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Vintage Ice Cubes

MB5

One of the Regulars
Messages
205
Location
Oregon
This is the best Ice tray I have ever used. Just lift up on the lever, pull out the separator and dump the cubes. I was concerned about freezing my hand to the tray at first, but it has not been an issue.
I also have a Frigidaire Ice Ejector that uses a similar system, but don't use it for fear of shattering the plastic cube container.
In the top right of the first photo you can see part of a Swing-A-Way cube crusher.

Does anyone else have vintage Ice trays?

ice1.JPG

ice2.JPG
 
K

kpreed

Guest
I have used the metal (aluminum?) trays, for many, many years. I was told they came in some ice boxes from the factory too. Must be why mine are marked "Crosley"
Now with most new machines having ice makers, I guess a ice tray will be a rare thing soon.
 

BegintheBeguine

My Mail is Forwarded Here
My dad procrastinated and never got the ice-maker wired up, so yes i still use Quickube and other ice cube trays, including new plastic ones. Some were brought in the moving van when we moved up North from Georgia in the 1960s! No shortage of ice at my house, those Martinis aren't going to chill themselves. Possibly a cute story, years and years ago I was hosting a party for some visiting New Zealanders and they wanted to help in the kitchen with the cooling of the Constant Comment tea (yummy mixed with vodka), but hadn't the foggiest how to operate the Quickube. :)
 

The Wingnut

One Too Many
Messages
1,711
Location
.
I've got a couple of those from a Philco. They tend to bust the ice into irregular chunks. Otherwise, they're neat.

Scotrace: Put HOT water into the tray. This slows the freezing process, making the ice less 'granular'.
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,684
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
I have the ones that came with my 1945 Kelvinator refrigerator -- the same kind of lever action as shown in the pic -- but I don't use them. The water here is awful, and it makes very bad ice. But I have fond memories of sticking my tongue to such trays as a misguided little girl!
 

dhermann1

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,154
Location
Da Bronx, NY, USA
When those trays are really cold, popping the ice out with the lever can make the cubes shatter. A trick to getting solid cubes out of them is to run a little cool water over the tray before you bend the lever. This warms the metal slightly and makes the surface of the ice melt a little, thus easing the ejection for the cube.
Sheesh. I must be getting old. It seems VERY odd to me to think of an aluminum ice tray as an antique. [huh]
 

Vornholt

One of the Regulars
Messages
170
My parents used those for years. Still do, in addition to some of those new fangled plastic thangs...:D
 

fatwoul

Practically Family
Messages
923
Location
UK
scotrace said:
There really is no way to get those nice clear cubes at home, is there?

Yes.

Domestic ice is made in a different way to the machine ice in bars and restaurants.

The ice in a domestic fridge freezer compartment is frozen in thick blocks, which allows the air to become trapped as it freezes. However, the machines that restaurants and bars use have a chilled plate, over which water is gradually poured, allowing it to freeze in thin layers at a time, trapping much less air, and leaving clearer cubes.

It's the same way ice forms on puddles in the winter - slowly, and in layers - which is why that ice also looks clear. I'm guessing that the ice on large masses of water like lakes is not clear because show usually accompanies a freeze deep enough to ice over a lake, so the result is a mixture of ice and compacted, refrozen snow, which contains lots of air.

The solution - albeit a time-consuming one - is to try to mimic nature as closely as possible.

Take a large, inch-deep tray, because it helps if the ice is able to form more slowly, and the tiny bits of water in an icecube tray freeze pretty fast. Clear a shelf in a freezer, put the tray in dead-level, and then pour as thin a layer of water as possible (maybe 1/16th-1/8th inch) into the tray. Allow that layer to freeze completely before pouring a second layer. Continue until the tray is full, which could take a week or more. The ice should be clear, or at least clearer.

You then, of course, need to chip at the ice to put it in drinks, and upon first inspection the rough-edged chipped ice will probably look frosted, because of the surface scoring that happened when you were chipping. However, as soon as the ice is put in a drink and begins to melt, the scratched surface will melt, leaving (hopefully) a clear ice cube.

You can try it wil an ice cube tray too, but in order to accurately fill each little cube with water in small layers, you'll probably need a 5ml syringe.

I tried this years ago and it worked well, but I'm tempted to try again, just for giggles. I will need to go and get some syringes. All the ones I have are full of old fish medicine, which really shouldn't be going in a food freezer. lol

The Wingnut said:
...Scotrace: Put HOT water into the tray. This slows the freezing process, making the ice less 'granular'.

Yes, this will help too, not only for the reason you describe but also because hot water holds less suspended oxygen than cold water does (something else I know from my fishtanks). However, if trying the layer method, you might find that the hot water melts the ice below it and defeats the purpose. In the layer method, it is best to stick to water that is room temperature, perhaps a touch cooler. Again, it's a matter of mimicking nature, and in nature, the new water attaching itself to a puddle or icicle would already be quite cold.
 

The Wingnut

One Too Many
Messages
1,711
Location
.
Excellent explanation, fatwoul - once again, The Man Who Knows TM!

These trays might actually be perfect for the layering technique, since the dividers are separate from the tray itself.
 

Shaul-Ike Cohen

One Too Many
Messages
1,176
Location
.
low-tech solution

scotrace said:
There really is no way to get those nice clear cubes at home, is there?

Unless you have a pro machine, your best bet is to boil the water before, maybe several times. I let it cool down to room temperature - can't bring it over me to put hot water in a freezer, so I wouldn't know about this effect in addition. The point of my boiling is decalcification, descaling. The backside is you've got the stuff in the pot then, but that happens with your tea water as well.

Try it!
 

Dr. Shocker

One of the Regulars
Messages
284
Location
Ventura
you mean they make another type.....got two in the freezer and a third tray only as my ice tray gotta keep that booze chilled
 

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