend and his brother who works as a contractor arrive, and the plate is removed and the top edge of the cabinet is trimmed to the installer specifications. I call back to the dealer.
We will call you on Monday.
On Monday, they call. I pick up, hoping for that Monday appointment. Some other things happened, and this fridge is now the axis upon which my stress rotates. It’s not entirely logical, but there it is. For some people, it would be no big deal. You order take out and wait. We have the small fridge for eggs and dairy. Not exactly a hardship. For me, however, not having a fridge is very difficult.
We will install it on Thursday.
This was just one hit too many.
Here is the thing. No matter how hard the circumstances are, you have to carry on. Because life doesn’t stop for us. We can take a moment to deal, but then things have to keep going. I’m not the roll-over type. When it comes down to it, very few of us are. We are biologically hardwired to survive.
I edited 110 pages between Monday and Thursday. A small win, but still a win.
Here it is. It’s in. It’s pretty much empty right now, but it has all the drawers and space you could ever want.
I’m sure that there will be another crisis life will throw my way. In fact, it did, and I will have pictures for you tomorrow. But meanwhile, this one crisis has a resolution. I have picked up and I’m moving on. And if it breaks again, I will handle that too.
Onward, to glory and full produce drawers!
Penny says
Sometimes the stress bucket is full and that one more thing tips it over. It’s real. It’s valid and it sounds like you handled it great. I probably would have given into and ranted at the poor delivery person as I was telling them I was sorry since I knew it wasn’t their fault. I now have kitchen envy. I don’t even like to cook and now I need a kitchen like yours.
Sechat says
oh oh oh House Andrews. I. Feel. Your. Pain. really really really.
In my current phase of life I am going through some thangs, situations with loved ones, so that situations like your refrigerator that should be resolved in 2, 3 business days (including Saturday in my book), just drag on, on, on. Adding pressure, unnecessary stress, to the urgent, priority life-stuff.
Truly, you are persevering, and sometimes you just have to get through this hour and come out the other side.
And we the BDH, wish you well.
Peace,
sage says
T’is the season for stress. We all have to hang in there. One day at a time, we will persevere.
Carolyn W. says
Thank you for sharing your kitchen. It’s beautifully done.
Sherwin C says
When I was a sprout, some 60 years back, we had a sub-zero freezer that sat outside our home in Albuquerque NM. It was the coldest freezer we ever owned and it had no issues even when it was 110 degrees out.
Glad to hear they are still making them. Hope this one lasts longer.
Elise says
I’ve been behind on my blog reading due to life stress and world stress. I got lured in by Charles Tubbin’s adventures and then popped over to fridge drama. Can I just say that the axis of stress feeling resonates so so much? I almost burst into tears reading this because I’m in the middle of an unexpected and expensive replacement. Deep breath, keep going, have to carry on!
MacGrani says
I feel your pain. Sending lots and lots of hugs!
By the way, I LOVE your kitchen!
Lacey Pfeffer says
Election week was awful. I drank too much every night and had trouble finding the motivation to brush my teeth. I cried a lot.
Rose says
On the happy side, you didn’t figure it out by getting food poisoning first!
hope tomorrow is better.
New fridge looks great.
Carolyn says
So sorry for all the stress, but the frog and the kitchen look amazing
Mary says
Hug!
Jean says
I love your blog, your kitchen is lovely, as is the new fridge. I love your blog as it reminds me that we all have crap to deal with and although we can’t control the stuff that happens, I can control my attitude. ::sigh:: my attitude isn’t always the best and sometimes that’s okay too. Thinking of you and yours.
Suey says
That is a giant refrigerator! Well done staying sane and getting work done.
Becky says
I should have listened to the universe’s message! Two days after this post, I left my upright freezer door open. For. Two. Days. I cried so hard. I’m so glad my sisters were able to come over and help me clean up.
Mary K. Cervenka says
If it isn’t one thing it is another!! Our only fridge is 16 years old and making occasional odd noises. I would mind but we are hosting 25 for Thanksgiving. Fingers crossed.
Just reread Kate Daniel’s books and the Innkeeper series.
Really jonseing(is that a word?) for a new book in any series.
Sarah says
Earlier in our marriage when my husband were not where we are not – we purchased a refrigerator because we went through a similar ordeal – not from a bend and dent no – we couldn’t afford that. So the local fb market it was and about a half gallon of bleach it was installed. It’s been 6 years and the ice/water maker still isn’t hooked up because – reasons.
We can afford a new one now – but why.
We have ice in cubes and trays and we have a filtered water pitcher in the fridge.
You are right – we adapt – you are not alone and in your points of not being able to even plz remember that yes the BDH devours HA’s work – but i’m pretty comfortable saying that we’d support you as people because you’re good people and those are rare.
BDH member *anime eye sharpness – we must protect HA.
please in those moments just picture us attacking and carrying off the offending fridge in mass. One hand on the fridge one hand on pitchfork – HOW DARE the appliance.
In short – emotional hugs offered and thank you!
Erin says
My mother’s subzero finally crapped out, after years of repair, near the end of the covid mess. You had to fulfill a contract on someone’s life to get a fridge in that time. Since we’re morally opposed to that, she has a teeny, tiny little fridge in that great big hole, and it’s been two years, because -eeeeesh- the subzeros cost a small car. Glad you got one, but I know to never start with one now.