It's Always Freezer Season: How to Freeze Like a Chef with 100 Make-Ahead Recipes [A Cookbook]Hardcover (2024)

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  • Description
  • Product Details
  • About the Author
  • Read an Excerpt
  • Table of Contents

Description

Transform the way you use your freezer with 100 flavorful meal prep recipes from two-time James Beard Award–winning Southern chef Ashley Christensen and cookbook author Kaitlyn Goalen.

NAMED ONE OF THE BEST COOKBOOKS OF THE YEAR BY TASTE OF HOME • “Ingenious . . . Ashley and Kaitlyn are leading us in the right direction to making life in the kitchen a little bit easier.”—Emeril Lagasse, chef and restaurateur

In It’s Always Freezer Season, Ashley Christensen and Kaitlyn Goalen reveal how the freezer can easily become the single most important tool in your kitchen. By turning your freezer into a fully provisioned pantry stocked with an array of homemade staples, you’ll save time and energy.

Even on a tight schedule you can now put together delicious, complex dishes such as Cornbread Panzanella with Watermelon, Cucumber, and Za’atar Vinaigrette; Potato Pierogi; Pan-Roasted Chicken Breast with Preserved Lemon–Garlic Butter; Braised Short Ribs with Cauliflower Fonduta; and Provençal Onion Tart (Pissaladière) with Tomato-Olive Relish. Christensen and Goalen also share fully prepared make-ahead dishes for every meal of the day to keep in your freezer, like Pistachio Croissant French Toast with Orange Blossom Soft Cream, Chicken and Kale Tortilla Soup, Pimento Mac and Cheese Custard, and Deviled Crab Rigatoni, plus snacks, sweets, and drinks ready to be enjoyed at a moment’s notice.

With innovative recipes, helpful technical information, and tips on stocking your new “pantry,” this book will allow you to make more delicious meals with a lot less effort.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781607746898

Media Type: Hardcover

Publisher: Clarkson Potter/Ten Speed

Publication Date: 04-06-2021

Pages: 272

Product Dimensions: 7.50(w) x 9.20(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Chef Ashley Christensen and writer Kaitlyn Goalen are the authors of Poole’s: Recipes and Stories from a Modern Diner. They are married and live in Raleigh, North Carolina, where they oversee the five restaurants in the AC Restaurants hospitality group.

Read an Excerpt

Read an Excerpt

Introduction: Why the freezer?

Both of us love to cook. When we wake up in the morning and choose to cook at home, it is soothing and meditative and fun—an activity that brings us happiness. On those days, it’s a luxury to spend a few hours on a single recipe—maybe the music is playing; maybe the windows are open or friends are helping; maybe it’s a cold day and the warmth of the stove is making the house cozy. It’s a joy.

But even the most beloved activities can be sucked of their pleasure when you are compelled to participate, rather than making the choice. Cooking as a necessity is labor. Whether we do so professionally or simply to feed ourselves or our families, most of us are required to cook daily. Even the most food-loving cooks we know get burned out on the labor of making dinner now and then.

On those nights, you might have options: you may go out to a restaurant; you may pick something up or have it delivered; or you can cook something, even when you don’t want to. The latter option becomes much more appealing when you have a freezer of dishes that you’ve cooked on a day when you felt the joy and happiness, rather than the labor, of cooking. A freezer full of the recipes that you’ll find in this book is like a savings account of emotional and physical sustenance: draw on it when your day-to-day stores are low.

In this age of obsession with the freshest, most seasonal food and the most cutting-edge flavors and techniques of top restaurants, the freezer may seem like a rather dowdy topic for a cookbook, especially for one cowritten by a professional chef. Freezers feature prominently in the make-ahead recipes of meal-prep blogs, but they rarely get top billing in cookbooks.

Hopefully, by the time you’ve cooked your way through even a few of the recipes in this book, you’ll come to the same realization we have:

The freezer, more than any other appliance in the kitchen, will help you cook delicious, flavorful meals in less time.

It is at the intersection of quality and taste, approachability and convenience.

The time-saving aspect needs to be contextualized: We’re not shaving hours off the clock by cutting corners. There are recipes in this book that require a time commitment because making great food takes time and work. (We should know; we do it for a living.) Instead, we’re focused on the idea that you should squeeze as much out of each cooking session as you can. For example, if you’re going to spend a few hours making a stock, don’t just make enough for one recipe of soup. For almost the same amount of effort, you could make double the stock, freeze half, and thus save yourself time on the next occasion you crave a bowl of something hot and delicious.

Using your freezer more strategically and thoughtfully delivers other benefits, too: it can help you avoid food waste and save money, preserve seasonal ingredients to enjoy throughout the year, and entertain on the fly or provide a meal for a friend or family member who needs the assistance.

We get asked a lot about our “secret weapon” in the kitchen. Home cooks are understandably curious to know what the tools and tricks are for cooking more delicious food. Well, when we’re at home, our secret weapon is definitely the freezer. Our freezer is the MVP of our kitchen and the single most important “kitchen tool” we have, as it allows us to cook our favorite things in a way that best satisfies our home-cooking philosophy. Through smart and strategic use of our freezer, we are able to cook deliciously, avoid food waste, and save time by maximizing the time we spend in the kitchen.

With this book, we’ve laid out our game plan for you to do the same. We love these recipes, and we hope you do, too. But even more so, we hope this approach can inspire in you new possibilities and renewed joy for cooking.

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Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Introduction: Why the freezer? 1

How to use this book 5

Recipes Organized By Course 6

Part 1 How to Use Your Freezer 9

1 What to freeze and what not to freeze 11

2 How long can I freeze it? 21

Frozen Food Lifespan 24

3 How to freeze 27

4 How to unfreeze 39

Part 2 The Freeze Pantry 47

5 Grains 49

6 Proteins 81

7 Dairy 111

8 Vegetables 133

Part 3 Freezer-Friendly Dishes 165

9 Breakfast and brunch dishes 167

10 Snacks and bites 181

11 Soups and saucy things 189

12 Casseroles and bakes 209

13 Sweets 223

14 Beverages 237

Resources 253

Acknowledgments 255

About the authors 257

Index 258

It's Always Freezer Season: How to Freeze Like a Chef with 100 Make-Ahead Recipes [A Cookbook]Hardcover (2024)

FAQs

What meals freeze really well? ›

Soups, stews, lasagna, empanadas, and pie dough are some of our favorites to freeze—check out more ideas below.

How do you freeze pre made dinners? ›

Pack foods into freezer bags

Freezer bags are thicker than storage bags and will keep the food fresh longer. Speed freezing and hasten thawing by freezing foods in a thin, flattened shape in freezer bags. A rounded shape takes longer to thaw through to the middle.

Which food is not okay to freeze? ›

These include anything with both a high water content and a cell structure that will burst from the expansion of the freezing water. Examples include cucumbers, grapes, and all but the firmest vegetables. Some cheeses freeze well but others like ricotta or even sour cream tend to get gritty.

What is the best meat to freeze cooked? ›

Stew and Braising Cuts (chuck, shank, shoulder, rounds) and other “low and slow” cuts do great but remember to portion these cuts before freezing, you'll need a hacksaw to cut through a chuck roast until fully thawed. Steaks, Chops and Searing Cuts are the most affected by the freezer.

What foods last longest in freezer? ›

What food lasts the longest in the freezer? Whole chickens or turkey, beef steaks and roasts and eggs out of the shell may last up to one year in the freezer if stored properly.

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