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DIY Block Ice Molds

61K views 26 replies 24 participants last post by  Senor D  
#1 ·
DIY Block Ice Molds

I’m considering buying commercial block ice molds used by shaved ice businesses and ice sculptures to make their own block ice to save money from purchasing from block ice venders. Looking online, there are a variety of options on the market from plastic, rubber, metal, and varies sizes/shapes of molds.

Has anyone used a large block ice mold to DIY their own ice? If so what did you buy? Thanks!

DIY Block Ice Molds
 
#3 ·
I went to lowes and bought cheap square-ish organization containers.
Similiar to this.
https://www.lowes.com/pd/Style-Sele...tyle-Selections-3-Pack-6-5-Quart-Clear-Shoe-Box-with-Standard-Snap-Lids/3345192

I got some that would fit in the cooler we were using.

For longer trips, I will freeze late trip meals vacuum sealed into each one, and separated the blocks in the cooler with cheap cutting boards.

Now I've got ice blocks below with food inside them, and ice blocks above that are purely ice.

And after all that I still like freezing gallon jugs better, they don't make a mess when they melt.
 
#6 ·
What ever you use be careful to seal the blocks if you want drinking water. The ice will absorb smells and flavors of what ever else stored in the frig/freezer.

Last fall there was a Buzzard talking about using gallon SunnyD bottles because their squarish shape. I'm looking forword to trying that this year by filling them with Distilled water and freezing them. Then by keeping them in containers I will have drinking water.
 
#7 ·
I use these as molds, freezes well, no leaks and fit in my cooler very well. Four gives me a lot (6 liters) of ice and very cold drinking water after a week or so of melting.
https://www.rei.com/product/629248/nalgene-ultralite-wide-mouth-water-bottle-48-fl-oz
I also make my own ice cubes in these cube trays. These make bigger cubes that last much longer than little cubes. I then pack the cubes in gallon zip lock freezer bags to keep cubes clean and any melt water from the food.
https://www.walmart.com/ip/Big-2-X-2-Ice-Cube-Tray/47460588


Got a freezer full of ice made, ready to hit a river :D
 
#8 ·
3 Gallon Bucket

I use a 3 gallon rectangular bucket. I've cut a couple inches off the top with a table saw so that they fit in the cooler. It takes a couple days to freeze them though. I've found it is best to add a couple of inches of water at a time or the bottom of the buckets eventually split. I also keep the bucket in the cooler too. That way there is not too much water sloshing around as they melt. Two of those in the 150 qt cooler will last for 7 or 8 days of desert rafting.
 
#10 ·
I used containers to make ice, but they often broke from the expansion. So I bought a chest freezer off of Craigslist for $50. I marked the inside of my cooler in one inch increments otherwise I tend to make too much ice. About a week before a trip I start adding water 1/2 inch or so at a time.
 
#12 ·
I was in the process of making ice molds when I noticed that two kitty litter plastic buckets will exactly fit both of my coolers. I cut them to size on the table saw and washed ran them through the dishwasher.

I get best results freezing in 2"-3" layers in my deep freezer. Thicker layers get more air bubbles and tend to have more side way expansion that distorts the shape.
 
#14 ·
My sole purpose for wanting to make my own ice is that in recent years it’s become more difficult to buy block ice at my local neighborhood stores. They are now only stocking crushed ice. The only consistent place that has block ice is a bit out of the way and sucks up the limited available time on a river week to go get it.

Last fall I purchased a very large chest freezer and have enough free room to make enough ice for one or two coolers at a time. However, I’m not going to pullout my elk meat and other food to freeze ice in my cooler. I would only freeze my cooler on a Grand Canyon length trip and would then utilize a friend’s commercial freezer.

For the other Western rivers, I’m on the river for 7-8 days at the most and I’ve had 3-4 blocks of grocery store ice last for a week in triple-digit temps as high as 113 degrees during the day. I’ve always tossed ice in the yard when I get home. However, I always freeze most of my food that can be frozen and prechill my cooler with a sacrificial ice block in water, before loading it.

