Jared, Thank you but you 'got me'.
Sorry, but you'll have to visualize a man and woman tearing a cabinet apart using crow bars. Crap is flying in the air. Next, picture the existing ice box and home made companion freezer being shaved of insulation with a straight blade shovel. See what I mean? We never even considered bringing the digital camera into that environment. What I would recommend that you do is to add insulation from the outside. First, inside the engine box, peel back any sound proofing. (Joke, the stock stuff is junk) Then install a layer of closed cell foam where the ice box is against engine heat. The best solution is to mount a vacuum panel there. But the problem with that is it would be exposed to any nicks or dings and would loose vacuum. If that happened, it's ruined. It would go from R36 to R2. I mounted mine on the inside of the panel. Better stick with closed cell foam in the engine box. Then for the bottom, at the rear of the box where the factory mounted the batteries, (bigger joke) drill a 1/4" hole. You are looking for AIR, not foam. Then do the same thing in the opposite side at the front-bottom. You know, in that space under the stove area. Again, you're looking to find air. Also make a couple of holes in the wall of the trash bin. Then go to Home Depot and buy about 6-8 cans of insulating spray foam. They should be all over the store. Stick a nozzle in the low-rear hole and start filling. Don't stop until you see foam coming out of one of the holes under the stove. It should then expand to the hole in the trash bin and vent out to an unobtrusive area for cleaning AFTER it dries. I would also cover the area around the holes with duct tape so that the foam can't penetrate wood grain. Also plug the lower holes as soon as foam is there. It really helps with cleanup too. I would also caulk the gap at the floor in the galley prior to this job. You could just tape it,,Na, caulk it. At the rear of the box, when you're done spraying foam, you can make a template of the rear panel and install another foam panel. You can order up a vacuum panel from rparts.com but, again, it must be protected. The way we did this job is to buy four gallons of pour foam and build it up from the front with the front panel off. The entire area was covered with vis-queen to prevent disasters. I wouldn't use the stuff again. Too hard to work with. Just use the spray stuff. Now look under the lid inside the box. Don't see any insulation do you? And these are Florida boats! Again, foam boards with spray adhesive works. Another trick with the foam boards is to cut them just a little larger than the space available and then wedge them into place. Well Jared, I'm sure you know now why this wasn't a digital camera environment. Whew. But it sure works good. Our refer holdover plate only requires the engine to pull it down once a day for 30 minutes because the freezer is next to it and outboard. The freezer is pulled down twice a day. On my to-do list is adjusting the freezer TXV for more volume. It's still a little light. I might also change it to a higher tonnage. You are going to have so much fun.