30 things I routinely freeze that you may or may not have thought about freezing yourself, PLUS how I organize my very, very organized freezer.
Some women have a well organized shoe closet, I have a well organized freezer. My love of food being greater than my love of shoes. And I have some footwear I'm pretty fond of.
I can open my freezer door any day and know instantly what's in there and what I have to choose from. Looking for the pumpkin ravioli I made 4 months ago, BAM there it is in the pasta bin. Sausage? BAM! Everything is stacked and labelled in clear containers.
What you see at the top of this post is the 3rd incarnation of my organized freezer. The drawers I bought to organize it last year were probably as expensive as the freezer itself. But I don't care because I love it and I never lose any food in it.
Prior to the pull out drawers I used stacking bins. First tubs, and then I graduated to tubs with lids. The problem with stacking tubs is you have to remove the whole tubs to get to what was in them or under them.
I freeze everything I possibly can for two reasons. So it doesn't go bad sitting in my fridge and so if I can always have random ingredients I may not use all of the time on hand. Galangal anyone?
Also this post will also show you how to possibly get TWICE as much into your freezer.
If you've ever thrown out a log of goat cheese because it turned on you before you could finish using it ... this post is for you.
30 things you might not have known you can freeze. Or maybe you did because let's face it, you're pretty clever - but hopefully there's at least one thing on here you weren't aware of.
Table of Contents
1. Whole Tomatoes
Freeze tomatoes whole. Just stick them in a container or even a plastic bag, skins and all and forget about them. When a recipe calls for tomatoes, you have them. Cut them when they're partially frozen for easy dicing or let them thaw for more of a whole stewed tomato thing. (they slip right out of their skins when they've thawed) Perfect for soups and stews.
2. Garlic
Stick whole cloves or heads of garlic in the freezer at the beginning of garlic season so in March, April, May and June you still have a garlic stash to grab. (you can freeze it any time before it goes soft and dry but the fresher it is when you freeze it the better the quality will be) Garlic is in peak season around mid-end of July.
3. Pizza Dough
I make a lot of pizza dough as you can imagine. See my backyard pizza oven here as proof. I like to make my dough fresh but always keep at least 4 balls of frozen dough in the freezer in case of a pizza emergency. Like what if Chris Isaak shows up one day and wants pizza and I don't have any dough made? What the hell then? Honestly.
DOUGH FREEZING TIP
(store bought or homemade)
Form the dough into tight balls around 250 grams each using the method in this post before it has started to rise. Wrap tightly in plastic wrap and freeze the balls. To use, remove them from the freezer, unwrap, and drop the frozen ball of dough into a bowl of room temperature water for 15 minutes. This helps them rehydrate and thaws them at the same time. Remove the balls from the water, and leave them covered on the counter for 2 hours to finish thawing.
(or just take the balls out of the freezer the night before and allow to thaw in the fridge)
4. Eggs
I wrote a post a few years ago about how to freeze eggs. But the gist of it is, you just crack the eggs, mix the whites and yolks together like you're making scrambled eggs and then freeze them. Don't stir them vigorously though. You don't want to incorporate any air or bubbles because that'll make them rubbery and tough. Freeze in food safe containers or in an ice cube tray.
3 Tablespoons of egg mixture = 1 egg.
5. Whipping Cream
Whipping cream is a miracle dairy product. You can boil it, scorch it, or freeze it and it isn't bothered one bit by any of it.
6. Milk
The trick to freezing milk is to let it thaw slowly in the fridge and to give it a shake to break up any bits that have solidified.
7. Coconut Milk
I've taken to using ½ cup of coconut milk in my Overnight Oatmeal recipe. That means I'm always left with part of a can which I sometimes use and sometimes don't use during the week. Enter ... freezing the coconut milk. It freezes perfectly. I just measure it out into ½ cup servings and stick it in the freezer door.
8. Ginger
I was the goon standing for ½ an hour picking out the smallest piece of ginger in the produce aisle because I know I'm never going to use a piece the size of a cob of corn. Now I pick whichever is the freshest and store the rest in the freezer.
9. Goat Cheese
Game changer. Goat cheese freezes perfectly. Use whatever you need when you first open it then immediately wrap the rest of it and store it in the freezer.
10. Cooked Pasta
I don't do this personally but apparently freezing cooked pasta is a thing. I do however freeze cooked lasagnas and other meals that have cooked pasta and they freeze well.
11. Cooked Rice
Ditto for rice. It freezes perfectly.
