Freezer Cooking February – Tips and Recipe Roundup

I hope you’re ready to fill your freezer this month!  Freezer cooking is going to be our focus for the next 4 weeks.  (It won’t be all freezer cooking though.  I’ve got a special dessert that will be perfect for Valentine’s I’ll share later this week!)

On Saturday, February 19 we’re going to have a Virtual Freezer Cooking Party via the Eat at Home Facebook page!  The idea is that if you’re free that day and want to get some cooking done, you can pop in to Facebook and share what you’re cooking and how it’s going.  I think it will be more fun to “cook together” than doing it alone.  And there may be a giveaway involved :-)

Before we get started with new freezer recipes and tips, here’s a roundup of posts I’ve already published on this topic, just in case you missed them the first time around.

Menus

There are now 3 Fill Your Freezer Menus:

Recipes

Main Dishes

These are all recipes that freeze especially well.  Some of them also make large quantities, so you get more bang for your cooking buck.

Desserts

Most cakes, cookies, breads and muffins can be frozen.  These are a few that make a lot and freeze well.

Freezer Cooking Tips

That should get us started!   More recipes to come in the next few weeks, including one for those meatballs in the photo at the top.

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Comments

  1. Beverly says:

    I’m so excited about this series, Tiffany. I need this one! Everything looks so good already.

  2. CJ says:

    Here’s one of my favorite cooking tips: any casserole that goes into a 9 X 13 baking pan will fit into two 8 X 8 baking pans. This makes it super easy to split one large casserole into two smaller ones. I use foil pans. Prepare your casseroles to the point of baking, cover with foil and then wrap all the way around with foil. Slip into a gallon-sized freezer bag. Label appropriately, including baking directions. This smaller size is perfect for empty nesters or smaller families. With this method, I can cook for myself and share with friends (or stock the freezer for those days I work in the yard). One of my favorite gifts for teachers or new moms is to give a couple of casseroles ready to pop in the oven. Looking forward to this month’s theme!

  3. ELISE says:

    I’ve been looking for this very thing ! So happy to have these recipes and tutorial!
    Great step-by-step photographs too! I’m just lovin’ your blog, thank you.

    Very Best Regards,
    Elise

  4. ATL Cook says:

    Here’s what I have in the freezer: Cooked pinto beans, wild rice cooked in chicken stock, meatballs, cooked pasta shapes, browned ground beef with onions and garlic, home made noodles ready to cook. I always make a double recipe and divide them into 4 portions.
    Home made bread sticks, King Arthur Flour blog recipe. Mini fruit pies in a Ball can or freeze wide mouth pint jar. Home made or store bought applesauce. Frozen bananas; peeled for smoothies or baked items. Pecan and walnut halves. Soup; make 4 servings and freeze 2 in Ball plastic freezer jars. Come in 8oz, 16oz, and 32oz sizes. Perfect for leftovers too. One each size or 3 alike–sold with Ball canning jars.

    Cooking for one–so glad to see Xiplock pint freezer bags!

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  1. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Reeds Cooking, Tiffany King. Tiffany King said: 32 recipes to stock your freezer, plus 3 weekly menus designed to feed you now and store meals away for later http://ht.ly/3OksB [...]

  2. [...] a list recipes that freeze well, click here.  This is a list of types of foods you can freeze, along with a few [...]