My name is Karen and I've never met a freezer I didn't like.
It wouldn't matter how big it was. I'd fill it.
Freezers are to me, what closets are to Paris Hilton. And an undetermined portion of the American Armed Forces.
So in honour of my love of the freezer and all things freezable I have for you a short list of ...
5 Things You Never Thought of Freezing!
Now you might be thinking? Why? Why, Karen would I freeze these things. Well I'll tell you ...
Donuts - If you buy a box of Krispy Kremes you have 2 options. Eat them all while wearing elastic pants before they go stale or eat a reasonable amount and throw the stale ones out. Lose, lose. Freeze em to keep the donuts fresh and your pants fitting.
Soup - I always say I'm going to preserve my soups but I'm terrified of botulism, plus I don't own a pressure cooker. So make huge batches of your favourite homemade soup when the vegetables are in season and then freeze it into individual portions. It's basic brilliance.
Sweaters - The minute you see one of those tiny moths flying around your closet, put your wool sweaters in a plastic bag and freeze them for 72 hours. It'll kill moth the eggs and larvae.
Milk - Milk doesn't seem to go on sale all that often, but when it does you can freeze the extra. Yes. You really can! Just remove the frozen bag, let it thaw in the fridge and give it a good shake before drinking. Don't forget about chocolate milk!
Yorkshire Pudding - I always think I've got my sh*t together whenever I make a roast beef dinner. All goes well until the last 10 minutes when EVERYTHING has to be done at the same time. Mashing the potatoes, making the gravy, cutting the roast, sobering up the Betty. Making a double batch of Yorkshire Pudding means you have an entire batch to freeze, thusly eliminating that one pain in the butt step the next time you make a roast. Just defrost them. They freeze PERFECTLY. And seriously ... who wants to eat a roast beef dinner without Yorkshire Pudding? It'd be like eating pea soup without vinegar. How gauche.
Now if you'll excuse me ... I have to go take something out of the freezer.
Katrina
Could we have a Yorkshire pudding/roast dinner post? It looks like I'm not the only who's never had that (and the drooling started the minute I saw the picture...I definitely need to eat that).
Karen
That just happens to be exactly what I'm having for dinner tonight. Prime rib, mashed potatoes, yorkshire pudding, fresh peas, beets with balsamic vinegar, acorn squash (from the garden) with nutmeg and maple syrup. No pics. Sorry. We eat this once a month or so, so I'll try to post it next time. Now if you'll excuse me I have to go and eat!
susie
I would like to add:
Leftover pasta sauce (make a double batch!)
Big blocks of cheese (cut them up in to reasonable portions)
Homemade chicken broth
Homemade pizza dough (make a double batch)
Thanks, Karen!
Evalyn
My freezer is full of ironing-in-waiting and garlic. Break the bulb into cloves, freeze in a zip lock bag, and when you are ready to use it the skin peels right off and it dices into lovely little bits before thawing.
vegeater
garlic! what a great idea! I'm always losing garlic....
I like to freeze tomato paste in ice cube trays, then once it's frozen I put it in a baggie. There is always too much tomato paste in a can... Then you have the perfect recipe-sized amount in a frozen little hunk...
Jen A
frozen cookie dough ... ohhh ... ohhh ... oooooh ...
Jenn
My fav freezer trick is to freeze things on a tray lined with a silpat then transferring to a bag once frozen: berries, sliced peppers, shredded chard, cut but not cooked bacon, individual cookie dough servings (upside: prevents me from eating a whole batch, downside: frozen cookie dough taste good and is in bite-sized pieces).
Pammy
The yorkshire pudding recipe sounds suspiciously like popovers to me (minus the roast fat) - they always impress my guests with that "puffed up" appearance, and they're EASY
Karen
They're really hard to describe. The middle is kind of dense and ... I don't want to say wet but ... kindda damp or something.
mothership
another fun thing to freeze.... damp stuff from the laundry that needs ironing!
It'll keep it damp til your ready to iron:
*wrap in plastic & throw in the fridge if you're not going to drag out the ironing board til later in the day, or freeze (so won't eventually mold in the fridge...don't ask me how I know!) if you won't get to ironing til later in the year.
Yorkshire pudding... yum!
Rosy
I also make a bit extra of everything and then freeze 2 portions for the Mr. and me. My favourites are chili, ragu and yes, soup (great when you are sick and you just zap yourself a remedy).
Freezing desserts is also great. Why leave a whole cake around to tempt you?
I cut portions and freeze them. Great for midnight snacks - don't knock frozen chocolate cake until you've tried it!
Love the milk freezing idea. Do you think it would work with half 'n' half (coffee cream?). I hate waking up to find I don't have any for my coffee!
funkyjunk
Ok y'all, am I the only one who doesn't know what Yorkshire Pudding is?
Karen
I gather from the "y'all", you're not from around these parts! :) Yorkshire pudding isn't really a pudding at all. In fact it's hard to describe. Kind of a cross between a bun and overcooked custard I guess. The ingredients are flour, eggs, salt, and milk. You mix it up and then cook it in roast fat in the oven at a very high temperature either in a big souffle dish or individual muffin cups like the one I've shown. They're crisp(ish) on the outside and a little more dense in the middle. You dip or cover them in gravy. Yum!
Ree
Popovers! Yorkshire Pudding is really just popover batter with a bit of the beef drippings added to each muffin cup or casserole, depending on how you want to make it...