12. Tomato Paste
Because how often does a recipe call for an entire can? Rarely. Just plop it by the tablespoon on a piece of wax paper and stick it all in the freezer. Once frozen take it off the paper and store it frozen in a baggie.
13. Chocoalte
If you buy lots of Halloween candy and are sure to hand out all the stuff you don't like first, hoarding all the chips and chocolate bars for yourself, you'll be pleased to know you can freeze all those mini (or maxi) chocolate bars. Chocolate chips too.
14. Chicken/Turkey Carcasses
My freezer is always filled with carcasses from those pre-cooked grocery store chickens. I buy them when I'm in a rush, eat about half of them and then toss the other half into the freezer. When I have 4 or 5 of them in there I pull them out and make chicken broth. Here's my chicken broth method and recipe.
15. Wine
I would like to take a moment right now to acknowledge the thought that just went through your head, "WHO has leftover wine to freeze???". K. Good, now that we got that out of the way I can tell you who has wine leftover. Me. I don't drink wine. I think it's pretty gross. There are a select few vintages I like but for the most part I'd rather have a whiskey. Or beer. Or if we're being honest, a Diet Coke.
If you use wine for cooking, freeze it in an ice cube tray for use in recipes.
If you drink wine but can't down the whole bottle in a night because you aren't 20, store the rest of it in the freezer. (don't do this with an unopened bottle or you could end up with an exploded bottle of wine)
Before your amateur sommelier head explodes you can read all about this method here.
16. Pesto
Make huge batches when the ingredients are in season and freeze them in ice cube trays. When they're frozen take them out and store them in a baggie or Tupperware bin.
17. Tortillas
I must eat an inordinate amount of Mexican inspired food because I'm always in need of tortillas. But I rarely use a whole package of them. Any unused get stored in the freezer in their original package.
18. Flour, Oatmeal, Grains etc.
O.K. Remember that Overnight Oatmeal I'm so fond of? Well I went to make it a while ago and just about barfed when I saw it was filled with grain weevils. Filled might be an exaggeration. I saw 2. I noticed them before I ate it. I now keep my oatmeal in the freezer. I think the fact that I still eat oatmeal is a testament to my love of oatmeal.
19. Nuts
Nuts have oil and nuts will go rancid. Any nuts I only use occasionally I keep in the freezer.
20. Whole Peppers
Peppers are prolific. One plant will fill a wingback chair with peppers. I just freeze them whole the same way I do tomatoes. (not including the ones I make into Jalapeño poppers.)
21. Cold Cuts / Sandwich Meat
That's right. I like me some nitrites and nitrates every once in a while. Sometimes a lady just needs to tuck into a pastrami on rye without worrying the world is going to end.
But I'm notoriously terrible at knowing how much to ask for at the deli counter so I always end up with too much. Into the freezer it goes until the next time. You'll have to dry them with a paper towel, otherwise they're fine.
22. Donuts
Krispy Kremes, Tim Hortons, chocolate or sugar glazed - it doesn't matter. If it's a donut, you can freeze it.
24. Yogurt
This one I don't do but have planned on doing it for years if that makes any difference.
So I can't comment on how the consistency or texture is after freezing. If you have popsicle molds, just fill them with yogurt, stick a popsicle stick in it and you have an instant frozen yogurt.
24. Bread
You probably already know this one but bread freezes BETTER than it fridges. Keeping bread in the refrigerator will make it dry out and go stale. Keep it in the freezer and it'll stay fresh.
25. Birthday Cake
Sometimes the urge to eat a birthday cake comes over you even though it isn't anyone's birthday. And you only eat ½ of it, alone on a Saturday night. Freezing the rest of it accomplishes 2 things. It preserves it perfectly AND it hides the evidence that you bought yourself a random birthday cake to eat alone on a Saturday night.
26. Maple Syrup
You can put it in the freezer, but ... it doesn't freeze solid! So you can pour right from the freezer.
You might not make your own maple syrup, but if you do, you can freeze it instead of hot packing it. Even with hot packing if you aren't being careful your maple syrup can grow mould. (maple syrup mould isn't considered dangerous and can just be skimmed off and reboiled) But still. To be safe, keep your maple syrup in the freezer.
27. Whole Avocados
This is what I do with avocados; I buy a bag of them, stare impatiently for days as they ripen, eat one, then let the rest rot. It's our relationship. If you too have this type of relationship with avocados, when they're ripened to your liking, put the entire avocado in the freezer.
When you want to use it, remove it from the freezer and let it thaw until it's soft enough to cut. Don't wait for it to completely thaw because it'll be a bit of a mush mess.
