Ice Cutting Refrigeration | How to Make Everything: Preservatives

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  • Опубліковано 10 тра 2017
  • In my first exploration of preserving food, I look to the past trade of ice cutting to attempt to create my own primitive refrigerator.
    Thank you to Thunderbird Lodge for the comfortable stay while we were in International Falls:
    www.thunderbirdrainylake.com/
    Thanks as well goes to:
    Dave Harder & Up North Builders - For helping cut and haul the ice.
    Mike Williams - For giving us the history of ice houses.
    International Falls Travelers Bureau - For connecting us to our Experts.
    Join the conversation and community on my subreddit:
    / howtomakeeverything
    || In This Video ||
    Our Camera Gear:
    - GH4: goo.gl/Kpgf9D
    - FS5: goo.gl/aPd428
    || SUBSCRIBE ||
    UA-cam Channel: bit.ly/1OmesgS
    || SUPPORT ||
    Patreon - / htme
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    Special Thanks to our Patrons at $15 per month or higher:
    Antonio Rios-Ochoa, Sandy Riis, Daniel Laux, Stian Andreassen, Susan M. George, Liz Roth, Winfield Jones Uwe Schmidt and Justin Finton
    || SOCIAL ||
    Facebook: ow.ly/X4rJC
    Twitter: ow.ly/X4rS3 (@HTMeverything)
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    || SERIES ||
    Sandwich - bit.ly/1ZVGNRn
    Suit - bit.ly/1NsQri8
    Bottle - bit.ly/1QlTU6C
    Thanksgiving Dinner - bit.ly/1UjLa1R
    Root Beer Float - bit.ly/1OGfphU
    Book - bit.ly/1SF23Gx
    Chocolate Bar - bit.ly/2085HIs
    Coffee - bit.ly/2jllv0I
    Eyeglasses - bit.ly/2jlispn
    Microscope and Telescope: bit.ly/2nQCRn7
    How To Brew Everything: bit.ly/2kJb47E
    Meet The Makers - bit.ly/23ldFlS
    || ABOUT ||
    Today, getting what you need is as easy as a trip to the store. From food to clothing, energy, medicine, and so much more, Andy George will discover what it takes to make everything from scratch. His mission is to understand the complex processes of manufacturing that is often taken for granted and do it all himself. Each week he’s traveling the world to bypass the modern supply chain in order to harvest raw materials straight from the source. Along the way, he’s answering the questions you never thought to ask.
    Music by the talented Taylor Lewin
    taylorlewin.com

КОМЕНТАРІ • 669

  • @gio7731
    @gio7731 7 років тому +899

    You have some of the most original and best content on UA-cam. Please don't stop doing what you do.

    • @balduir5259
      @balduir5259 7 років тому +55

      Giordano Mancini and it is well edited and not cringe-worthy

    • @justzietse3248
      @justzietse3248 7 років тому +22

      Balduir maybe a little bit of cringe

    • @andrecarpy6890
      @andrecarpy6890 6 років тому +1

      JustZietse it feels a bit awkward sometimes

    • @rajanrao
      @rajanrao 4 роки тому

      welp he just stopped

    • @listenhere1623
      @listenhere1623 3 роки тому

      Oh well he changed the channel to a different theme kinda. It's better

  • @smaspa8627
    @smaspa8627 7 років тому +472

    That ice looks clearer than the glass/ice lenses you made!

  • @micahphilson
    @micahphilson 6 років тому +66

    Ice works best in an enclosed environment, where atmospheric air doesn't keep replenishing and staying warmer. It would have lasted *much* longer inside that shed you kept it next to, because it could have cooled the entire thing down and used that as insulation, rather than the wind keeping on blowing around it and constantly warming everything back up.

    • @digernesarne
      @digernesarne 5 років тому +18

      Love the concept of this channel, but its so annoying all the painfully bad and uninformed deciscions he makes every episode😩

  • @gunther4354
    @gunther4354 7 років тому +1488

    how the hell does ice survive for 4 months on sea?

    • @ThatVIPYouLove
      @ThatVIPYouLove 7 років тому +274

      If insulated well and in large volume it can last a suprisingly long time

    • @htme
      @htme  7 років тому +539

      It's amazing how long large blocks of ice can last for if well insulated. The icehouse at the resort supposedly only had to be filled once every two years because it was so efficient.
      When Tudor sailed his ice to India, he started with 180 tons and still managed to arrive with 100 tons still intact when he got there

    • @bojan01010
      @bojan01010 7 років тому +43

      By isolating it in wet hay.

