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What Foods Can't Be Frozen?

Fitness_Chick
Fitness_Chick Posts: 6,648 Member
edited September 2024 in Food and Nutrition
What Foods Can't Be Frozen?
by Becki Robins

Potatoes, Rice, Pasta, Cream Sauces, Cheese Do Not Freeze Well

The quality of your frozen recipes depends on which ingredients you use.

Here's a short list of foods that don't freeze well or require special freezing techniques.

Freezing meals is a great way to save time in the kitchen, but not everything is a good candidate for the freezer. It might be tempting to toss an entire batch of spaghetti, pasta and all, into your freezer, but what you'll save in time will cost you in goodwill once your family realizes they're expected to eat that unpleasant looking pile of mushy noodles. Not everything freezes well, and knowing what you can and can't put into a freezer ahead of time will save you money and time in the long run.

When Freezing Foods, Quality is the Goal
According to the Food and Drug Administration, any food kept at 0 degrees Fahrenheit will be safe indefinitely. So, the following list doesn't take into account freezing for safety (in theory, you can keep something in your freezer for 25 years and it will still be safe to eat). Freezing for quality is the goal.

Here's a short list of foods that require special freezing techniques or should be kept out of the freezer altogether:

Potatoes - Especially when they are cubed, cooked thoroughly and used as a part of a stew or soup, potatoes aren't good candidates for a freezer. They become mushy and grainy and most people find them unpleasant. If you insist on freezing potatoes, use spuds that have been cut into a small dice (less surface area in the mouth makes the mushiness less noticeable) and have been parboiled but not cooked through. It's tricky to walk this line, though--the potatoes have to be cooked just to the point where reheating will finish the job, otherwise you'll have a meal full of almost-raw potatoes, which might be just as bad as mushy ones.

Rice - Like potatoes, this ingredient can be par-boiled prior to freezing, but if it's underdone it will be chewy, and if it's overdone it will be mushy. Unless you're fond of experimentation, it's best to avoid freezing rice. Instead, you can cook fresh rice and add it on serving day.

Pasta - Freezing pasta is usually a bad idea, but there are some exceptions. Casserole-style pasta dishes like lasagna usually freeze nicely, provided the noodles are (again) only partially cooked before placing them in the freezer. Some recipes of this type even call for uncooked noodles--as long as there is plenty of sauce in the recipe, the moisture will permeate the noodles as the food defrosts and reheats.

Cream Sauces - Any recipe containing large quantities of cream, milk, half-and-half etc. are best prepared sans-dairy. Cream can easily be added to the recipe once it has been defrosted, and doing it this way will avoid the curdling and separation you're likely to experience if you try to freeze a sauce made with cream.

Cheese - Grated cheese freezes pretty well, and small cubes of cheese also do fine. Trying to freeze a cheese sauce is tricky, though, and is best avoided. Frozen cheese sauces separate and become lumpy and unpleasant.

Raw vegetables that contain water - This list includes most kinds of lettuces, celery, and any other vegetable with a high water content. These foods are vulnerable to damage from ice crystals and are best kept out of the freezer.

Keeping this list in mind, remember that there really aren’t any hard and fast rules about what can and absolutely cannot be frozen with success. In the freezer cooking community you will find a lot of people who claim to have frozen cream sauces, pasta or potatoes without problems. What this really means is that people have varying ideas about what quality means, and/or different ideas about what kinds of quality changes they will accept in the name of convenience. If you’re a stickler for al-dente or you seek perfection in your recipes, it’s a good idea to keep the above ingredients out of your freezer. Otherwise, experimentation will give you a good idea about where your own quality standards lie

http://cookingresources.suite101.com/article.cfm/what_foods_cant_be_frozen

Replies

  • Fitness_Chick
    Fitness_Chick Posts: 6,648 Member
    What Foods Can't Be Frozen?
    by Becki Robins

    Potatoes, Rice, Pasta, Cream Sauces, Cheese Do Not Freeze Well

    The quality of your frozen recipes depends on which ingredients you use.