28. Corn on the Cob
I freeze it every year the day that I pick it. It can come out mushy and gross, but if you use the method for freezing corn that I do you have a good shot at frozen corn on the cob that still has some crunch.
29. ALL the Side Dishes
After every Thanksgiving dinner at my house, I freeze ALL of the leftover side dishes. Mashed turnip, broccoli casserole, stuffing, gravy ... all of it. Everything gets put into individual sized servings before freezing.
30. Shredded/Grated Cheese
Semi-hard cheese like cheddar, mozzarella (any of those you buy in a rectangular or brick shape at the grocery store) can be frozen whole but you can make things even easier for future you by pre-shredding it.
I make a lot of pizza so when pizza cheese is on sale I buy it, shred it, and put it in containers in the freezer. When it's time to make pizza I can just pull out a bag and it's ready to toss on top.
*If you can, avoid using pre-shredded cheese from the grocery store. The cheese is dusted in cellulose or potato starch to stop it from sticking together in the package. WHICH MAKES IT LESS MELTY. Nobody talks about that. If you use pre-shredded cheese and your cheese still looks like little strings after cooking, that's what's happening.
31. Lick Mats/Kongs
Soak your dog's kibble in water until it's soft and saturated then spread it onto a lick mat or fill a Kong with it. Pop the lick mat or Kong into the freeze for a couple of hours and your dog will be entertained and fulfilled licking his frozen dinner for at least an hour.
I use this 3 tiered lick mat and give it to Philip on Sunday nights. He'll work at it for an hour and a half and is zonked afterwards.
I first wrote this post 14 years ago and it had 5 things on it. I remember writing the post because I was SO amazed at how well Krispy Kreme donuts would freeze. This was about the time that Krispy Kremes made their way into Canada - Costco had them if I remember correctly.
And now I have a freezer full of delicious healthy foods and NOT A SINGLE KRISPY KREME. There are however, several slices of apple pie and pumpkin pie from Thanksgiving. And yes. They both freeze perfectly.
Vicki Riddle
Marshmallows! They freeze great and keep fresh. Plus, they don't take long to defrost.
I also freeze butter and potato chips. Thanks for the tip on the tomato paste!
T
Avocados, whole, pulp or made into guacamole or whatever. It stays green and freezes really well.
Katt Hunsaker
I was with you until you said Tim Hortons. Now all I can think about are Timbits and how I'm in Chicago and it would require a trip through TSA and airfare to get them. I also now need to build a pizza oven... would you be willing to share your dough recipe?
Karen
Hi Katt. One of the dough recipes I use is actually on the blog. You can see it here. I also use the New York Style pizza dough recipe from Serious Eats. And I always, always ferment my dough in the fridge for 2-3 days now. :) ~karen!
Heather
Frozen grapes....the absolute best....also helps with hot flashes.
Suzanne
I adore that you are ready if Chris Isaak shows up for pizza. Who doesn't love pizza? Hell, who doesn't love Chris Isaak?!
Karen
I went to dinner with him once - work related - I sat beside him and he sang Wicked Game and played the guitar. I remember him telling me he went foraging for mushrooms with his mother as well. I was immediately smitten and that's the kind of smitten one doesn't get over. It just isn't, lol. ~ karen!
Linda
When you freeze garlic do you take heads apart and peel the individual cloves or just toss paper covered cloves in freezer bag.or container? Could you freeze entire head intact?
I have frozen buttermilk in one cup sandwich Ziploc bags for baking and have frozen full fat yogurt successfully. It seems to stir up like fresh
Karen
I separate the cloves, but leave the skin on. ~ karen!
Hannah
I cannot help but think there's more than just our widely difference gardening zones affecting how we grow things- I have read previously that carrots are difficult for you to start, and now you're telling me that pepper plants make more than 2 underripe peppers I have to pick in August because the hard frost starts Sept 2?! Peace Country mud grows carrots like a hot damn, I have accidentally grown carrots once by dropping an unopened carrot seed pack that was then covered with a bunch of dirt from me digging a hole to plant a crabapple tree. I can't grow peppers, even in my greenhouse, to save my life.
Elen
Bookmarked. I learned a few things. ;-)
Anne
A wonderful post! I do freeze most of these things but didn't know about some. Also thanks for the suggestions for storage ie silicone bags and Snapware. As we lost a lot of stuff out of our two freezers in our recent storm - five days with no BC Hydro right until Christmas Day - I had a big cleanout. I have to say I found things that I didn't know I had! Now I'm promising to be a better freezer-user! This all will help. Also for you knitters, freeze sealed bags of wool or natural fibres from dubious sources for about a week to prevent moth introduction.
