thread: Massive Cook Up - wdyt?

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  1. #1
    Lucy in the sky with diamonds.

    Jan 2005
    Funky Town, Vic
    7,070

    AND the other thing -

    are there any guidelines on freezing? Does rice freeze ok?

    I was going to par boil lots of the vegies to freeze as well...

    With having milk, bread and cheese delivered I was also hoping to avoid food shopping EVER again, well for a month or so anyway.

  2. #2
    Registered User

    Nov 2005
    in a house!
    6,125

    There was a segment on Sunrise last week with a lady and her book abuot freezing everything. There was a website but the name eludes me atm....sorry!

    I personally do not like rice that is frozen just on its on. I only like it if the rice is coated in a sauce, or in a casserole iykwim? same with pasta

    Potatoes shouldnt be frozen apparently, but the occasional few in a stew is ok.

    Par boiling is great for vegies. If you over cook them, then freeze them, they turn to mush!

  3. #3
    Lucy in the sky with diamonds.

    Jan 2005
    Funky Town, Vic
    7,070

    Hmm, what about mashed potato?

    I might check out the sunrise website.

  4. #4
    Registered User

    Nov 2005
    in a house!
    6,125

    im pretty sure she said thats the main one that goes yuck

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Jul 2005
    Rural NSW
    6,975

    Is the cooler weather inspiring you Lulu?

    I've just had (actually still having) my first Big Baking Day of the year. It was all because the morning was so cold and I'm too stingy to put on the central heating. So I decided to heat up the house with cooking!

    Last night I had some nice home made bread that had gone hard and stale... was going to do a bread and butter pudding... but no jam or marmalade so had to think outside the square... I vaguely recalled a Delia Smith recipe for traditional Christmas pudding that called for a substantial amount of stale bread... so i dug that out and made it up substituting a few things; cooked pear instead of cooked apple... I don't mind experimenting... didn't have any stout but made up the liquid content in other ways... doubled the rum content for example hehe So that has to rest overnight and it was ready to go on this morning for it's 8 hour stint on the stove... yes, 8 hours with the gas burner on warming up our house... perfect.

    I also cooked: spanikopita (Greek spinach dish with filo pastry) and a French leek and potato soup! Oh and pancakes (but that was using the cheats Pancake parlour mix)... so lots of stove top use today... and cosy house. It's been so much fun

    My kitchen is old too but at least I have a double oven (two, on top of each other) this is my favourite thing and really helps make big baking days easier.... highly recommended if you decide to renovate Lulu! Much better use of space than those new wide ovens.... you can have two ovens on the go at two different settings.
    Last edited by Bathsheba; March 30th, 2008 at 02:50 PM.

  6. #6
    Registered User

    Jan 2006
    Melbourne
    2,732

    Ooh Bath I love a great big cook up Bummer is our place has floorboards throughout so no amount of oven use gets it toasty.

    Lulu, if you google "once a month cooking" you will find heaps of stuff on big batch cooking - problem is most sites are US-based so you need to convert from imperial to metric.

    Better go - I hear his (little) master's voice....

  7. #7
    Registered User

    Jul 2005
    Rural NSW
    6,975

    Yeah, our house has floorboards except for the bedrooms (carpet)... I think because our main living area is so close to the kitchen it really helps. In between cooking I read the weekend papers at the kitchen table which is part of the open-plan kitchen/dining. The lounge is around the corner and the heat made that area comfortable... not as toasty as the kitchen/dining but at least the chill was taken away. When I finish using one of the ovens I make sure I leave the door open for it to cool down...

    Gotta get it cleaned up so DH can cook fish for dinner...

  8. #8
    Registered User

    Dec 2007
    Victoria
    7,260

    If you are going to freeze vegies, you are better off just buying frozen veg to begin with - they are usually cheaper and they certainly are better for you - the vitamin ad mineral content is usually a lot higher than fresh veg these days.

    As for potatoes and rice, they are fine to freeze if they are cooked adn have a sauce on them to protect them. If you thaw out dry cooked rice, it generally goes crunchy as all the moisture (the thing its cooked in) is released in the thawing process. Same with potatoes and pasta, so they need to be sauced before freezing. iykwim

    WRT to the veggies going off before you use them, I make a soup once a week with the left over veggies - potato, pumpkins, zuccinni, broc/cauli, corn, just about anything can be put in to the pot, except capsisums! Doesn't have to be huge, could only do the family for one meal, but it gets rid of the veggies and is really healthy and yummy alternative to throwing them lol!! lo This is what just about every restaurant that serves a soup does btw, helps to keep costs down and you can add anything to it, herbs, curry powder, pasta, rice, or barley, to beef it up....nothing better htan a big fat veggie soup!!

    HTH Good luck!

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