    Here's a short list of foods that don't freeze well or require special freezing techniques.

    Freezing meals is a great way to save time in the kitchen, but not everything is a good candidate for the freezer. It might be tempting to toss an entire batch of spaghetti, pasta and all, into your freezer, but what you'll save in time will cost you in goodwill once your family realizes they're expected to eat that unpleasant looking pile of mushy noodles. Not everything freezes well, and knowing what you can and can't put into a freezer ahead of time will save you money and time in the long run.

    When Freezing Foods, Quality is the Goal
    According to the Food and Drug Administration, any food kept at 0 degrees Fahrenheit will be safe indefinitely. So, the following list doesn't take into account freezing for safety (in theory, you can keep something in your freezer for 25 years and it will still be safe to eat). Freezing for quality is the goal.

    Here's a short list of foods that require special freezing techniques or should be kept out of the freezer altogether:

    Potatoes - Especially when they are cubed, cooked thoroughly and used as a part of a stew or soup, potatoes aren't good candidates for a freezer. They become mushy and grainy and most people find them unpleasant. If you insist on freezing potatoes, use spuds that have been cut into a small dice (less surface area in the mouth makes the mushiness less noticeable) and have been parboiled but not cooked through. It's tricky to walk this line, though--the potatoes have to be cooked just to the point where reheating will finish the job, otherwise you'll have a meal full of almost-raw potatoes, which might be just as bad as mushy ones.

    Rice - Like potatoes, this ingredient can be par-boiled prior to freezing, but if it's underdone it will be chewy, and if it's overdone it will be mushy. Unless you're fond of experimentation, it's best to avoid freezing rice. Instead, you can cook fresh rice and add it on serving day.

    Pasta - Freezing pasta is usually a bad idea, but there are some exceptions. Casserole-style pasta dishes like lasagna usually freeze nicely, provided the noodles are (again) only partially cooked before placing them in the freezer. Some recipes of this type even call for uncooked noodles--as long as there is plenty of sauce in the recipe, the moisture will permeate the noodles as the food defrosts and reheats.

    Cream Sauces - Any recipe containing large quantities of cream, milk, half-and-half etc. are best prepared sans-dairy. Cream can easily be added to the recipe once it has been defrosted, and doing it this way will avoid the curdling and separation you're likely to experience if you try to freeze a sauce made with cream.

    Cheese - Grated cheese freezes pretty well, and small cubes of cheese also do fine. Trying to freeze a cheese sauce is tricky, though, and is best avoided. Frozen cheese sauces separate and become lumpy and unpleasant.

    Raw vegetables that contain water - This list includes most kinds of lettuces, celery, and any other vegetable with a high water content. These foods are vulnerable to damage from ice crystals and are best kept out of the freezer.

    Keeping this list in mind, remember that there really aren’t any hard and fast rules about what can and absolutely cannot be frozen with success. In the freezer cooking community you will find a lot of people who claim to have frozen cream sauces, pasta or potatoes without problems. What this really means is that people have varying ideas about what quality means, and/or different ideas about what kinds of quality changes they will accept in the name of convenience. If you’re a stickler for al-dente or you seek perfection in your recipes, it’s a good idea to keep the above ingredients out of your freezer. Otherwise, experimentation will give you a good idea about where your own quality standards lie

    http://cookingresources.suite101.com/article.cfm/what_foods_cant_be_frozen
  • Phoenix_Rising
    Phoenix_Rising Posts: 11,417 Member
    Raw vegetables that contain water - This list includes most kinds of lettuces, celery, and any other vegetable with a high water content. These foods are vulnerable to damage from ice crystals and are best kept out of the freezer.