I make Popovers (without the drippings, sub butter) on Sunday mornings, and serve 'em with obscene amounts of butter and strawberry preserves oooooooYUM!
Question: How do you get the crispy-ness back once you've taken them out of the freezer? Toaster oven? Doesn't the microwave make 'em go all mushy-rubbery?
BTW: My favorite weird thing to freeze - ginger root straight from the store. Makes it so much easier to grate.
Jacque Charwood
Ree.... as in TPW Ree???
Karen
Ree - I re-heat the Yorkshire Puddings in the oven for a few minutes at 350. I don't even put them on a cookie sheet, just throw them straight in on the racks. They come out perfectly! Nice and crispy (because of ya know ... the grease) on the outside and warm and soft on the inside. OMG. I love them.
ModFruGal
The sweater tip is new to me..I can't wear much wool, but good to know!
Katherine
These are great ideas! One freezing tip I've done in the past is when I have a little bit of wax left in a candle holder, and no wick left to burn, I'll freeze the holder and the excess wax pops right out. It's super easy and you have no chance of burning yourself while trying to melt the leftover wax...
Liz
As a knitter, i have been told that to truly kill moths in wool (us knitters suffer with moth larvae in our precious yarn stashes as well as garments) you have to freeze, thaw, re-freeze. The first freezing kills the larvae but doesn't kill any eggs that might be there, they'll lie dormant. The thaw will allow the eggs to hatch, and the second freeze will kill any remaining larvae.
Thanksfully i haven't had to do this with any of my woollen things yet. Mmmmm, moth larvae. What a treat.
Heather
Hi Karen, love your work!
Cheese can freeze too!
Buy in bulk, grate and freeze.
This is what they do in pizza shops,so Im told,
makes it easier to sprinkle.And saves money!!
mimi
I freeze all leftovers too, but usually end up throwing them out 6 (or 12 months) later when I defrost the freezer!
My favourite thing to freeze is make breadcrumbs from crusts (which my kids won't eat) and freee, then you have instant topping for fish pie, cauliflower cheese, whatever! I even sneak in a slice of wholegrain in the crumbs!
Pam'a
What is this fish pie you speak of?
Josie
Hi Karen! Muffins freeze wonderfully! The big giant ones, put each in a sandwich ziploc bag and toss it in. When you want one, just toss it in the microwave (crack open the ziploc) for 30-45 seconds and voilla - freshly "baked" muffins!
Sarah
I find that freezing soup in zip lock bags is awesome - they seem stronger then normal freezer bags, and you can open them a little bit while they are defrosting in the microwave so they dont explode (not fun to clean up). Plus, they dont take up as much room in my tiny freezer as tupperware. Genius.
Helen
Freezing donuts?? GENIUS.
"can I be you when I grow up?" :)
Amie
Curry's are ace to freeze too! Even left over home made pasta sauce! Yum
Karen
Oh I know! I freeze almost allll leftovers, other than stuff that has potatoes in it. (they go weird) But I didn't think to make double batches of soup to freeze until a few years ago for some reason. And who ever would have thought to freeze donuts? The lady who sells the Krispy Kremes gave me that tip when I said I wasn't sure I could eat a whole box of donuts!
Amie
I've never had a Krispy Kreme, but I do like to freeze choc chip cookies with a generous smear of vanilla ice-cream! Ommm nom nom nom......
Langela
Man, she saw you coming! I'm surprised you didn't walk out with several boxes.
Pam'a
I bought a fancy new fridge a couple of years back, bidding a fond adieu to the old trooper I'd had for 20 years. The new one's black and sexy, with ice and water in the door...French doors! Finally, opening the fridge wouldn't completely block traffic to the dining room...
But alas-- The freezer can hold a pound of hamburger, a box of popsicles, a loaf of bread... and the big-ass icemaker. We don't even USE ice. No bulk freezing for me. :(
Why can't we test drive major appliances before we buy them??!
Karen
Heh! I have a small freezer too. Luckily I have a mudroom right off my kitchen, so I keep a small upright (not chest) freezer in there. It's the love of my life.
Shannon
Power to the frozen soup. I would surely die without it.
I read a thing once about freezing pricy designer jeans instead of washing them. Apparently you spot clean them & stick them in the freezer.
never tried it because I don't wear jeans very often.
Karen
Really? That fascinates me! What do you wear? I almost exclusively wear jeans. I got so excited I almost exploded when I found out that mixing denim shirts and denim jeans is in Vogue this season. Do you wear dresses? I also like those, because it's so easy to get dressed. Swooosh over your head and you're done.
Shannon
Yeah I am a swooshy dress girl. (I was one of those little kids who was always lifting thier dress over thier head at inappropriate moments.) Even when it is really cold I just layer on my black bamboo tights which are super warm + jackets.
I just don't find jeans comfortable the fabric makes me want to die. I love those trashy denim leggings though (I belive they're calling them jeggings *gag*) they're very comfy with a tunic top.
vegeater
bamboo leggings? where do you get them?
Shannon
I am in Australia so you might even just want to type bamboo leggings into google & see what pops up.
I buy mine from David Jones (Aussie department store) the brand is ambra
ginger
Be weary of the Canadian Tuxedo look! ;)
kate
Ohh the Canadian Tuxedo, as long as you're not rockin a pushbroom mustache you're doin ok
Carson
Hello Karen I have been amazed at these things! Great job, Also if you want some other stuff to freeze, freeze gum then try to eat it!
Thank you!
Carson
P.S. Is that you in your picture if it is you are cute!Also e-mail me at [email protected]