1 / 41

Leader Lesson The Family Freezer: Making the Most of What Goes In

Leader Lesson The Family Freezer: Making the Most of What Goes In. Provided by: Barbara Brown, Ph.D., R.D./L.D. Food Specialist, Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service Associate Prof., Department of Nutritional Sciences. The situation. Not a new home preservation tool

eilis
Télécharger la présentation

Leader Lesson The Family Freezer: Making the Most of What Goes In

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Leader LessonThe Family Freezer: Making the Most of What Goes In Provided by: Barbara Brown, Ph.D., R.D./L.D. Food Specialist, Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service Associate Prof., Department of Nutritional Sciences

  2. The situation • Not a new home preservation tool • What is going into your freezer? • How is your food wrapped? • How long will food be stored in the freezer? California Agriculture, California Experiment Station, March, 1947 Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  3. Plusses of freezing • Save food when you have time • Use oven efficiently when bake extra to freeze • Less waste if leftovers are frozen (if used) • Prepare special diet & baby foods in quantity & freeze in single portions • Save time by doubling, tripling recipes • Eases cooking for 1 or 2 • May save $ by making own convenience foods Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  4. On the minus side • Expensive when total cost of packaging, energy use, & freezer itself • More energy used to cook, freeze & reheat a dish than to cook for immediate use • Some dishes have a relatively short storage life compared to storage life of the ingredients • Must allow time for thawing unless a microwave is available • Some foods don’t freeze well or don’t justify work & cost of freezing Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  5. Cost associated with freezing • Initial cost of freezer, divided over 20 years if new, nine years if used • Lost interest on cash outlay for freezer • Freezer maintenance and repair • USDA estimates 2% of purchase price of new freezer/year • Used freezers may be higher Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  6. Cost associated with freezing (continued) • Electricity needed to reach and maintain 0oF • Packaging materials • Water & fuel to prepare food for freezing • Cost of ingredients Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  7. Figuring the cost • Takes 0.l kilowatt hours to freeze 1 pound of food & lower its temperature to 0oF Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  8. Energy required depends on many factors • Temperature of room where freezer is located • Frequency of door openings • Size of freezer. In general, larger freezers use more electricity than smaller ones. • Insulating properties of freezer • Clean, well maintained freezers use less energy Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  9. Energy required depends on many factors • Full freezers use less total electricity & less electricity/pound of food to maintain 0oF • Turnover of food—cost to maintain frozen food mounts daily • Chest vs. upright • In general, chests are more economically to operate than uprights • Manual defrost vs. frost-free • Frost-free freezers cost considerably more to operate Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  10. Example of energy costs:Frost free vs. manual defrost • Cost to run a 15-cubic foot freezer for 1 year when electricity costs 7 cents/kilowatt hour: • Frost-free freezer cost $123.27/year • Manual defrost freezer cost $81.37/year • Difference = $41.90 • $838 over 20 years of freezer life Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  11. Operation cost of a 15-cubic foot freezer/pound of food for 1 year Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  12. Safety of frozen foods • Freezer is set at recommended freezer temperature (0oF) will keep food safe to eatindefinitely • Food must be safe to eat when it goes in • Slows movement of molecules causing microbes to enter a dormant state • Harmful bacteria not killed by freezing temperatures • Begin to grow as food thaws • Parasites can be destroyed by freezing Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  13. Freezer storage • Color, flavor & texture eventually deteriorate • Recommended storage times are for quality only • Effects of too long a storage • Some foods develop rancid or off odor • Appearance suffers even if edible • Usable in soups, stews, casseroles Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  14. Keep it cold • Keep freezer set at 0oF or lower • Use appliance thermometer to monitor • Refrigerator freezing compartment can’t maintain temperature if opened often • Use only for short-term frozen storage Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  15. To help keep unit cold • Allow air movement inside freezer • Reduce number of items in freezer & add shelf space • Allow air to circulate more efficiently for a more thorough freeze • Keep foods away from back vent • Blocks air circulation & results in a warmer freezer Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  16. Preparing homemade convenience foods for freezing • Freeze slightly undercooked if will be reheated • Cool quickly after preparation by: • Put pan in ice water, stir if possible OR • Put in serving size freezer containers & refrigerate until cool • Freeze as soon as cool Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  17. Not all foods freeze well *Cucumbers & cabbage can be frozen as marinated foods (freezer pickles or slaw) Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  18. Not all foods freeze well (continued) Source: National Center for Home Food Preservation, http://www.uga.edu/nchfp/ Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  19. Don’t know how it will freeze? • Try freezing a small portion, then check quality Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  20. Packaging • Pack amount to be used at one time • Choose packaging that matches thawing & reheating method you’ll use • Freezer- & microwave-safe containers for those to be thawed and/or cooked in microwave oven Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  21. Packaging options • Use moisture-vapor-proof packaging • Plastic containers, freezer bags, heavy-duty aluminum foil, coated freezer paper, wide-mouth