    • @MetaBloxer
      @MetaBloxer 7 років тому +71

      blocks of ice beside each other will exchange less heat (less surface area to transfer from) and protect inner blocks. Also, it might be colder than you think, since the lower limit is technically 0K.

    • @Jordan-px6ux
      @Jordan-px6ux 7 років тому +34

      MetaBloxer 0 kelvin is extremely cold in fact absolute zero, ice would not reach that on ships, did you mean 273 Kelvins which is 0 degrees Celsius being the "lower limit of ice"

  • @YamiKisara
    @YamiKisara 2 роки тому +10

    What you kind of forgot to mention is that people wouldn't have this behind their shack like you did. Ice blocks were put in the basement and old basements are naturally around 5-10°C all year round and you could make a part of it colder by placing some ice blocks there (this was used to cool beer, for example). Or a small ice block was placed inside a metal container at the bottom of a kitchen pantry and it kept it nice and cool for about a week, then the ice had to be replenished (it's also why it wasn't advised to open the pantry too often, you'd only take out the groceries you needed and keep it shut at all other times, just like when mum scolds you about keeping the fridge open for too long). I reckon if you dug a decent sized metal container into the ground and stacked ice blocks around the walls it would keep all year round. At least in moderate climate, not in a hot place of course.

  • @OlliWilkman
    @OlliWilkman 7 років тому +74

    My dad was ice cutting when he was young, in the Finnish countryside in the 1950s, before there was electricity in every house. They had cows and needed ice to keep milk cold before the dairy men came to collect it.

  • @movere358
    @movere358 7 років тому +17

    That crystal-clear ice is beautiful...

  • @magnets1000
    @magnets1000 7 років тому +236

    It would have been good to put a temperature data logger in there with the food

    • @guppy8525
      @guppy8525 4 роки тому +1

      magnets1000 comrade doge

  • @johnlupo9577
    @johnlupo9577 4 роки тому +6

    My father used an ice house for years at his summer resort. The ice was cut from the local lake in winter then buried in sawdust for the whole year.
    It worked great.

    • @cheeseburger9232
      @cheeseburger9232 Рік тому

      Do you know the square footage of the ice house ?
      Was it above ground or underground?
      Built out of wood? Or concrete?

  • @sovietunion8087
    @sovietunion8087 4 роки тому +9

    It's so satisfying when the top comes off and what remains looks like glass

  • @WellThatsSilly
    @WellThatsSilly 7 років тому +17

    Pulling those blocks out looks incredibly satisfying

  • @DJLoudRiver
    @DJLoudRiver 7 років тому +2

    Because some people might be interested in this: I live in the Central German Uplands and here people used to build big, house-shaped fames over which they poured water in the winter to make ice, which they then kept in cellars dug into the granite. This would keep things, most notably beer, cold all summer long. I can't speak for all of Germany, but where I am from, this is reasonably well documented.

  • @frozenwater2370
    @frozenwater2370 7 років тому +49

    This is like primitive technology yet still different, I like it!

    • @caccamerdaputtanaeva
      @caccamerdaputtanaeva 6 років тому +3

      ryan miller I think he means the UA-cam Channel primitive technology, that do surprising tutorial from the very point of start

    • @InsanePigeon
      @InsanePigeon 5 років тому +2

      Primitive Technology evolves into this guy in time

  • @zenxity
    @zenxity 7 років тому +143

    Andy is so used to failures that he had low expectations for the Ice Box.

    • @spectrelex3051
      @spectrelex3051 7 років тому +8

      Honest your name describes this comment.

  • @AsterDXZ
    @AsterDXZ 7 років тому +41

    Never knew Ice could be so interesting

  • @sbcinema
    @sbcinema 3 роки тому +1

    In our family estate in Bavaria we still have a refrigerator that was operated with block ice, this method was still occasionally used until the end of the 1950s

  • @LyleLane
    @LyleLane 6 років тому +2

    3:54
    So cut through the heart, cold and clear
    Strike for love and strike for fear
    See the beauty, sharp and sheer
    Split the ice apart!
    And break the frozen heart
    😂😂

  • @lookingfordinosaurs
    @lookingfordinosaurs 7 років тому +1

    I live in International Falls! Its so cool you came here of all places!

