Guest guest Posted June 27, 2004 Report Share Posted June 27, 2004 HOW LONG CAN I FREEZE FOOD? " What a great question for summer, when our freezers get a workout. And whether you have a separate unit or not, you can make your freezer work more efficiently. The following tips and information are from a variety of sources, including personal experience and advice from readers past. First, arm yourself with the tools. Buy both the quart and gallon sizes of zipper-top freezer (not just storage) bags. If you, like B.B, eat a lot of restaurant food, get some small freezer containers to hold individual servings. And put a ball-point pen beside your refrigerator to write on the bags. Do not let anybody else take this pen for homework or writing checks or any other reason. Tie a string on it if you have to. It is your freezer information lifeline. A calendar is also useful, because, instead of just writing today's date on the package, you can figure out your own " use by " dates using the time lines suggested below. -- All leftovers should be refrigerated or frozen within two hours. If you go to dinner and then a movie, you should not leave the food in your car while you watch all of Tom Hanks in " The Terminal " and THEN refrigerate it when you get home. -- Label leftovers (use that pen) with the date, refrigerate them and eat or freeze them within three or four days. Once a week, toss old leftovers from the fridge. -- As you add food to the freezer, put it in the back and pull older items forward, so you can find them easily before they are past their prime. -- If you're cooking in bulk on weekends and want to freeze the extras, cool foods quickly in shallow dishes. Remember the mantra: " Two inches thick to cool it quick. " Slice large cuts of meat and divide gumbos, stews and chilis into small containers. -- Cooked rice, packaged in small amounts in freezer bags, freezes and reheats beautifully in the microwave. -- Leftover plain pasta freezes best if dry. Put it in plastic freezer bags and squish out all the air first. -- Freeze extra pasta sauce and pasta separately, or just freeze the sauce and make fresh pasta later. -- Baked pasta dishes, such as lasagna and baked ziti, freeze well. Freeze whole dishes in glass, plastic or foil containers, covered in plastic wrap, then foil. -- To freeze soup, line a single-serving bowl with foil and fill it with the soup. Freeze it; then pop the soup out of the bowl and put it in a freezer bag. For a meal, peel off the wrapping, put it back in the bowl, and reheat to boiling in the microwave. -- Use frozen cooked meat, meat dishes, meat gravy and broth within two to three months. -- Cooked chicken and fish dishes are good in the freezer for four to six months. -- Fried chicken can be frozen for up to four months. -- Cooked ham, lunch meats and pizza should be used within one or two months after freezing. -- Meat gravy and broth: two to three months. -- Nothing made with mayonnaise freezes well. -- Cheese can be frozen, but the texture may become crumbly and it won't melt well. However, frozen cheese can be used in recipes. Sour cream, cream cheese and cottage cheese shouldn't be frozen. -- Margarine and butter freeze well. -- Frozen foods should be thawed in the refrigerator or in the microwave on low power. (Frozen food should not be thawed in warm water or on the kitchen counter, where dangerous bacteria can grow as the meat's outer layers defrost.) -- For food safety, all leftovers should be thoroughly reheated before serving Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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