Meal prep/freezer

jenniferkaye22
jenniferkaye22 Posts: 84 Member
What are some recipes or meals you can make and then freeze for the rest of the week?

Replies

  • acpgee
    acpgee Posts: 7,965 Member
    In my household the typical freezer meals are

    Beef bourgingon
    Coq au vin
    Dak dori tang
    Marcella Hazan's bolognaise sauce for pasta
    Meatballs and meatloaf
    Beef rendang and other curries
    Dutch pea soup
    Cassoulet
    Chilli con carne
    Gratin dauphinoise (you need to bake before freezing, otherwise the potato starch turns to sugar in the freezer)

    Whenever I make a recipe that freezes well (almost any braised meat or braised meat with pulses combiination) I do a quadruple batch because the extra work is not incremental and freeze in portion size containers.
  • srober3581
    srober3581 Posts: 1 Member
    If I am making lasagna, I make 2 or 3 to freeze for later.
    I make extra servings of chili or tortilla soup and freeze left overs. Beef and vegetable stew also freeze well.
    Pulled chicken or pork freezes well too.
    If you are looking to do meal prep, here are a couple I have done that my family likes:

    https://www.sixsistersstuff.com/recipe/20-minute-tuscan-pasta-freezer-meal/#_a5y_p=5124451

    https://www.passionforsavings.com/cheesy-broccoli-chicken-rice-recipe-freezer-meal/
  • Rainbowsunshine26
    Rainbowsunshine26 Posts: 89 Member
    Soup soup and more soup
    Overnight oats
  • fitnessguy266
    fitnessguy266 Posts: 150 Member
    Baked chicken breasts along with baked zucchini, squash, and bell peppers.....also candy yams! Mmmmm
  • tinkerbellang83
    tinkerbellang83 Posts: 9,130 Member
    My typical freezer meal-prepping foods are:
    • Chilli - veggie/mince/diced beef
    • Casseroles/Stews - such as strogonoff/chorizo & chickpea/Chicken & mushroom
    • Currys - various Chicken/Tofu/Paneer/Lamb/Beef - Thai/Indian are my usual go to.
    • Veggie Soups - Cauliflower & Cheddar/Spicy Carrot/Broccoli & Blue Cheese/Aubergine & Mushroom
    • Overnight Oats - usually I make mine with Alpro Oat Milk and Flavoured Soy Yoghurt and some dark chocolate chips and add a portion of blueberries (which I also freeze seperately). Let it sit in fridge overnight first and then freeze.
    • Fishcakes/Burgers/Meatballs - I usually prepare these but freeze uncooked and pan fry.
  • egbert2016
    egbert2016 Posts: 37 Member
    Spaghetti sauce over noodles and mushrooms. Chili. Soup. "Burrito bowls" - chicken, corn, beans and salsa over Brown rice. "Stir Fry Bowls" - chicken or shrimp, broccoli, carrots, edamame and asian sauce over brown rice. For breakfasts, I do a big pan of egg white frittata and cut it into pieces to freeze separately.
  • acpgee
    acpgee Posts: 7,965 Member
    My hubbie is the weekday cook and he struggles a bit with that. I try to help him out by batch cooking some freezer meals on the weekend. We've got a bottle of full fat cola bought accidentally in the cupboard so I will do coca cola chicken to put in the freezer this weekend. This is essentially a hacks version of chicken teriyaki.

    Brown some chicken thighs and drumsticks and set aside. In the same pan, sautee some onion and then add some minced garlic and fry until fragrant. Toss in a cup of coca cola (not sugar free) with several large glugs of thin soy sauce. Braise about 20 minutes, taste and adjust with salt, sugar, lemon and sriracha to balance saltiness, sweetness, acidity and heat, remembering that sweetness will reduce once you caramelize the sauce. Turn up the heat to a rapid boil for 5 minutes so that the sauce turns into a syrupy caramelized mass, removing chicken if it is already cooked through (72C internal temperature).

