T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2060.11 | APPLES: Freezing Apple Dishes | MILVAX::MAHON | | Sat Oct 22 1988 14:36 | 21 |
| Hi, I am planning on doing some cooking with apples.
I would like to make apple stuff (pies and turnovers).
I have a few questions:
1. Can you freeze these items?
2. Do they have to be fully cooked, or can they be raw?
lastly,
3. How long can you keep them in the freezer before they
start to get funny? What should I wrap them in.
I have tons of apples I would like to work with, but am afraid\
I may ruin the goods by putting them in the freezer incorrectly.
Someone help! I already have the apples!
Thanks in advance for any suggestions,
Bren
|
2060.12 | Try open Freezing | CSMADM::EDWARDS | | Mon Oct 24 1988 12:20 | 10 |
| I know you can freeze both cooked and uncooked apple pies - not
sure how long for - we always forget things anyway !. We used to
be subjected to lots of apples when we lived in Ireland and we used
to freeze them " open " - ie sliced and sprinkled with lemon juice
and spread on trays. When they were frozen we used to bag them (
ziplock ) and then when needed we just spread them on the pie base
and into the oven whilst still frozen. Not as good as fresh but
still better than tinned pie filling !
Rod
|
2060.13 | HOW TO FREEZE APPLES | HUBIE::PRIVETTS | | Mon Oct 24 1988 13:17 | 6 |
| I MAKE SEVERAL APPLE PIES AND APPLE CRISP RECIPES. THE ONLY TRICK
IS TO FREEZE THEM UNBAKED. DON'T COOK ANY APPLE RECIPES BEFORE
FREEZING THEM AS IT MAKES THEM MUSHY. I DON'T KNOW HOW LONG YOU
CAN KEEP THEM BEFORE THEY GET FUNNY. I HAVE A RECIPE BOOK, THOUGH,
THAT I KNOW DOES TELL HOW LONG. I'LL LOOK IT UP AND LET YOU KNOW.
PATTI
|
2060.14 | WHEN IN DOUBT, THINK SAUCE! | BARTLE::READ | | Mon Oct 24 1988 13:57 | 23 |
| WHEN YOU HAVE ENOUGH PIES, CRISPS, ETC. DO APPLESAUCE WHICH CAN
BE FROZEN AFTER COOKING.
I CUT WHOLE APPLES IN FOURS, LEAVE ON SKINS AND SEEDS, THROW AS
MANY AS I WANT TO USE IN A BIG POT, - AND INSTEAD OF ADDING WATER,
I USE EITHER A SMALL AMOUNT OF FRESH CIDER OR ORANGE JUICE OR
COMBINATION OF BOTH. AMOUNT DEPENDS ON NUMBER OF APPLES, AND HOW
JUICY THEY ARE. YOU DON'T WANT SO MUCH THAT IT'S WATERY BUT ENOUGH
TO KEEP FROM BURNING AND TO GIVE IT THE RIGHT CONSISTENCY. BRING
TO A BOIL AND SIMMER UNTIL MUSHY.
I THEN DUMP THEM INTO A FOLEY FOOD MILL WHICH EXTRACTS THE SKINS
AND SEEDS. ADD SUGAR OR HONEY TO TASTE, SOME CINNAMON, FRESH GRATED
NUTMEG, AND A LITTLE GROUND ALLSPICE.
IF YOUR APPLES ARE NICE AND RED, THE APPLESAUCE WILL BE A LOVELY
PINK COLOR. IF NOT, I ADD A LITTLE RED FOOD COLORING FOR EYE APPEAL.
PUT IN PLASTIC FOOD CONTAINERS (LEAVE A LITTLE ROOM AT THE TOP)
COVER TIGHTLY AND FREEZE. THIS IS SO EASY, KEEPS SO WELL, AND TASTES
SO MUCH BETTER THAN THE CANNED STUFF IN THE STORES, THAT EVEN IF
YOU DON'T HAVE APPLES TO USE UP , IT'S WORTHWHILE TO GO BUY THEM
JUST FOR THIS!
|
2060.15 | Freeze 'em baked | USMFG::PJEFFRIES | the best is better | Mon Oct 24 1988 14:18 | 9 |
| I always freeze my apple pies after they are cooked with no problems.
When ever I get around to pie baking, I do 3 or 4 at a time. The
secret to not getting mushy apples is to mix the varieties of apples.
I usually mix macs, granny smiths and some times delicious. Don't
slice the apples too thin and really fill the pie plate heaping
full.
I repeat, I have never had a mushy pie and I have been doing this
for over 20 years.
|
2060.1 | Wrap and Place | DNEAST::TURCOTTE_PAU | | Tue Oct 24 1989 10:40 | 8 |
|
My wife just put some Apple Crisps in the freezer a couple of weeks
ago and she wrapped them with plastic wrap then with aluminum foil
after they had cooled and popped them in the freezer.
Froggy
|
2060.2 | Corn on the cob? | FLUKES::SUTTON | He roams the seas in freedom... | Tue Aug 14 1990 10:59 | 15 |
| How about corn on the cob?
I can't find any specific directions in any of my books on how to
freeze the stuff! Joy of Cooking dances around it a bit but never
answers some fairly basic questions, like:
Do I shuck the corn first or freeze it in the husk?