  • @blairalive
    @blairalive 7 років тому

    I HAVE SPENT EVERY SUMMER OF MY LIFE AT RAINY LAKE AND THIS MADE MY WEEK!

  • @antonmotin7395
    @antonmotin7395 7 років тому +390

    I just don't understand people of youtube. A buff guy, who shouts at camera and makes idiotic vlogs got millions of subs. This channel, that is SO interesting to watch and learn new things, got quarter of million. smh

    • @spectrelex3051
      @spectrelex3051 7 років тому +10

      Михаил Венедиктов yep. Quantity>quality when it comes to UA-cam. *sigh*

    • @fatsasquatch4183
      @fatsasquatch4183 7 років тому +2

      Михаил Венедиктов I never knew there was a channel about a buff guy screaming at a camera? Can I have a link to his channel please?

    • @2531Prasad
      @2531Prasad 7 років тому +17

      same way a girl puts naked pictures on Instagram gets more likes then a guy who posts about how his trip to tallest mountain was.

    • @dannyvo7334
      @dannyvo7334 7 років тому +7

      Fat Sasquatch Logan Paul

    • @oshi_nobu
      @oshi_nobu 6 років тому

      Danny Vo tbh, he's entertaining tho

  • @baristurkmen2342
    @baristurkmen2342 6 років тому

    Why is there something so satisfying about watching this ice being harvested? It’s just so perfect

  • @TL-mc6lz
    @TL-mc6lz 7 років тому +2

    Omg! I'm in love with that Minnesota accent! That's my favorite thing about the movie and show Fargo, but that old man is just too cute. Haha. Love what you do on this channel! So great.

    • @frogbear02
      @frogbear02 4 роки тому

      coming from Wisconsin... I didn't even realise that he was speaking with an accent until I went back and listened to it again XD

  • @davidbringle379
    @davidbringle379 2 роки тому

    I grew up in desert where you are dependent on refrigeration. A really cold winter day was 40F. My mind exploded the first time I spent winter in the upper Midwest. Leave food on the patio, it will freeze. What?!!! The name Icebox to indicate a refrigerator was odd too. Closest I was familiar with were ice factories built in the early 20th century to make cubed and block ice. Generally used for transit in the days before trucks had refrigerated trailers. The one in my hometown has been converted to restaurants and upscale shops. Thanks for producing this documentary.

  • @rawovunlapin8201
    @rawovunlapin8201 7 років тому +119

    That's pretty... cool

  • @topilinkala1594
    @topilinkala1594 Рік тому

    I remember a milk farm from my youth in 60's in Finland. It was where my grandmother had her summer cottage. They had ice blocks covered with sawdust just outside the barn. The ice of course came from the same lake we swam during those summers we were there.

  • @renatogdn
    @renatogdn 5 років тому +1

    I watched it while high and with no sounds or context.
    VERY interesting video!
    So, this guy went on a hunt for ice, learned how to harvest it from some ancient people, got some bricks of ice home, BURIED IT, waited 1 month, checked if some food was spoiled and the end.

  • @TB-tz8dl
    @TB-tz8dl 6 років тому +1

    This is simply amazing. For everything you do, you meet new people and they all seem so kind and passionate. These videos make me want to meet people and engage in all sort of activities! Thank you!

  • @windstorm9865
    @windstorm9865 6 років тому

    Honestly give this man a show

  • @theonefromk7602
    @theonefromk7602 7 років тому +88

    reminds me of the opening scene from frozen lol

    • @javiersalazar492
      @javiersalazar492 5 років тому +1

      omg i can't believe i was the only thinking that 😂

    • @RuptureEt
      @RuptureEt 4 роки тому

      @@javiersalazar492 same

    • @sashospams
      @sashospams 4 роки тому +1

      HmMmMm i wonder whyyyyy

    • @demonpatriot8994
      @demonpatriot8994 4 роки тому

      Remind me of Antarcticite from Land of the Lustrous

  • @beny.4935
    @beny.4935 7 років тому +1

    Looks much clearer than the lenses you've made!

  • @geoffreykha3401
    @geoffreykha3401 7 років тому

    that's some satisfiying looking blocks of ice.Very smooth looking,very clear

  • @brytekru7946
    @brytekru7946 4 роки тому

    Those blocks are absolutely beautiful in their perfection.