    Like all braised chicken dishes, this freezes well. Serve with rice and an asian cucumber salad an asian slaw, dressed with a commercial Japanese sesame salad dressing (=goma). If you don't mind the extra work you can also add a simple vegetable sautee such as spinach with garlic, or broccoli with garlic.
  • 13bbird13
    13bbird13 Posts: 425 Member
    Soup soup and more soup
    Overnight oats

    I never tried freezing overnight oats... I'll have to give it a shot. I usually just make a small batch and get two meals out of it, keeping the second half in the fridge, but I could make bigger batches if it freezes well.
  • acpgee
    acpgee Posts: 7,965 Member
    A rather modest batch of coca cola chicken with braised carrots cooling before going into the freezer.
    ypr8b5m3yaxz.jpeg
  • bigfoot27
    bigfoot27 Posts: 8 Member
    Can anybody help me please. I have started to try batch cooking and have just defrosted some beef and made a casserole also minced beef and made some chilli con carne. After freezing them do I need to defrost before reheating or can I reheat from frozen (as obviously already been cooked) thank you in advance.
  • born_of_fire74
    born_of_fire74 Posts: 776 Member
    I was surprised to learn that potatoes do not freeze very well. I made a huge beef stew in my slow cooker and froze a bunch; the potatoes turned rather mealy, quite an unappetizing texture in something you expect to be starch creamy, when reheated.
    bigfoot27 wrote: »
    Can anybody help me please. I have started to try batch cooking and have just defrosted some beef and made a casserole also minced beef and made some chilli con carne. After freezing them do I need to defrost before reheating or can I reheat from frozen (as obviously already been cooked) thank you in advance.

    I’d say you are fine to reheat from frozen, just don’t set the microwave for ten minutes and walk away. Your food will still be frozen in the middle but your container will be melted LOL. Put it in for a minute or two, stir it, then heat it for a minute or two, stir again, rinse and repeat, until fully warmed through. This is my go to method—should be fine for you too.
  • bigfoot27
    bigfoot27 Posts: 8 Member
    edited January 2020
    Thank you so much for taking the time to reply .
  • acpgee
    acpgee Posts: 7,965 Member
    I was surprised to learn that potatoes do not freeze very well. I made a huge beef stew in my slow cooker and froze a bunch; the potatoes turned rather mealy, quite an unappetizing texture in something you expect to be starch creamy, when reheated.
    bigfoot27 wrote: »
    Can anybody help me please. I have started to try batch cooking and have just defrosted some beef and made a casserole also minced beef and made some chilli con carne. After freezing them do I need to defrost before reheating or can I reheat from frozen (as obviously already been cooked) thank you in advance.

    I’d say you are fine to reheat from frozen, just don’t set the microwave for ten minutes and walk away. Your food will still be frozen in the middle but your container will be melted LOL. Put it in for a minute or two, stir it, then heat it for a minute or two, stir again, rinse and repeat, until fully warmed through. This is my go to method—should be fine for you too.

    I freeze gratin dauphinoise (scallopped potatoes in the US, I think). They need to be fully cooked before going in the freezer otherwise apparently the starch gets converted to sugar. This is the only potato dish I freeze but I find it works well.

  • 13bbird13
    13bbird13 Posts: 425 Member
    It also depends a little bit on the type of potato. Regular Idaho russets freeze terribly in my experience... the texture is very grainy and unpleasant. I have better luck with Yukon Golds when I make a batch of beef or chicken stew to freeze.
  • hereinmissouri
    hereinmissouri Posts: 11 Member
    I started cooking 2-3 extra servings of dinner every night. Then I put in divided Tupperware containers, sharpie what it is on the lid and freeze. Keep doing this every dinner and within a week or two, you have a nice selection of frozen meals.
  • acpgee
    acpgee Posts: 7,965 Member
    I like to cook, so my typical gift to new parents is an afternoon of batch cooking some freezer meals. One couple I am friends with keep asking me back every two months to cook something together to fill up their freezer. Saturday we will do beef rendang and coca cola chicken for the freezer and make a month's worth of Indonesian salad dressing for tomato salad and Japanese sesame dressing for cucumber salad for the fridge.
  • missysippy930
    missysippy930 Posts: 2,577 Member
    bigfoot27 wrote: »
    Thank you so much for taking the time to reply .

    I also heat meals I have frozen in a covered pot on the stove top or in the oven, from the frozen state. It takes longer than the microwave, but works great if time isn’t an issue.