canning jars (leave 1 to 2 inches headspace) • Convenience foods—glass or metal baking pans lined with plastic wrap or foil; when frozen lift out food & put in freezer bags or wrap with freezer paper Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  22. Vacuum-packaging • More oxygen removed, the better the quality • Vacuum-packaging does not kill microbes • Must keep food cold while thawing • Vacuum-sealed bags not designed for cooking • Replacement bags can be expensive, more difficult to locate Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  23. Freezer burn • Moisture loss from the food surface • May look like fuzzy, grayish white spot on food surface • Not harmful but causes off-flavors, dries out & toughens food • Packaging in moisture/vapor-proof containers or wrapping & storing food for recommended length of time helps prevent • Cover fruit with syrup & cooked meat with gravy or sauce to help prevent Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  24. Rules for wrapping • Wrap tightly • Wrap again (double wrap) • Wrap individual portions separately when appropriate • Wrapping tightly & double wrapping help maintain quality & prevent freezer burn • Wrapping individual portions separately lets you remove some food to prepare without thawing unneeded food Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  25. Best storage materials are easy to mark • Label foods with the date & contents so that keeping an inventory is easy • Use permanent markers to label either on strip of masking tape or directly on package/container • Remove permanent marker from empty plastic containers with rubbing alcohol • Throw away canning jar lids & plastic bags Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  26. Package dating & freezing • Don’t buy foods with out-of-date Sell-By or Best-if-Used-By dates • Buy the food with the longest Best-if-Used-By date for best food quality. If you can’t use perishable foods within 3 to 7 days, freeze • For quality purposes, freeze food before Best-if-Used-By date to maintain the highest quality while frozen • Once food is frozen the package date becomes irrelevant Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  27. Putting food into the freezer • Freeze at 0oF or below • Place packages against cooling surfaces of freezer for quick freezing • Freeze only what can be frozen in 24 hours • Usually 2-3 pounds/cubic foot Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  28. Keep an inventory • Post list of frozen food with freezing date near freezer • Add & subtract from list Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  29. Using frozen foods • Reheat food that was cooked & frozen to 165oF • Use a thermometer to check to avoid overcooking Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  30. Thawing frozen food • Room temperature • Ok for nonperishable foods (bread, cakes, cookies) • Leave food in package until thawed • Refrigerator • Best for perishable foods (meats, main dishes, cooked meat, side dishes, eggs) • Microwave oven • General guideline: 6-8 min/pound thawed on defrost setting (30% power) • Frozen foods may be cooked without thawing • Allow 1/3 to 1/2 more cooking time Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  31. Using thawed food • When you thaw, open, & prepare frozen food, use within 3—7 days to keep it safe • Discard improperly thawed and opened, or prepared foods that have been uneaten within 4 days Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  32. Freezer tips • Freeze whole grains and foods that contain them to slow the onset of rancidity • Yeast: freezing not recommended • Bagels & English muffins defrost more quickly when frozen pre-sliced or separated • Hamburger patties: separate burgers with square pieces of parchment paper then place in freezer bag • Also works with tortillas, crepes, French toast, pancakes Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  33. Freezing tips for meat • May be left in original packaging up to 2 weeks • For longer storage, wrap tightly in freezer packaging to prevent freezer burn Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  34. Freezing coffee • Coffee beans: if use a bag in less than 10—12 days, store beans in original bag or zipper-lock bag away from heat & light • For longer storage, freeze • Ground coffee: store in freezer • Measure amount needed into filter & warm to room temperature before brewing Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  35. Power outages • Keep the door shut • Full freezer usually okay for 48 hours; 1/2-full only 1 day • Refrigerator freezing compartment may not keep foods frozen as long • If the freezer is not full, quickly group packages together to stay cold more effectively • Separate meat & poultry from other foods so if they begin to thaw, juices won't drip onto other foods Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  36. If power stays off consider… • Putting dry ice, block ice, or bags of ice in freezer • Use appliance thermometer to monitor freezer temperature • Moving foods to a family or friend's freezer • Invest in a generator—know how to use it safely Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  37. If power stays off don’t… • Move food outside • Can thaw when exposed to sun even when temperature is very cold • Food may become too warm & foodborne bacteria could grow • Food could be exposed to unsanitary conditions or animals Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  38. When power comes back on… • Determine safety by checking condition & temperature of food • Refreeze or use food that is partly frozen, still has ice crystals, or is as cold as if it were in a refrigerator (40°F) • Not necessary to cook raw foods prior to refreezing Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  39. Throw away • Perishable foods that have been warmer than 40°F over 2 hrs • Any food contaminated by raw meat juices • Soft or melted ice cream (low quality) Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  40. Summary • Freezing food offers many benefits • Freezing is an expensive method of preserving food • Use proper packaging and label food to be frozen • Monitor what is in your freezer and use it before quality deteriorates • Have a plan for power outages Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

  41. Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

More Related