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The art of freezing food

Don’t just throw it in the freezer. Look after your food

Prevent freezer burn. Keep it airtight

Wrap everything carefully before you freeze it

Cold air in your freezer keeps the food frozen.

But if the air comes into direct contact with your food it’ll dry it out and spoil it.

It’s called freezer burn.

So, it’s essential you protect anything you put in the freezer from direct exposure to air.

Take time to wrap your meat properly for the freezer to maintain quality and taste

Double wrap to keep it airtight

Step 1

Step 2

Freeze it quickly. The faster your food freezes, the better it’ll taste

Rapid freezing prevents large ice crystals forming inside the meat.

But if meat freezes too slowly lots of big ice crystals form within it.

These crystals damage the structure of the meat.

It’ll lose moisture when it thaws and be dry when you eat it.

How to freeze your meat quickly

Use the Fast Freeze option. Many freezers have this, if yours does use it.

Portion, wrap, airtight, label, date,

Don’t leave food too long in the freezer

Eat within 3 months

Freezing keeps food safe almost indefinitely. But, over time, its quality deteriorates.

So, no matter how well you wrap your food it’ll eventually develop freezer burn.

It’ll still be safe to eat. But it won’t taste very nice.

You can freeze meat for up to 3 months with no discernible loss of quality.

After that there’s a chance it’ll develop freezer burn and be dry and unappetising when you cook it.

Write a “Use by Date” on everything you put into your freezer. Use a “last in, first out” principal.

Thaw meat slowly in your fridge. Leave it on a plate, uncovered, at the bottom of the fridge.

Why freezer burn is your enemy. What it is and how to stop it

Freezer burn won’t hurt you. But it’ll spoil the taste of your food.

It’s caused by a natural physical process which happens when ice molecules in frozen food “migrate” to the coldest part of the freezer, usually the walls.

The water is literally being pulled out of the food.

It’s the same process that’s used to make freeze-dried coffee.

If your food isn’t airtight when you put it in the freezer, you’ll get freezer burn more quickly.

The water will leave your food and end up on the walls of your freezer.

So, your food becomes dry and unappetising and it might also develop a metallic taste.

Freezer burn is visible as brownish white marks on the meat.

If there’s any fat in these marks it might get oxidised which, though harmless, changes the smell and the taste.

References include:

Freybors

Food.gov.uk