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You want to keep your beers cold, but you don't have a fridge! Your approach will vary depending on whether you're outdoors or indoors; you'll need to work with what you have available. In general, there are three low-tech options: cool your beer with cold water, ice, or snow; chill your beer with the power of evaporative cooling; or bury your beer in cool, damp soil to keep it from warming up on a hot day.

Method 1
Method 1 of 3:

Using Water, Ice, and Snow

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  1. Watermark wikiHow to Cool Beers Without a Fridge
    This is one of the fastest ways to lower the temperature of a beverage, and you can do it indoors or outdoors. Completely submerge the surface of your beer container in cold water; the colder, the better. If the water is icy, you should be able to sufficiently cool a beer from room temperature to "party cold" within five minutes. The process might take somewhat longer if you're outdoors, or if the water is warmer.
    • If you're indoors: Dunk the beers in a bucket of ice water, or run them under a cold tap for a few minutes.
    • If you're outdoors: Submerge the beers in a natural water source – a river, a spring, a lake, or an ocean. Make sure to secure the beers so that they don't sink or drift away.
  2. Watermark wikiHow to Cool Beers Without a Fridge
    Fill a bucket, a bathtub, a cooler, or any large, watertight container with the coldest water that you can find. Supplement with ice, if possible. After you're done, try re-purposing the water: water your lawn, or your garden, or fill a pet's water bowl. Place your drinks in the ice water solution and rapidly stir them all around for 2-5 minutes. By stirring, you're using forced convection to speed the transfer of heat out of your drink and into the ice water solution.
    • Add as much ice to the water as you can, but not so much that it prevents the entire beverage container from being submerged into the water. A 50/50 mix of ice and water is a good rule of thumb.
    • The thicker and better-insulated the container, the better. Seal the container off from the air to retain even more of the chill. This way, the ice will melt more slowly.
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  3. Watermark wikiHow to Cool Beers Without a Fridge
    A small handful should do the trick. Salt lowers the freezing temperature of the water – which means that the water can get colder than the normal freezing temperature (32 degrees Fahrenheit or 0 degrees Celsius) without turning into ice.
  4. Watermark wikiHow to Cool Beers Without a Fridge
    If you have access to a sink, you can cool beers quickly. Hold the beer under the faucet and run a steady stream of cold water over the container. You should be able to cool a beer within five minutes. Save the runoff water in a bucket so that you can re-purpose it.
    • If you don't have a sink, you can use a shower, a bath spigot, or any other water source.
    • Don't waste water. Save the runoff water in a bucket, then using it to wash dishes or water plants. Running the tap for five minutes just to cool beer is incredibly wasteful.
  5. 5
    Submerge the beers in a body of water. Find a cold and accessible body of water: a river, a lake, a spring, a sea. Rig up a system to keep the beers from sinking or drifting. Tie the beers into a net or bag; string them together with rope; push them into the sand at the bottom; wedge them between roots, rocks, or kelp. If you cool your beers in running water, make sure to tie them to the bank, a boat, or yourself so that they aren't swept downstream.
    • Don't use hot water sources, such as hot springs or geysers. This is intuitive, but perhaps bears mention.
    • If there's a cold rain outside, try leaving the beers out where they'll catch the brunt of the elements. This may not cool them as effectively as a full submersion, but it should do the trick in time.
  6. 6
    Stick your beers in the snow. If there's snow on the ground, simply wedge your beers into the snow and wait half an hour. If it's cold out—say, below 40 degrees—but there is no snow, you can still put the beers outside to cool. Try to leave them in the shade, not the direct sunlight. If the snow is deep enough, wedge the beers beneath the surface so that they cool more quickly.
    • If you leave beers beneath the surface of the snow, make sure that you mark the spot so that you don't forget where you've left them. Otherwise, you may be doomed to drink warm beers in the springtime.
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Method 2
Method 2 of 3:

