freezer cooking adventures…

Well, 3 pregnancies later I have finally accomplished something that has been on my to-do list each time but never happened…

I made several meals for my freezer, so we can actually eat more than canned chili and cereal when Baby Girl gets here and I am too tired to cook!

My mom came over this week to keep us company for a few days while Andrew was out of town.

Yesterday I got it in my head that I should do some freezer-feeding and since Grandma was here to help entertain the boys, I decided to actually do it!

Over the course of the afternoon, I ended up getting several meals ready and boy did that feel good!

I also snuck in a few minutes to organize our garage freezers so we can actually find those meals again in a few weeks, which felt almost as good as getting the meals ready themselves!

Nesting has officially come to town, I think!

All of these dishes I made on the smaller side, so that we don’t have more than one meal and one meal of leftovers from each one.

Here’s what I froze:

2 - 9″ pans of my Tuna Casserole
6 - small-loaf size Cheesy Barbeque Chipotle Meatloaves
1 batch of Chili-Seasoned hamburger meat for tacos or chili later
2 batches of Hamburger Soup
1 big batch of Slow Cooker Beef Stroganoff (we’ll get at least 2 meals or a company meal out of this!)
oh and one more triple-batch of Raspberry Freezer Jam.

And I still have a big batch of our favorite Split Pea Soup to make (today or tomorrow… I forgot to buy carrots for that one!) that will give us 3-4 meals worth!

Here’s what I did:

I made the Tuna Casserole’s except for baking, put into foil pans, covered with foil, placed in gallon ziplocs, labeled and froze. (To serve, I will thaw overnight and bake at 350ºF until heated through and bubbly.)

For the meatloaves, I mixed all the ingredients, formed and placed into small foil loaf pans, covered with foil, placed into gallon ziplocs, labeled and froze. (To serve, I will thaw overnight and bake at 350ºF until cooked through, brushing with more barbeque sauce if needed!)

I browned 3lbs of ground beef and seasoned with Homemade Chili Seasoning. Half was used to make 2 batches of Hamburger Soup and half was frozen in a ziploc to use later for tacos or chili making.

For the Hamburger Soup, I put all the ingredients, and the cooled, cooked hamburger into gallon ziplocs, labeled and froze. (To serve, I will add corn - I was out - and then heat on the stove or slow cooker!)

I cooked my Slow Cooker Stroganoff as usual, except for adding the sour cream, let it cool and then placed it into a gallon ziploc, labeled and froze. (To serve, I will reheat in the slow cooker, adding sour cream at the end, and serve with fresh cooked noodles.)

I will make my Split Pea soup as usual tomorrow and freeze into gallon ziplocs (probably will take 4), label and freeze. (To serve, I will reheat on the stove or slow cooker!)

And… we will eat well for a while at least!!

Do you freezer cook? Or have you before??

What are your favorite recipes to freeze and reheat?

I may do another day of this if I feel up to it, so I need some ideas!

(Fun story: I *may* have sharpened my knives before I began, and I *may* have cut myself a few times with those newly sharp knives. Here’s a tip: If you do the same, don’t decide to cut up a bunch of fresh pineapple the next day!)

no effort slow cooker cleaning

I have finally figured it out!!

After years and years of soaking, scrubbing, soaking & scrubbing over and over again to get my crockpot inserts clean after particularly stuck-on messes, I finally figured out the best and easiest way to clean them.

Want me to share?

Ok, here’s what you do:

1. Take your dirty, gross, burnt-on food crusted crockpot…

2. leave it in the base…

3. fill it up with hot water and a few squirts of dish soap…

4. turn it on LOW and walk away!

Let the soapy water ‘cook’ overnight, or even for a day or more if you’ve got a really big mess (think chili that sat in the slow cooker - on - for almost 2 days!).

When you’re ready, dump out the hot water, do a quick swish with a brush or rag and your crockpot will be clean as a whistle! (If it’s not, add more hot water and soap and just let it cook longer!)

Enjoy your clean slow cooker with no effort at all!

Does this make you as excited as it does me? I feel like I just gained years of my life back and a whole new joy-obsession with my slow cooker!!!

And, I will be making this slow cooker steel-cut oatmeal tonight. And not caring one bit about the burnt on bits that are pretty much inevitable!

 

peeling peaches… a step-by-step photo tutorial!

Do you ever feel like making a few peach pies, or canning or freezing that beautiful box of organic peaches you just got a great deal on, but just can’t seem to get in the mood to try and peel all of those peaches?

Well, here’s a trick for peeling them quickly and easily!

(Yes, I know these are nectarines, not peaches…
but I had both and these looked so much prettier!)

This is something I learned years ago from my Grandma, while I helped her can peaches, and it works great on peaches, tomatoes, nectarines & plums!

Here’s my kitchen set-up when I am going to peel a bunch of peaches. This time I am going to dice them and freeze them to use later. I found some gorgeous organic peaches and nectarines at Costco this week, so I grabbed 3 boxes, and just may go back for more!

You need a pot (big enough to hold a few peaches submerged in boiling water), a big bowl full of ice water, a slotted spoon or tongs, knives and a cutting board!

(Did you notice that I have a towel under my cutting board? Well, it’s there for 2 reasons… 1st to keep the board from sliding around as I chop and 2nd, to catch all the overflow juices!)

Wash your peaches and score a small X into the bottom of each one with a paring knife.

Place 2 or 3 peaches at a time into the boiling water, and let them boil for 30-60 seconds, until the skin at the “X” starts to curl up.

Quickly take them out of the boiling water and place them into your ice-water bath to cool them down so you can peel them (and to stop the cooking process!).

Take them out of the cold water once they are cool enough to handle and with your fingers, pull back the skin. It will come of very easily, sometimes even in one piece!

Chop your fruit however you would like… I like to dice mine, just because that’s how I usually use it!

And there you go!

Next time you need to peel a bunch of peaches or nectarines for peach pie, blueberry nectarine crumb bars, cinnamon nectarine freezer jam… or for canning or freezing, try this trick!

Check back next week for some great recipes, like the ones mentioned above, using all this beautiful fruit!!