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This article accompanies "Tips for Freezing Vegetables." Specific vegetable blanching or cooking times for freezing vegetables artichokes to mushrooms and tomato juice.
Freezing vegetables usually requires blanching in boiling water, cooking, or steam blanching prior to freezing. After blanching, cool in ice water for 1 1/2 times the blanching time. These are the blanching times for common vegetables: Asparagus – Blanch medium stalks 3 minutes; large stalks 4 minutes Bean Pods – Blanch 3 minutes Lima Beans – Blanch 3 minutes for medium; 4 minutes for very large Beets – Remove all but 2 inches of the top; Don’t blanch – cook until tender; Chill; Then slice and freeze Beans/Soybeans – Boil in the pods for 5 minutes; remove beans; chill; freeze Broccoli – Remove tough leaves; Remove woody ends; Slice stalks lengthwise; soak ½ hour in salt brine*; rinse and drain; then blanch 3 minutes or steam 5 minutes Brussels sprouts – Soak in salt brine* for ½ hour; Blanch small for 2 minutes; medium for 4 minutes; large for 5 minutes Cabbage – Blanch wedges for 3 minutes; shredded for 1 ½ minutes Carrots – Trim, wash and scrape the carrots; dice or slice them; blanch for 2 minutes Corn on the Cob – Blanch small ears 7 minutes; medium 9 minutes; large 11 minutes Corn – whole kernel – Blanch on the cob for 4 ½ minutes; then cut off the cob after cooling in ice water Corn – creamed – Same as above, except when cutting off the cob, only cut the kernel tips; then scrape the cob with the back of your knife to get juice and pulp Herbs – Wash and drain, but don’t blanch; wrap sprigs or leaves in foil, or seal in a plastic bag; put inside a carton or glass jar in your freezer Mushrooms – Wash, remove stem base; Blanch medium or small whole mushrooms 5 minutes; or cut-up mushrooms for 3 minutes (Add 1 tablespoon lemon juice to your water to prevent darkening) Okra – Blanch small 3 minutes; Large for 4 minutes Peas – Green and English, Blanch 1 ½ minutes; Blackeyes for 2 minutes; Sugar, Chinese or Pods, Blanch for 1 ½ to 3 minutes depending on size; Be sure to remove strings from pods Hot Peppers – Wash, drain and freeze Green and Red Peppers – Cut in two and remove seeds; Blanch halved peppers 3 ½ minutes Pumpkin/Squash – Wash, cut into pieces, remove seeds, and bake or steam until tender; After cooling, scoop out the pulp from the rind and freeze Potatoes – Don’t freeze well unless prepared as food first, such as French fries, hash browns; for new potatoes, wash and scrape skins off, then blanch 4 minutes for very small up to 10 minutes for very large – eat frozen new potatoes within one month for best flavor and texture Spinach, collards, greens – Spinach, blanch 2 minutes; collards, blanch 3-4 minutes (the more tender your leaves, the less time you need for blanching) Summer Squash/Zucchini – Cut into pieces, then blanch for 3 minutes Tomatoes – Wash and core your tomatoes; cut them up; Don’t blanch, cook until soft Tomato juice – Wash, core and cut up your tomatoes; Cook for 5 minutes; Put your tomatoes through a food mill to make juice or for tomato puree, cook the juice until it is half its volume; freeze * Soaking in brine gets rid of insects which may have crawled into the vegetable * See my accompanying article, "Tips for Freezing Vegetables" for the steps to freezing.
The copyright of the article Freezing Vegetables in Vegetable Gardens is owned by Sally Odum. Permission to republish Freezing Vegetables in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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Oct 6, 2008 11:27 AM
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