  • @Thehamstersgiude2u
    @Thehamstersgiude2u 6 років тому

    This video never fails at meeting my satisfactory needs, the perfect cut of clear ice. ❤️

  • @veo16
    @veo16 6 років тому

    this guy is a legend. i hope hes doing well now. with the wealth of not just knowledge, but experience from having been through the gamut of odd jobs.
    in these videos we’re watching him as a first-timer in each job. hes doing a lot better than i would at the same tasks.

  • @nick-vm6qx
    @nick-vm6qx 7 років тому +1

    How do you have only 250k subs? You make some of the highest quality and original videos I've seen, just know that your efforts are affecting at least one person out there

  • @dwaynewladyka577
    @dwaynewladyka577 6 років тому +1

    My dad who is close to 88 years of age remembers having an ice house on his parent's farm in Alberta, Canada, in the 1930s and 1940s.

  • @juanfranciscobrizuela
    @juanfranciscobrizuela 5 років тому

    You answered so many of my questions with this video. Thank you!

  • @ajeisenberg
    @ajeisenberg 7 років тому

    The amount of effort that goes into making these videos is INSANE!!

  • @jmnori
    @jmnori 7 років тому

    This, I have to admit, is incredibly satisfying.

  • @andrecarpy6890
    @andrecarpy6890 6 років тому +2

    That cube of ice looks beautiful

  • @fredeyoh
    @fredeyoh 7 років тому

    Thank you for continuously providing amazing content 🤙🏽 this is my favorite channel

  • @seanhampson4126
    @seanhampson4126 7 років тому

    That's amazing! I had no clue it would still work that well with the ice melted that far! Great video keep em coming!

  • @moodylicious
    @moodylicious 2 роки тому

    6:27 VERY good point!!!! Definitely spot on!!
    What a great job you do with these productions!
    I am impressed
    tysm!

  • @harishchakrawarthy9940
    @harishchakrawarthy9940 6 років тому

    Somehow it is so satisfying to see the clear ice block removed from the lake.

  • @harperl2
    @harperl2 7 років тому

    As always, keep on keeping on. Love this series!

  • @eliaslynggaard9888
    @eliaslynggaard9888 4 роки тому

    3:49 Are nobody gonna talk about how RELAXING that looks?

  • @brandonvb8237
    @brandonvb8237 7 років тому +1

    something so satisfying about this.

  • @RealRuler2112
    @RealRuler2112 7 років тому +1

    About a quarter of your videos, I don't think I want to watch because of the subject matter. I do because I know how your channel is and always, always, always learn a ton of stuff that I never even thought of before. It's not often that I watch a video that I'm not really interested in the subject matter of & end up being sucked into and indeed sad when the video ends. Your whole channel is chuck full of super-interesting videos.

  • @adamsherman5024
    @adamsherman5024 2 роки тому

    Amazing! the kind of knowledge i was craving as an Adirondacker..I have easy access to plenty of natural ice.

  • @RandomExperiments
    @RandomExperiments 6 років тому

    Î knew about the old ice refrigerators, but it's nice to see how effective it really is. Nice video! :)

  • @Bus-cz4vy
    @Bus-cz4vy 6 років тому

    This guy should have 10 million subscribers! All the work he does is incredible compared to other youtubers! Keep on working man!

  • @ReviewyCA
    @ReviewyCA 7 років тому +34

    Another great video :)
    The sawdust shot was very cinematic!

  • @ThatVIPYouLove
    @ThatVIPYouLove 7 років тому +247

    shouldve had unrefrifgerated food as a comparison to see if the ice was effective

    • @fejfo6559
      @fejfo6559 7 років тому +72

      Do you really need to see rotten food to know food goes bad in a month?

    • @MetaBloxer
      @MetaBloxer 7 років тому +73

      While it would have been neat to see, most of that would have been a ball of mold or brown scraps on a month, especially the meat.

