Jan 12 2009
What’s in the Freezer?
By now the most anyone should have left over from Christmas is perhaps the last of your fruitcake if you made one or a part-used jar of mincemeat.
It’s a good time of year for checking your freezer and making a list of items you could use to make a meal if the weather keeps you indoors or money is tight. Remember to put any best before or expiry dates on your list and use your favourite fridge magnet to stick your list on the door.
When I did this recently I found some chicken thighs and a pack of sausagemeat-based stuffing I bought as a standby for the festive season. The stuffing had onion, herbs and apricot in it. I made half of this into little meatballs, fried with the chicken and added wine, more herbs and mushrooms. This cooked up into a delicious casserole which went into an energy-friendly low oven for a couple of hours. The rest of the stuffing was formed into a roll, wrapped in foil and put in to the oven with the casserole and will make my lunchtime sandwiches for a day or two with some good chutney.
I had some cooking apples to use up, these went into a crumble pudding with some mincemeat left from Christmas mince pies. I greased the baking dish with the last of the brandy butter. When the casserole came out, the heat went up to 180C and cooked the crumble for 25 mins. I had already added either brandy or calvados to the mincemeat when I opened the jar, so it tasted great!
I am going to try to clear my freezer a bit so I can give it a good clean. When it is clear enough I will unload the remaining items - mostly frozen veg staples like peas, sweetcorn, oven chips (French fries) and the like, into a couple of cold boxes with some icepacks. If it is cold enough outside the boxes can go out there while I clean. Some nights it has been colder than inside my freezer, even down here on the South Coast, but we’re back to mild and windy for a few days.
The freezer is a frost-free model so cleaning will be quick and a final wipe with a cloth dipped in a bicarb. of soda solution will help it keep fresh.
This is what else I found and some suggestions what to do with it.
More chicken thighs - another casserole perhaps with leeks and herb dumplings or Thai green curry
Minced Lamb - I could get out my Claudia Roden Middle East cookbook for exotic inspiration, but I could also make Shepherds Pie topped with creamy mash
Whole Pheasant - bought when I thought I was going to have a friend to dinner, but he got the flu - perhaps he’ll come for Sunday lunch if I promise not to cook parsnips or sprouts both of which he hates. I could make a rich pot roast with red wine.
Sausages - with mash of course, or take the meat out of the skins, break up and add to pasta sauce.
Fish in breadcrumbs/fish cakes/plain fish portions - Friday treats with some parsley sauce and chips or mash and peas - maybe mushy peas if I have a tin in the cupboard
Bacon - BLT for weekend breakfasts of course, but need to round up all the little packs that I make of 6 or 8 rashers from supermarket bulk packs
Cranberries - the other half of the pack that didn’t go into sauce for the festive bird - will be briefly stewed with a bare tablespoon of water, then cooled and will go into muffins with a good pinch of mixed spice and orange zest
Other frozen berries - can go mushy when thawed - use in a smoothie for breakfast, a coulis to pour over vanilla icecream or with apples in a pie or crumble, no need to thaw for this
Here are some things to buy for your storecupboard rather than the freezer to bulk out other items and to make sure you aren’t caught short if snowed in.
Suet (or veg alternative) for dumplings and pastry. Pulses - dried and tinned - soups, casseroles and curries.
Tinned tomatoes - without herb or garlic flavourings, I like the crushed ones which are less watery than whole ones in juice. Tomato paste.
Spices -try the Seasoned Pioneers website for mail order and ideas
Creamed or kernel sweetcorn - you’ll want to make that soup recipe from a previous post
Bread mixes - or plenty of flour and dried yeast.
Sultanas and raisins.
Long-life milk.
Instant mashed potato - handy for topping fish or shepherds pie or as an emergency veg side dish
Make your list, then if you have run out of ideas what to do with what you find, come back and comment and I’ll try to give you some suggestions and recipes
Some tasty ideas! Thank you.
I love parsnips and sprouts, when can i come to dinner?