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Why it’s so important to keep your fridge clean

Moritz Weinstock
29.5.2024
Translation: Katherine Martin

How often do you clean out your fridge? Hopefully not just once a year. After all, in addition to food, your refrigerator plays host to huge quantities of bacteria. Here’s how to get this germ magnet squeaky clean.

Don’t let the shiny chrome or American-style retro look fool you – fridges are often far less cool than you’d think. At least when it comes to cleanliness, that is. Instead of being a temple of freshness, your fridge often harbours hidden biotopes containing all sorts of microbes. Partly because it’s where food is chilled and partly because its encounters with a cloth or sponge are far too rare.

More germs live in the fridge than in the toilet

Other studies have pinpointed the most germ-ridden household hotspots, revealing that there are significantly more bacteria in your fridge than in your toilet bowl.

By comparison, there are 10-100 germs per square centimetre on a toilet seat. The only items shown to be filthier are used kitchen sponges, which house an average of up to 50 billion bacteria per cubic centimetre.

With this in mind, meticulous fridge cleanliness isn’t an OTT luxury – it’s a necessity to reduce health risks. There’s simply no getting around adopting a regular cleaning ritual involving emptying the fridge, storing food elsewhere temporarily and thoroughly cleaning all the surfaces.

How to clean your fridge properly

Hygiene experts recommend cleaning your fridge every 4-6 weeks. Use a mixture of washing-up liquid and hot water (vinegar water is also an option) to clean the compartments and shelves. Don’t forget the seals either. Cotton buds are a handy way to get into hard-to-reach areas such as drainage channels. You can usually see dirt there in the form of dark discolouration, which can be scraped out and wiped away with a cloth.

What goes where in the fridge?

The way you stock your fridge determines the shelf life of your food as well as how clean your fridge stays. The bottom shelf, usually made of glass, is the coldest part of the fridge. At 2-4 degrees, it’s ideal for fresh fish, meat and vegan alternatives.

Meanwhile, the middle of the fridge, with a temperature of about 4-6 degrees, is suited to dairy products and sausages. These, by the way, are best stored in airtight containers. Ready-made food goes at the top of the fridge, while juice, eggs and sauces such as ketchup, mustard and mayonnaise belong in the door compartments.

My colleague Maike explains the best way to keep your fridge tidy here:

Not all vegetables need to go in the fridge. In fact, tomatoes and cucumbers prefer to be stored outside. Lettuce, on the other hand, keeps best if it’s wrapped in a damp cloth and stored in the salad drawer. Potatoes, onions and garlic stay fresh when kept in a dark pantry. If you’ve opened a food container, you should mark it in order to keep track of it.

The NSF study conducted in the US states that ready-to-eat items should always be kept separate from unwashed ones in order to avoid cross-contamination.You should always store raw meat, poultry and seafood away from everything else, positioning them in a way that ensures no raw juices drip onto other foods

How do you keep your fridge smelling fresh?

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Notebook, camera, laptop or smartphone. For me, life's about taking notes – both analogue and digital. What's always on me? My iPod Shuffle. It's all in the mix, after all. This is also reflected in the topics I write about.


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