Achieving Your Freezer’s Full Potential

Posted on by Mary Hunt in Home & Family 10 Comments

Is your freezer a money-guzzling storage facility for mystery meats? An oversized ice maker? It’s time to learn how to turn that box of wasted cold space into the money-stretching, time-saving household appliance it was meant to be.

Leftovers

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TIPS

Temperature. Set it to the coldest setting so you maintain a constant temperature of 0 degrees or lower to ensure food will be safe to eat. 

Efficient. A full freezer uses less electricity. When food inventory is low, pack it full by adding containers of water to fit the empty spaces.

Debt-Proof Living

Right wrap. Wrap food tightly to prevent moisture loss that causes food to become dry and discolored. Then, wrap it again in a thicker layer of foil, plastic or freezer bags. The second wrap keeps out odors.

No burn. Trapped air causes freezer burn. To prevent it, select a container small enough so your contents fill it. And skip the fancy sealing machine. Using a freezer bag, seal all but enough space to slip in a drinking straw. Inhale on the straw to pull out all the air, quickly seal the bag, and pop it into the freezer.

TRICKS 

Burgers. Separate individual hamburger patties with squares of waxed paper or parchment, then stack in a freezer bag. You can do this with tortillas, too.

Bagels. Bagels can go from freezer to toaster without thawing. Slice and wrap each bagel in plastic, slipping the wrap between the two halves first and then around. Store in a freezer bag.

Bacon. Roll up the bacon in tight coils, each with two or three slices, and pop into a freezer bag. Remove, and thaw one or more coils at a time.

Cookie dough. Divide the dough into balls, and arrange on a lined cookie sheet. Once frozen, place the balls in a freezer bag. Bake as many as you’d like without defrosting.

Casseroles. Whether original or leftover, line a casserole dish with foil before filling it. Seal tightly, and freeze. Once frozen, remove the foil package from the dish and store in the freezer. When ready to bake, slip food from foil, place in the same dish and bake.

Freshly baked muffins. Make your favorite muffin batter, and fill muffin pans lined with paper cups. Instead of baking, stick the pan in the freezer. When frozen, pop the muffins into freezer bags. When ready to bake, take the number of muffins out of the freezer, put them into the muffin pan, and bake according to the recipe, adding about 5 minutes.

Stock. Pour stock or broth into a coffee mug lined with a quart-sized freezer bag. Seal the bag, and lay it flat on a cookie sheet. Freeze.

Nuts. Sealed in a freezer bag. Nuts stay fresh-tasting for months. No need to defrost—frozen nuts chop just as easily as fresh.

Dry goods. Stored in the freezer, flour, bread crumbs, cornmeal, oats and other grains—even potato chips and crackers—are protected from humidity, bugs and rancidity. Make sure bags and containers are closed tightly.

Do you have any more freezer tips and tricks? Share them with the EC community in the comments below.

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Posted on by Mary Hunt in Home & Family 10 Comments
  • Sharon in Arkansas

    I use flattened cupcake papers, large size, between hamberger patties for freezing. No cutting waxed paper and no corners sticking out.

    • http://twitter.com/DebtProofLiving Mary Hunt

      You’ve given me a great idea. Due to an unfortunate purchasing error, I have about a zillion too-small round coffee filters. I think they’d work just like your large cupcake papers. Thanks!

  • karen

    I save and use the inside “bag” in cereal boxes. open flat and cut to fit between meat pieces in freezer bags. and yes, we do sometimes buy boxed cereal when it is cost friendly

    • http://twitter.com/DebtProofLiving Mary Hunt

      Another great idea. Ideas like yours make me smile … not because it saves so much money, but keeps me focused on do things faster, better and well, cheaper.

  • Cindy

    I pour small amounts of chicken or beef broth into my ice cube trays to freeze. When it’s frozen, I transfer the cubes to a freezer bag to use later.

  • Lucy

    After wrapping meat tightly in plastic wrap then foil, I write contents on a slip of paper and place in a good quality freezer bag. I remove the frozen food to defrost when needed and store freezer bag in the freezer for my next shopping trip. No need to continually buy expensive freezer bags and I always know where they are.

    • http://twitter.com/DebtProofLiving Mary Hunt

      Freezer bags … in the freezer! Brilliant.

  • Gretchen

    When strawberries are on sale or you have too many, hull & wash. Spread them out on a jelly-roll sheet & freeze. After frozen put them in a ziploc bag, pull out for making smoothies or for topping ice cream, etc.
    Too many lemons?? Juice them & freeze the juice in an ice cube tray. Pop out & store in ziploc bags. Put one cube, some sugar & add water to make a class of lemonade.

  • Kristine Smith

    When I prepare a recipe for my family of four that I know will produce leftovers (Often enough for a second meal) I make two meals at once. If my recipe calls for a 9×13 pan, I use two 8×8′s and serve one fresh, wrap the other well and put in the freezer. A week or two later, when I’d love a night off from cooking, I pull it out and cook it up. By then the family is excited to see it again, as well.

  • Karen Tennison

    When I have leftovers (and I often purposely make extra for this
    reason), I pack meals in those 3 compartment plastic lunch containers. I store them in the freezer and use them for my husband’s lunch, or he eats them for dinner if I know I’m not going to be home to cook. I try to keep a variety and stockpile of meals. He’s not a cook, but he knows how to microwave! This also keeps him from eating unhealthy fast food.