    Strawberries generally fall in that category as well.
  • Anna_Banana
    Anna_Banana Posts: 2,939 Member
    We make extras when we cook and freeze the leftovers. There are definately some things that you don't want to freeze. If I'm making a soup with noodles in it I will take out what I want to freeze before it is completely done. Half cooked noodles reheat way better than over cooked ones.
  • Fitness_Chick
    Fitness_Chick Posts: 6,648 Member
    We make extras when we cook and freeze the leftovers. There are definately some things that you don't want to freeze. If I'm making a soup with noodles in it I will take out what I want to freeze before it is completely done. Half cooked noodles reheat way better than over cooked ones.

    Good to KNOW! Didn't know that and thanks for adding how you make it work Anna:flowerforyou:
  • Fitness_Chick
    Fitness_Chick Posts: 6,648 Member
    Raw vegetables that contain water - This list includes most kinds of lettuces, celery, and any other vegetable with a high water content. These foods are vulnerable to damage from ice crystals and are best kept out of the freezer.

    Strawberries generally fall in that category as well.
    Unless you're going for a smoothie then I guess it would work fine:drinker:
  • Phoenix_Rising
    Phoenix_Rising Posts: 11,417 Member
    Raw vegetables that contain water - This list includes most kinds of lettuces, celery, and any other vegetable with a high water content. These foods are vulnerable to damage from ice crystals and are best kept out of the freezer.

    Strawberries generally fall in that category as well.
    Unless you're going for a smoothie then I guess it would work fine:drinker:

    Right!

    I saw Alton Brown (on "Good Eats") showing how to properly freeze (dehydrate) strawberries. Regular old freezing leads to crystallization, which upon thawing leaves you with mushy shapless strawberries. If anyone wanted to properly freeze strawberries, I'd recommend looking up that episode and following his steps, which I think involved liquid nitrogen. Unless liquid nitrogen is the explosive stuff.... If so, he didn't use that. :wink:
  • rheston
    rheston Posts: 638
    haven't you guys eaten frozen strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, etc? I freeze these fruits when I pick them in the spring and summer and put them away for my snacks during the winter months or even on a hot summer's day. They are really delicious and a good way to satisfy one's hunger pangs.

    I take some exception to freezing pasta. I cook lasagna a couple of times a year and I always cook enough for an army. I put away numerous individually wrapped servings in the freezer for later in the year when time doesn't permit cooking a regular meal. The noodles are always as good as they were when first cooked and nothing is lost in either the texture or flavor. Am I just lucky or what?
  • Fitness_Chick
    Fitness_Chick Posts: 6,648 Member
    haven't you guys eaten frozen strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, etc? I freeze these fruits when I pick them in the spring and summer and put them away for my snacks during the winter months or even on a hot summer's day. They are really delicious and a good way to satisfy one's hunger pangs.

    I take some exception to freezing pasta. I cook lasagna a couple of times a year and I always cook enough for an army. I put away numerous individually wrapped servings in the freezer for later in the year when time doesn't permit cooking a regular meal. The noodles are always as good as they were when first cooked and nothing is lost in either the texture or flavor. Am I just lucky or what?

    Hm, come to think about it, I've also frozen lasagna I tucked away in the there...so yup, mine tasted fine when I warmed it up too.:bigsmile:

    Maybe you're lucky too!:wink: OH I love fresh berries best but always envy those that grown them and are able to them fill the freezer up to enjoy more later!:drinker:

    FC:heart:
  • sixtyinchesoffury
    sixtyinchesoffury Posts: 321 Member
    I have frozen lasagna too. I do find that I need to make some sauce to top it off though or it seems a little dry.

    One of my favorite things to eat are frozen blueberries and grapes. I think the water in them gives them a slushy consistency.

    Good for hot summer days..........:wink:
  • Fitness_Chick
    Fitness_Chick Posts: 6,648 Member
    I have frozen lasagna too. I do find that I need to make some sauce to top it off though or it seems a little dry.

    One of my favorite things to eat are frozen blueberries and grapes. I think the water in them gives them a slushy consistency.

    Good for hot summer days..........:wink:
    frozen grapes in the Summer are the BEST! Like mini popcicles:drinker:
  • Fitness_Chick
    Fitness_Chick Posts: 6,648 Member
    :smile:
This discussion has been closed.