OK, I have reviewed the recipe thread. But - what do you like to make that freezes well?
I just don't have time to prepare a good meal every night, heck - every other night.
I'd love some recipes I can make on a Sunday and then be able to reheat throughout the week.
Mostly recipes that are non-pasta-based ... so veggie lasagna is out, unless I can make it without noodles.
Anyone have any favorites that preserve well?
CherokeeDem
(3,718 posts)would love to have some of those recipes myself!
A quick note...I've used thin slices of eggplant or zucchini, sliced lengthwise to substitute for lasagna noodles...works really well....
Flaxbee
(13,661 posts)you've done it successfully!
Will have to look into that.
Response to Flaxbee (Original post)
avebury This message was self-deleted by its author.
Goblinmonger
(22,340 posts)(and I do a lot of crock pot cooking and cooking on the weekend to freeze because the teaching gig doesn't offer a lot of time to cook during the week). I can give recipes for these if you want my take on it:
Chili
Frijoles de olla
Curried Rice and Lentils
Baked Oatmeal with Fruit (I have this for breakfast a lot)
Baked Steel Cut Oats & Pumpkin
Lentil sauce for pasta
Lentil Taco Filling
Tomato Pasta Sauce
Pestos (basil, garlic scape, & red pepper)
All kinds of soups
Probably more if I think about it. I generally find that after about 3 weeks, I have enough foods for supper and lunch that I don't need to cook or buy non-fresh groceries for about another 3 weeks.
Flaxbee
(13,661 posts)Whenever you have time, would love some of the recipes:
Curried rice and lentils (what - if any - veggies do you include?)
Frijoles de olla
Steel cut oats and pumpkin (that sounds fantastic)
Lentil taco filling
Any favorite soups -- my husband really likes Mediterranean and Asian flavorings ... and I'll buy chicken for him if he asks for it, but I want the base of everything to be vegetarian.
I've got a Moosewood Restaurant cookbook and like their ideas, but a lot of their recipes have about a zillion ingredients ... I'm looking for simple and tasty and "preservable".
LeftyMom
(49,212 posts)Not a whole lot of work and it saves a ton of money over canned soup for when I'm in a hurry or feel a bit under the weather.
Flaxbee
(13,661 posts)Extremely high quality dried goods, and very easy to toss in some veggies and presto! Soup.
I was at the office until 2am last night and made a very bad decision to heat a can of Progresso soup that someone we used to work with had left in the cupboard - I should have just licked the inside of the cat's litter box and it would have tasted better.
It's really amazing how truly different (and much better) home made (with good, whole ingredients) soups and food taste; once you've become accustomed to natural foods without preservatives, it is a WORLD of difference.
flvegan
(64,615 posts)You're welcome.
LeftyMom
(49,212 posts)LeftyMom
(49,212 posts)Freezing tofu changes the texture and can make it a bit grainy. So unless you've got a savory dish where that's okay (sometimes it can even be desirable if you're using your tofu as a meat stand-in,) you'll generally want to avoid freezing tofu dishes.