Ideally, I'm looking for a mold that can withstand repeated freezing and not crack. I’m thinking about getting actual flexible silicon bread loaf pan, which are roughly the same size as typical store bought block ice. Even more ideal, would be a mold the size of 3+ standard blocks, so I’m looking for a wedding cake size silicon mold.

Cheers!
 
#17 ·
in recent years it’s become more difficult to buy block ice at my local neighborhood stores. They are now only stocking crushed ice. The only consistent place that has block ice Cheers!
Ive noticed the same thing. I've also noticed that most block ice is just pressed crushed ice which does little more for you than crushed. Finding actual blocks of solid ice may only be practical by doing it yourself.
 
#15 ·
I use the 2.5 gallon rectangular water jugs from the store and freeze them on their side. These just happen to fit in my Sherpa 120 like they were made to do that. Handle and spigot if you want the water. About once a year I'll have to replace one when they get a pinhole in a corner or something. They'll survive a lot of thawing and freezing though. And they are only a couple bucks if at the end of a trip you want to slice it open and let everyone go to town for some drink ice on the last night.

You might find you are about to gain cooler space too. Grocery store ice blocks are half air anyway. If you were using three before you might only need one or two. Making your own is going to be way more solid and last longer.
 
#21 ·
I use the 2.5 gallon rectangular water jugs from the store and freeze them on their side. These just happen to fit in my Sherpa 120 like they were made to do that. Handle and spigot if you want the water. About once a year I'll have to replace one when they get a pinhole in a corner or something. They'll survive a lot of thawing and freezing though. And they are only a couple bucks if at the end of a trip you want to slice it open and let everyone go to town for some drink ice on the last night.

You might find you are about to gain cooler space too. Grocery store ice blocks are half air anyway. If you were using three before you might only need one or two. Making your own is going to be way more solid and last longer.
yep drain 20% put em in the freezer upside down with valve open so when the ice expands the air escapes. Leave 3-4 in the freezer year round. Your freezer will run less saving energy and the ice blocks get super cold and last a lot longer. Weatherstrip the lid, toss in dry ice, duct tape the seal around the lid. Open still frozen 7-14 days later.
 
#16 ·
I think that I found a far better way to do ice. I take 1 gallon and 2 gallon zip-lock freezer bags and i fill them with water then lay them flat in my freezer and let them turn solid ice. The reason I like this is bc they make flat "blocks" that I can line the floor, and sides of the cooler with. Then I put more of these across the top of the cooler too. I also sometimes make a freezer "section" of my cooler by surrounding my meat and stuff in basically a cube of these frozen bags. The water can obviously later be drained from the bags into a water jug if needed. It is cheap and easy and works really well. Also, buy a windshield sun shade thing and cut it up and use it as additional insulation across the top of the cooler, this really helps as well.
 
#18 ·
I like to use the large rectangular low-profile Glad Ware food containers: https://www.glad.com/food-storage/containers/large-food-storage-containers/

I do remove them from the plastic before loading them in the cooler.

I keep several in my freezer, so I always have what I need for a trip. 4 of these fit nicely on the bottom of my 65/70 qt coolers and 2 fit nicely in my smaller coolers. For longer trips, I pour cubes on them to fill any gaps. I also cover with blue foam sleeping pad (from Walmart) cut to fit, for added insulation.

They have lasted a 2-3 years so far.
 
#20 ·
I have used the rectangular food containers too, with good success.

I would be wary of the silicone thingies for freezing. Or just be very careful of spillage. They need to sit on something rigid and it is a pain to move them if you still have liquid. Just be careful.
 
#25 ·
I found some one gallon jugs on Amazon, they look like anti-freeze containers. 5 of them fit the bottom of my cooler wall to wall. Fill them a few inches a time in the chest freezer. I always have ice cold water on the tail end of the trip, usually douse the TL, NFL coach style, at the take out.
I like this system because everything stays dry inside the cooler.