    • @ThatVIPYouLove
      @ThatVIPYouLove 7 років тому +7

      yeah, I don't typically store foods for a month just to see what it looks like

    • @404killer
      @404killer 6 років тому +3

      Lol, do you want to fuck up his fridge with that mouldy stuff? :P

    • @ryandavis3336
      @ryandavis3336 6 років тому +15

      I would've like to see the same stuff refrigerated in a modern refrigerator for comparison

  • @carsonkundolf3448
    @carsonkundolf3448 7 років тому +2

    My grandfather told me about this when he lived in Connecticut as a child, they would have warehouses of ice covered in saw dust and the Ice man would come to your house caring the ice with the hooks on his shoulders, at times they would just Walk in your house and put it in the ice box and walk out and shut the door.
    You would probably would had a better out come if you put the ice and food in a underground cellar or in a cooled insulated shed maybe. I see the food was fine but I would recommend if you do this again to try some how to find a caller.

  • @SouthPark333Gaming
    @SouthPark333Gaming 7 років тому

    this is one of your best videos so far!

  • @potatowithatoe8045
    @potatowithatoe8045 6 років тому

    The ice looks so aesthetic!

  • @DavidDDavidson1337
    @DavidDDavidson1337 6 років тому

    I used to work at a concrete plant during the summer and we would use 300lb blocks to control the concrete temp, you would sling it into large chippers that would then blow it into the mixer. While the blocks were not cut from lakes but made in a factory, was definitely a cool job.

  • @lucasp7630
    @lucasp7630 7 років тому

    That was so aesthetically pleasing

  • @safe2speed271
    @safe2speed271 7 років тому

    I like wating till all your vids are done then I can binge watch

  • @codyl.7120
    @codyl.7120 6 років тому

    That clear ice is beautiful..

  • @renvincentquimat3896
    @renvincentquimat3896 7 років тому

    This channel really needs more subs

  • @AldoSchmedack
    @AldoSchmedack 5 років тому

    Wow, a place I have been to before! Pretty cool!

  • @thienle_tn
    @thienle_tn 5 років тому

    The ice is so PRETTY!

  • @fireinthehole2272
    @fireinthehole2272 6 років тому

    What a really nice guy, the iceman

  • @AKSoapy29
    @AKSoapy29 6 років тому

    Wow, great to see that people still do this! Just like you, I'm from Minnesota as well. Every year on a weekend around Christmas time, our family gathers at our cabin to spend time together, eat great food, and make ice! I created a time lapse of it a couple of years ago, and it's on my channel if you'd like to take a look. We use a chainsaw mounted on a custom rig to pull it along the ice, and we still use ice tongs and ramps and sawdust to preserve the ice for the summer. The reason we do this is because our cabin is on an island in northern Minnesota, and we don't have power. It's cool to go digging in the ice house in the middle of summer, and there's still ice! Sometimes people bury drinks to keep them cold ;)

    • @moodylicious
      @moodylicious 2 роки тому

      ~ the makings for some serious memories!! Very Cool!!

  • @ZXY101
    @ZXY101 7 років тому +54

    That was cool.
    Badum tiss

    • @nuwbers
      @nuwbers 6 років тому +3

      xZXY101x your comment is pretty chill

    • @dacchy1645
      @dacchy1645 6 років тому

      Nuwbers badummm tiss

    • @jokyyang6032
      @jokyyang6032 6 років тому +3

      Wow you guys are COLD

    • @moeman1933
      @moeman1933 6 років тому

      ZXY101 s

    • @memester4079
      @memester4079 5 років тому

      Wow, what an ICY reception

  • @johnlupo9577
    @johnlupo9577 4 роки тому

    My father had a fishing resort known as Pine Crest Lodge near Westport Ontario. When he first bought the resort in the 1959’s

  • @dexteraguirre2814
    @dexteraguirre2814 4 роки тому

    Wow natural ice looks clear

  • @lutheduck
    @lutheduck 7 років тому

    where I live in mountain areas we store ice in hole under dried grass and it lasts entire summer... you dig a hole, stuff it with ice and ingredients you want to preserve, then cover it up with lot of dried grass.

  • @antman7673
    @antman7673 6 років тому

    Wow, now I like refrigerators even more.

  • @samkiller555
    @samkiller555 7 років тому

    I like your content and I think it has great production value keep it up

  • @TealCheetah
    @TealCheetah 7 років тому

    Interesting vid!
    I wish it had been mentioned about the double walled in ground storage system for ice. Basically two concrete boxes with air inbetween as insulation.

