Should they be taken out of the wrapping and stored as single units, or should I leave them in the package?
EDIT to add I mean, the package is 24 bottles bundled together. Should I just leave them in the crate, or disperse them around the fridge?
|
Should they be taken out of the wrapping and stored as single units, or should I leave them in the package? EDIT to add I mean, the package is 24 bottles bundled together. Should I just leave them in the crate, or disperse them around the fridge? |
|||||||||
|
|
That depends,
Georg EDIT to Todds edit: There is not much "wrapping" in this case, but the outermost bottles are a shield for the inner ones. So, the answers stay the same. |
||||
|
|
|
In the bottom, the temperature will be lowest there. Also you should take the bottle out of the wrapping, and the water out of the bottle for fastest cooling, and the air out of the freezer, otherwise you use power to cool the wrapping and air etc. |
|||
|
|
|
Left long enough, no matter how you store anything at a fixed temperature, it will equilibrate with its environment and reach the same temperature. So store them however you want, they'll be just as cold in the refrigerator in any case. Though, I would point out that a) some parts of the fridge are colder than others, so that'll make a difference, and b) as Georg points out, the speed that they cool off in the fridge (and warm when taken out) will depend on packaging. |
|||
|
|