Karen but not that karen
Hi ! Do you happen to live on Galiano ? Just seems familiar- the storm of 2018 and the wool ..,
katy
Kale freezes well. I was at my daughter's this weekend. She was making us burritos, pulled a bag of prepackaged chopped kale out of the freezer and sprinkled a handful on our burritos instead of lettuce, and put the bag back in the freezer. The kale thawed out quickly and was just like fresh kale. And it actually tasted good in the burrito.
Ruth
New to me this year: Tuna fish salad!! it freezes well. Never knew.
Sometimes I buy good tuna salad, one big container (for eating) one little one to freeze.
So wonderful to be able to pull it out of the freezer. And zip: it's ready to eat soon's it's defrosted.
Thank you to whoever turned me on to this!
Renee Ryz
You can freeze taco chips or potato chips too. The air in the bag acts like a cushion. Snack, then reseal & freeze. When my mom told me this, I thought she was bonkers until she told me the chips I just ate were frozen ones.
Renee Ryz
You can freeze taco chips or potato chips too. The air in the bag acts like a cushion. Snack, then reseal & freeze. When my mom told me this, I thought she was bonkers until she told me the chips I just ate were frozen ones.
Maria
Oh. My. Land. Freezing dollops of tomato paste? Freezing WHOLE TOMATOES?! This is straight-up revolutionary.
Looooove posts about food storage. It’s essential to making my summer garden last the whole year and I have absolutely no idea how to do it! I always end up going back to the grocery store before fall even ends.
Lori
I love these! I knew a couple of them but most of them were new to me (or things I had forgotten.
My contribution: mozzarella freezes well when shredded - I buy a big bulk-size block and shred (grate?) in my food processor with the grating attachment and then freeze it flat on a cookie sheet (or just in a large ziploc if I'm lazy). It works well for individual pizzas straight out of the freezer.
Kristi
Any chocolate in my freezer is guaranteed to spontaneously evaporate. True story 🤔
I’m in love with the idea of poking someone with a stick-just blame it on garlic gone bad, right?
Jane Baker
For 17 years I lived 200 miles from the grocery store so about every four to five weeks my husband and I, (or just one of us) would go to town early in the morning, do a shop, appointments, etc. and back out in the afternoon. Since it was a 400 mile (600 km) round trip, you didn't do it every day so I bought everything to last that long including at least five to six gallons of milk which always went into the freezer, ditto on the butter, cream cheese, cheese, etc. I have frozen everything you have listed here and then some with great success except for yogurt. Yogurt does not freeze well at all. It is gross. It separates and for some reason, unlike other stuff, it does not go back together again. It's kind of like Humpty Dumpty. It's broken and stays broken, which is why I had to learn how to make it because even though we would buy six or eight containers at a time, it usually didn't last until the next time we went to town.
As an addendum, I used Tupperware Fridge Smart containers in the fridge for all of my vegetables and could nicely keep mushrooms for at least a couple of weeks, peppers for up to five weeks, romaine lettuce for at least four, and so on. Unfortunately, we have been near civilization for the past year now and even though I left a lot of Fridge Smart containers for the new owners of my past home, I still have a massive box of them and no place to use them. If anyone needs some?
Marjorie
I have a cabinet full of cheap grocery store plastic containers, different brands with tops that aren't interchangeable but that I continue to fear throwing away. I'll look for Tupperware Fridge Smart ones, hoping they can be frozen too. In any case, thanks for this. And if you're really looking to offload some containers, they would find a happy home with me!
Jody
I'm surprised you didn't mention freezing yogurt with tampons to treat yeast infections.
Karen
Hahaha! ~ karen
Lisa Wallace
My contribution to the list - chipotle peppers in adobo! I puree the whole can, use what I need for the current recipe, then portion out the rest, similar to the idea of tomato paste, usually in 1 tbsp portions. For this and tomato paste, I like to use the Glad Press 'n Seal, then each individually wrapped 1 or 2 tbsp portion (they look like taffy candies) goes into a larger baggie that is labeled with the contents.
Lorrie Kay Douglas
THANK YOU for all of these tips. Some I had heard of and others, not at all. I only wished I had seen this post awhile back I you're right, the pepper plants multiply like bunnies! We had to throw some out due to mold. Now, I'll gladly let the hubs know that we can plant one again without any fear of losing out on them as we can freeze them, whole too!! YIPEE!!