  • @TomCraigCanvasHost
    @TomCraigCanvasHost 7 років тому

    Keep going dude. You are good people! I've kept hammering away at something for the last 20 years.. It is now beginning to work. Lesson learned, is never give up, defy, but learn, from your critics, whilst bearing in mind that they may not be correct. :)

  • @Razzy1312
    @Razzy1312 6 років тому +1

    "Born of cold and winter air
    And mountain rain combining
    This icy force both foul and fair
    Has a frozen heart worth mining
    Cut through the heart, cold and clear
    Strike for love and strike for fear
    See the beauty sharp and sheer
    Split the ice apart
    And break the frozen heart!"

    • @lukespillman1313
      @lukespillman1313 Рік тому

      Watch your step!
      Let it go!
      Ah!
      Oh!
      Watch your step!
      Let it go!
      Beautiful!
      Powerful!
      Dangerous!
      Cold!
      Ice has magic
      Can’t be controlled
      Stronger than one!
      Stronger than ten!
      Stronger than a hundred men!

  • @cutcc
    @cutcc 6 років тому

    This was quite satisfying to watch, and the music gives off a Minecraft vibe lol.

  • @lostnative4295
    @lostnative4295 5 років тому +1

    At !HowToMakeAnyThing! Try salting the sawdust to see if it would help preserve food longer, my theory is as a chef we use salt to help keep the ice from melting 🤗😎😁

  • @shern92
    @shern92 7 років тому

    Im amazed!

  • @csx_cat5893
    @csx_cat5893 4 роки тому

    the perfectly square clear ice was sooo satisfying

  • @xorxpert
    @xorxpert 6 років тому

    OMFG I WENT TO THE SAME EXACT PLACE A FEW YEARS AGO! Even went to the paper mill the the local bars. It was a great time.

  • @badoop3165
    @badoop3165 5 років тому +1

    STRONGER THAN ONE
    STRONGER THAN TEN
    STRONGER THAN ONE HUNDRED MEN!!!

  • @toresanderify
    @toresanderify 5 років тому

    I love eating ice cubes 😍 this looks awesome 😍

  • @amalienilsen2985
    @amalienilsen2985 7 років тому

    I love this channel.

  • @IAm-ce8eo
    @IAm-ce8eo 7 років тому +14

    hell yea, back to the good content

  • @kushalaxx
    @kushalaxx 7 років тому

    Dude i love your channel.

  • @yummyjackalmeat
    @yummyjackalmeat 6 років тому +1

    Wtf...i jist discovered your videos the other day. I am blown away. This is a fantastic channel

    • @htme
      @htme  6 років тому +1

      Thanks and welcome!

  • @DaarkCloud
    @DaarkCloud 5 років тому

    Local history! I live in Duluth, MN which is not too far from I. Falls

  • @bilbo_gamers6417
    @bilbo_gamers6417 6 років тому

    I would recommend digging a kind of basement-dungeon under your house to keep the ice, that would keep the stuff frozen almost forever.

  • @norm1124
    @norm1124 7 років тому

    nice experiment

  • @CrazyDanishHacker
    @CrazyDanishHacker 6 років тому

    Great video

  • @aidanwansbrough7495
    @aidanwansbrough7495 5 років тому

    Really interesting!

  • @Wisconsin.pikachu
    @Wisconsin.pikachu 5 років тому

    I use to work with the amish they have a entire room that has like 6"+ thick foam insulating them, they cut the ice from there local pounds and can keep it all summer in the rooms

  • @raphaeldrayton6599
    @raphaeldrayton6599 7 років тому

    really good

  • @zachattack1084
    @zachattack1084 3 роки тому

    The ice cutters looked like they were having fun

  • @senditsupplyco.8824
    @senditsupplyco.8824 6 років тому +3

    My grandparents live in international falls

  • @jdwest34
    @jdwest34 7 років тому +17

    My great grand father cut ice on Lake Minnetonka in the early 1900s.

  • @sinswept
    @sinswept 5 років тому

    On a related topic it would be great to see how you build a root cellar :) That would probably make an ideal place for an experiment in ice refrigeration as well!

  • @channonfenris6627
    @channonfenris6627 5 років тому

    very interesting

  • @cheesamcheah7640
    @cheesamcheah7640 7 років тому

    That's some cutting edge technology

  • @johnnykhoury9656
    @johnnykhoury9656 7 років тому

    The literal definition of quality over quantity

  • @laquerhead1
    @laquerhead1 5 років тому +1

    2:47 what a nice old chap