Using Evaporative Cooling

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  1. The concept: you will put the beers inside a clay pot, insulated by a layer of sand and a larger clay pot. Cover the top of the pot with a cold, wet towel. As the water evaporates, it cools the inside of the container. After an hour or two, you can put the beers inside and let them cool! You can use this method even on very hot days – you may be able to cool the inside of the pot to more than 40 degrees below the outside temperature. [1]
    • In a pinch, you can use smaller-scale evaporative cooling. Soak a towel, newspaper, or toilet paper with cold water, then wrap the beer inside. As the water evaporates, the beer should slowly cool. [2]
  2. One should be large enough to hold 2-5 beers at once; the other should be large enough to hold the first pot with at least a half-inch of clearance on each side.Plug the bottom of each pot with clay, putty, cork – anything that will help retain the sand.
    • If you must use plastic pots (or another material), then you may. Bear in mind that clay is a better insulator, so a "clay pot fridge" will be more effective. [3]
  3. Watermark wikiHow to Cool Beers Without a Fridge
    You can use any sort of sand, although fine-grit river sand (as opposed to less dense sand with bigger grains) will insulate best. Fill the bottom inch of the largest pot with sand, then place the smaller pot inside. Carefully fill the space between the two pots until it is completely packed with sand. It's okay if you spill a bit of sand in the bottom of the smaller pot.
  4. Watermark wikiHow to Cool Beers Without a Fridge
    Carefully pour icy-cold water into the gap between the two pots, all the way around. Let the water soak into the sand, but do not use so much water that it pools on top. You want the sand to be damp, but not muddy.
  5. Watermark wikiHow to Cool Beers Without a Fridge
    Once the inside of the pot-fridge has sunk below about 50 degrees, you're ready to start cooling your beers. You might need to wait a few hours on a hot day, or a matter of minutes on a cold day. Check the beers every hour or so, but no more frequently.
  6. Watermark wikiHow to Cool Beers Without a Fridge
    Thoroughly soak a towel with cold water, then wring it out so that it isn't sopping. Drape the towel taut across the rims of the two pots, and make sure that it covers the entire opening. Now, your "clay pot fridge" is complete. As the water evaporates from the sand and the towel, it will cool the interior of the pot. Leave the contraption to sit for a few hours before you place the beers inside. Once they're cold, they're ready to drink!
    • If you need to cool your beers quickly, then it's okay to put the beverages inside immediately. Bear in mind, however, that the interior may cool more quickly without the beverages taking up space – and that the process will still not be immediate.
    • Re-soak the towel with icy water as needed. As long as it's damp, you should be okay. If you move the towel, don't leave the "fridge" open for long, or else you'll lose all of the cool air.
    • Consider leaving a thermostat inside the pot. This will help you gauge how well your "fridge" is working, and it will give you a clue about when to insert the beers.
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Method 3
Method 3 of 3:

Burying Beers

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  1. This method isn't as fast as the others, but it can keep bottles cool for long periods of time. This may be especially effective if it's a warm and sunny day. It's less messy if your containers are large, and it helps keep your beers chill if you're moving them from other cold storage.
  2. Look in the shade, not the beating sun. Try to bury your beers along the shore of a river, a lake, or a sea – but be careful if the tide is coming in. The wetter the soil, the better.
    • You can also pour water onto the ground to keep it moist. This may be the best choice if there is no body of water around, and you have water to spare,
  3. Dig a hole that's large enough for the beer container. Bury it up to the cap or lid; in general, deeper is cooler. Consider leaving the cap or lid exposed to keep it from getting dirty. If you bury the beers completely, make sure that you don't forget where you left them!
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Community Q&A

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  • Question
    How can I cool water in minutes without touching it?
    Tasha04
    Community Answer
    Let it sit or blow on it or put a cold towel over it.
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      Tips

      • Another way to cool your drink is to fold a paper towel or something capable of being soaked and wrapped around the drink. Then add salt to one half of the paper towel and fold it to stop the salt from dropping out. Then wrap it around you drink to cool it down.
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      Warnings

      • Always take all of your trash with you after being in the outdoors. Don't leave bottles, cans, lids, or plastic holders out for wildlife to ingest.
      • Salt will kill plants in higher concentrations and alters soil pH in lower concentrations, thus potentially changing what can grow on that piece of ground. Bare ground where there are heavy rains or fast moving water (on a steep slope or the bank of a river that floods, for example) can result in erosion. So please dispose of salt water responsibly.
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      Things You'll Need

      • Bottle of beer
      • Water
      • Wind or stream, water body

      Expert Interview

      Thanks for reading our article! If you’d like to learn more about alcoholic drinks, check out our in-depth interview with Yasmin Rosales .

      About This Article

      Article Summary X

      To keep beers cool without a fridge, put them in a cooler or large container filled with cold water, ice, and a handful of table salt. The water will cool the beer faster than just ice would, and the salt will make the water colder. Another option is to wrap each of the beers in a wet sock or cloth and set them outside in a windy area. The cool wind and wet socks will keep them cold until you’re ready for them. You can also try submerging them in a nearby body of water to keep them cool. Wrap them up in a bag or net, submerge them in the water, and tie them to something along the shore. Or, wedge them between some logs or rocks underwater so they don’t float away. Another thing you can try is burying your beers. Find a cool, shady spot, and bury them part way in the ground. Make sure at least the top of each beer is sticking out of the ground so it’s easy to find and remove them. For more ideas on how to cool beers without a fridge, like using evaporative cooling, read on!

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