Guest guest Posted June 12, 2004 Report Share Posted June 12, 2004 > > > Mining the depths of your personal freezer > > Freezing is a popular way to preserve food, but there are rules to > follow in order to sustain quality and flavor > > BY JULIA MOSKIN > > For stalkers of fresh produce, this is a momentous time: It is the > beginning of the harvest season in much of the United States. For a > few delirious months, markets will be awash in domestic berries and > peaches; weeks of plentiful corn and tomatoes will follow. > > And then it all ends abruptly in October. Against the long months > when farm stands are populated exclusively by beets and rutabagas, > past generations got out their Mason jars and big sterilizing pots > and canned. But freezing is faster, easier and less sweaty. > > With summer's bounty and blackouts approaching, here is a basic > course in freezer management. > > Ruthlessness is paramount: A year is the maximum life for most items, > and a freezer isn't a long-term storage unit. > > ''For years, I only saw the back of my freezer when I moved,'' said > Analisa , a systems analyst who lives in Battery Park City, and > who was one of several people who revealed the dark secrets of their > freezers, beet-flavored ice cubes and all. ``The ice cream in the > front would get eaten, but everything else just stayed.'' > > Our freezers may dream of labeled and dated cubes of homemade stock, > but what they seem to get is blackened bananas, stale wedding cake > and plastic bags crusted over with ice, their contents > unrecognizable. ''It's amazing how things look alike once they're > frozen,'' said Chenoweth, a nutritionist in Minneapolis. > > In theory, freezing preserves food indefinitely. In fact, for home > cooks with residential-grade refrigerators, freezing is a stopgap > that slows the aging of food but does not halt it. > > Home freezers should stay well below freezing, at zero or below, > according to the Agriculture Department. But do you know how cold > yours is? ''Heavens no,'' Shirley Corriher, a food scientist and the > author of Cookwise (Morrow, 1997), said from her kitchen in Atlanta > recently. > > Most home freezers, especially those inside refrigerators, are at > least 10 above, the North American Meat Processors Association says. > And for every 5 degrees above zero, the life of food is cut in half, > Agriculture Department officials say. > > Freezer temperatures can be checked easily with an inexpensive > refrigerator thermometer from a hardware store or an infrared > thermometer like the ones the Agriculture Department uses to check > compliance with food safety rules. Infrared models, which cost $50 or > more, are useful for checking many temperatures in the kitchen: oil > for deep-frying, ovens for baking (the thermometers go up to 525) and > fluctuations in refrigerators and freezers. A sampling of New York > City home freezers last week, tested with an infrared Raytek MiniTemp > with a laser pointer, ranged from minus 10 up to 22. > > TALKING TEMPERATURE > > Freezer temperatures should be checked every few months. Even if you > don't change the setting, a freezer can be 20 degrees warmer in > summer than in winter. During a blackout like the one last August, a > home freezer full of food will stay safely frozen for about two days > if the door is not opened. (A half-full freezer will last about half > as long, and so on.) Food that has visibly thawed should be used or > tossed out, but as long as the freezer temperature has not risen > above 32, the Agriculture Department says, the contents can safely be > refrozen. > > Even food that is frozen under ideal conditions does not last > forever. ''Most of it can last a few months at the most before the > taste changes,'' Corriher said. ''As long as it stays at zero, it's > safe, but that doesn't mean it's going to taste good.'' So taste, not > just safety, should be a factor when considering what to freeze. > > Often, food that has been frozen once can safely be frozen again, an > important point as ever more people buy their perishables in bulk -- > family packs of chicken parts are one of Costco's biggest-selling > food items. But by the time you lift these products from the > refrigerated case, they have already been frozen and thawed at least > once, so do not expect fresh flavor or succulent texture if you > refreeze them. The Agriculture Department says it is safe to eat meat > that has been refrozen, as long as it has never risen above 40 > degrees (refrigerator temperature), even during defrosting. > > Chicken, especially, suffers from ''drip,'' the food industry's term > for the juices that ooze out of food as it thaws. Unappetizing as it > sounds, drip contains the liquid, salts and minerals that give > chicken its flavor, and once the thawing releases that liquid, no > amount of marinating or brining can bring it back. > > LIFE-SPANS > > Chicken, pork and fish are best used within six months; they are far > less resilient in the freezer than red meats, which can be frozen for > a year. Anything more than a year old, except large roasts of meat, > can be considered inedible and thrown out. > > Summer fruit and vegetables can last all winter in the freezer, > especially cooked -- recipes with lots of liquid, like corn chowder, > tomato sauce, bean soup and berry compote, are ideal. But raw produce > has a more fragile texture that can be ruined by freezing. > Vegetables, whether frozen at home or in an industrial plant, can be > protected by a quick dip in boiling water, to set the texture and > color. Cut them into bite-size pieces beforehand. They should barely > cook: The time can range from 90 seconds for spinach and bok choy to > three minutes for carrots and Jerusalem artichokes. Next, plunge the > vegetables into a bowl of ice water to stop the cooking. Drain well, > and freeze. > > Fruit should also be cut up before freezing, though berries can be > left whole. Toss each cup of fruit with a scant tablespoon of sugar > to reduce browning. (To reduce it more, pack the fruit covered in > sugar syrup, made by dissolving sugar in an equal quantity of water > until clear.) Fresh herbs do not freeze well, except stick herbs like > rosemary and thyme. > > When you plot additions to the freezer, remember that stackable > containers, not bags, are the most efficient storage units. When > freezing liquids, leave at least half an inch of space at the top of > each container -- water expands as it freezes. Freezer bags and > containers are worth the extra cost, because their thickness makes > them much more airtight than regular plastic products. ''The worst > thing you can use in the freezer is plain old plastic wrap,'' > Chenoweth said. ``It's like going outside in a snowstorm wearing a > windbreaker: no protection at all.'' > > Harold McGee, who explored the chemical processes of the kitchen in > his book On Food and Cooking, showed that air, even more than age, is > the enemy of frozen food. Exposure to air dries out the food and > ultimately causes freezer burn, which, though not a dangerous > condition, is remarkably unappetizing. Even a small spot usually > means that the whole piece of food has been exposed to air and will > taste stale. Thick wrapping, tight seals and snug packing will > minimize exposure; so will pressing (or sucking) out as much air as > possible before sealing any freezer container. > > Defrosting is one of the great and irritating challenges of cooking > from the freezer. For many staples, the process cannot be rushed, so > planning is necessary. Frozen fruits, fresh pasta and blanched > vegetables can be cooked straight from the freezer. (One faction of > grilling radicals even insists that burgers and steak can be cooked > frozen, if they are not more than about an inch thick.) But ''if you > need chicken right away, you are pretty much out of luck,'' Corriher > said. ``I find that microwave defrosting is risky: Some parts start > cooking while the rest of it is still ice.'' > > The Agriculture Department insists that for safe defrosting, food > must be thawed slowly in the refrigerator, or while tightly wrapped > and immersed in cold water. (Microwave defrosting is so variable that > the department does not offer guidelines, other than to specify that > microwave-defrosted food should be cooked immediately.) A 15-pound > turkey, for example, will take three days to thaw fully in the > refrigerator, but leaving the turkey at room temperature for a few > hours is not an option. ''Any time you leave food out on the > counter,'' Corriher said, ``the microbiologists just go crazy.'' > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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