Do I blanch it? Parboil it? Cook it completely? - before I freeze it?
With all the delicious corn appearing on the farm stands around us and
a freezer with lots of empty space, I'm looking forward to your help.
Thanks,
/Harry
|
2060.3 | Can you freeze squash? | SWSOGO::GRAY | | Tue Aug 14 1990 11:01 | 5 |
| I was wondering if you could freeze summer squash or zucchini?
Thanks,
Gail
|
2060.4 | Freezing made zucchini tough | WAGON::HARRIS | | Tue Aug 14 1990 11:56 | 12 |
| My experiences with freezing zucchini haven't been very
successful. Last summer, I sliced large chunks, blanched,
put into plastic freezer bags, and froze. When I took
them out to reheat, they tasted okay, but were tough.
In 2568.0, I mentioned that I was trying out a vegetable
lasagna, and planned to freeze it. In this case, the
squash was not cooked first. When we defrosted and baked
two days later, the zucchini in that dish was tough as well.
The success that I HAVE had was to make zucchini bread, and
freeze. It was just dandy when eaten during the winter.
|
2060.5 | | TRUCKS::GKE | | Tue Aug 14 1990 12:03 | 15 |
|
I've had success freezing zucchini by shredding it, soaking it for
an hour in very salted water, then blanching it for exactly 1 min
in boiling water, draining and freezing it in little blocks that
I formed on a baking sheet. When the little blocks were frozen
I bagged them and then used the shredded zucchini throughout the
winter for zucchini bread and in casseroles an soups. The little
blocks allow you to take out just the amount you want for a given
recipe.
Squash I always boil until done, puree and then freeze for pies
or to be warmed up with butter.. whenever I've tried freezing it
in chunks it is stringy and watery when reheated.
gailann
|
2060.6 | corn | DNEAST::MAHANEY_MIKE | | Tue Aug 14 1990 12:37 | 3 |
| As far as corn goes, I just parboil the corn for about
three minutes and then cut it off the cobb with a electric knife and
bag it up.
|
2060.7 | The quick and dirty method of zuke freezing | REORG::AITEL | Never eat a barracuda over 3 lbs. | Tue Aug 14 1990 12:38 | 14 |
| I freeze grated zucchini without any other preparation. I fill
up ziplock freezer bags with it, or grated summer squash. In
the winter, I defrost and use for zucchini/squash bread or
muffins, or put it secretly in stews - it's grated so it
disintegrates and just makes the gravy richer AND passes the
no-zuke test at the dinner table.... Anyhow, if you use it in
breads, decrease your liquids a bit to account for the juice
that will be in the bag after defrosting.
I bet the method in -.1 gives you less liquid in the zucchini,
but my method is very quick. Whatever!
--L
|
2060.8 | | TLE::EIKENBERRY | Sharon Eikenberry | Tue Aug 14 1990 14:18 | 5 |
| My parents blanch corn on the cob (w/o husk), and then freeze it. They don't
cut the kernels off - they leave the cob intact. I'm not sure how long they
cook it for when they're ready to eat it, though.
--Sharon
|
2060.9 | another variation on the same theme | SHIRE::DETOTH | | Wed Aug 15 1990 05:15 | 19 |
| I freeze corn in the husk... it seems to keep the kernels from getting
tough/freeze-dried... If I remember correctly though... it can't be
kept for months and months... Steaming them to defrost/cook seems to
work real good (softens the outer toughness). After letting it/them
cool down a bit... I cut of the not-so-nice-to-look-at ends.
re: zucchini... I have "blanched" large/long chunks (cut in half
length-wise), taken out the seeds and stuffed with meat filling,
wrapped/bagged. I defrost starting in a cold oven... periodically
drain off some of the excess water... which I keep for a later soup or
even to cook rice/noodles in... I have also had reasonable results
cutting it into "julienne" small narrow little sticks which I freeze
without blanching... I then bring them back to life either by steaming
of just "stewing" if that's the right term; I put them in a pan with no
liquid - low heat and let them "stew" in their own juice...(add a
dribble of olive oil and a sprinkling of curry powder and yum yum
yum...)
Diana
|
2060.10 | Space Saver | DNEAST::MAHANEY_MIKE | | Wed Aug 15 1990 05:43 | 3 |
| The main reason that you might want to cut the corn off the
cobb as I do is to save space, depending on how much you put up. When
I do, its usally around 250-300 ears.
|
2060.16 | which is my best option tonight? | APLVEW::DEBRIAE | searching for the language that is _also_ yours | Thu Dec 12 1996 09:54 | 35 |
2060.17 | | ZIGLAR::LAURENT | Hal Laurent @ COP | Thu Dec 12 1996 10:14 | 10 |
2060.18 | suppose thawed-before-baked apples won't get any mushier... | APLVEW::DEBRIAE | searching for the language that is _also_ yours | Thu Dec 12 1996 11:32 | 19 |
2060.19 | | STAR::MWOLINSKI | uCoder sans Frontieres | Thu Dec 12 1996 11:43 | 8 |
2060.20 | heavily spice my pies,got stronger in freezer,helped frozen state... | APLVEW::DEBRIAE | searching for the language that is _also_ yours | Fri Dec 13 1996 09:41 | 10
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