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  1. #16
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Springville, NY
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    185

    Thumbs up

    Mine too!!:)

  2. #17
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    Gilberts, IL
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    Quote Originally Posted by Coonlie View Post
    We have a Food Saver and one thing I've found is that it's hard to seal really wet or juicy food because the liquid gets sucked up into the seal area and leaves gaps that don't seal.

    Anyone else experience this? Have a solution? Otherwise, I love the Food Saver.
    I have an old food saver and it doesnt have a switch on it for moist so I either put a bounty paper towel just under where the seal line is of the bag (that way if liquid does come up the paper towel catches it ) or I will put the item in the freezer overnight then seal the next day like mentioned already.



    Lotsaraw for apples I would juice them and freeze the juice, or if you are going to freeze a apple whole maybe it could be used for smoothie instead of ice...I dunno how a frozen apple would turn out upon defrost, same thing with pears, cucumbers things with very delicate flesh.

  3. #18
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Minnesota by way of Atlanta
    Posts
    176

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    I was thinking of trying this. How do you thing the juice would come out I mean as in would it be more water than juice taste wise?

    Lotsaraw for apples I would juice them and freeze the juice, or if you are going to freeze a apple whole maybe it could be used for smoothie instead of ice...I dunno how a frozen apple would turn out upon defrost, same thing with pears, cucumbers things with very delicate flesh.[/QUOTE]
    Never give up on your dreams even if it take a life time

  4. #19

    Default Great hint for liquid sealing

    I have the food saver. I really love it.. To seal something with a lot of liquid I take a paper towel fold it to size and place it in the bag just under where I will be sealing the bag. When the machine starts sucking the air and liquid, the paper towel collects the liquid allowing the machine to seal the bag well. Works great .

  5. #20
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    Thomasville, NC
    Posts
    2,803
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    I'm so glad someone told me how to foodsaver my avo's!! I never thought of freezing them first! NOW I will be doing this instead of letting them go bad!

    I also use the foodsaver containers.....they are great for spinach and other salad greens, they keep for weeks, instead of days!!

    Best of luck!
    Wendi
    "Do you not know that your body is a temple of the HOLY SPIRIT who is in you, whom you have from GOD, and that you are not your own? For you have been bought with a price, therefore glorify GOD in your body." 1 Corinthians 6:19-20

    My Journalhttp://www.rawfoodtalk.com/blogs/blog-1914/

  6. #21
    Colorawdo girl Guest

    Default

    I got a little reynolds brand I think.Its a little appliance for ten dollars and you buy the bags and it sucks all the air out of the bag and tightens the bag right up.Its amazing and no freezer burn.Redo after you take some food out of it.
    Freezing reduces some nutrients but not terrible.

  7. #22
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Posts
    1,101
    Blog Entries
    273

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    Glad I got my "Food Saver". I grew my first garden this past summer 08 and froze lots of greens with it. Love it, love it!

  8. #23
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Beautiful Washington State
    Posts
    3,603

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    Quote Originally Posted by islesgirl View Post
    Glad I got my "Food Saver". I grew my first garden this past summer 08 and froze lots of greens with it. Love it, love it!
    Hi islegirl ~ Can you post how you froze your greens?

    We want to do that this summer as organic greens are so spendy here. I'm interested to know the process you followed to get them frozen.

    Thanking you in advance! *Ü*

  9. #24
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
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    Hi Deb - Well, I'll just tell you what I did - don't think I'm an expert at this or anything. The greens were from my first garden in 27 years and I was so proud of it. All I grew was greens! Beets (greens), carrots (tops), kale, swiss chard, collards, parsley, spinach and romaine. I washed them off - that takes time. Then I simply drained them and stuffed the food saver bags with them and sucked out the air using the "moist" setting and popped them into the freezer. The only problem was that if I'd frozen quite a bit per bag I had to cut it or tear it in half and that wasn't always easy. I used these greens to make GS in my vitamix every single day. Of course, if you are using them for smoothies it is much easier to use a smaller amount per bag but the bags are not cheap so I often simply take what I need from a well-stuffed bag and then re-seal it. Does this help?:) I really can't afford organic from the store, but I saw a documentary last night about "sludge" being poured out on farmers' fields and it was scary and made me think I'd better find a way to cut corners and come up with the money for organic. We'll see. Or I will have another garden this summer.

    Sue.

  10. #25
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Beautiful Washington State
    Posts
    3,603

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    Hi Sue ~ Yes - that [I]does[I] help a lot! I wasn't sure which way to go on freezing the greens. It's something I haven't done before. And what a savings it will be, we $pend a lot on green$!

    Thank you Sue, I appreciate your posting back with how you froze your greens. *Ü*

  11. #26

    Default

    so it's not true you have to blanch veggies before freezing? or does this not apply to vacum sealing?

    i was reading about it last week and everything i read said just fruits don't have to be blanched or cooked.

  12. #27
    iamacranberry Guest

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    Course you don't have to blanch veggies before freezing...I never do! But if you buy frozen vegetables from the store, they'll probably have been blanched.

  13. #28
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Beautiful Washington State
    Posts
    3,603

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    I'm another one that doesn't blanch the veggies I freeze. I do use the Food Saver, but even if I didn't use it - I wouldn't blanch first.

    Same with fruits - I don't blanch any of them and I freeze just about every fruit there is - ha.. *Ü*

  14. #29

    Default

    i was just asking :)

    i forget now the reasons it was mentioned to blanch veggies. so only thing i left in memory was if i was going to freeze anything at all it would just be fruits.
    but if you guys are doing it and find it ok.. then cool and perhaps i'll consider it if i ever freeze.

  15. #30
    Join Date
    May 2010
    Location
    SWFL - Naples area.
    Posts
    528

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    I used to have a ton of apples and routinely made sauce and froze in the FS. worked perfectly. Kids ate applesauce all winter.

    I also did quartered apples. They were soft when they were thawed, bit worked in recipes, so would also work well in smoothies. a little moisture (water works and many swear by lemon juice or another citric acid) to coat them before freezing will help retain color.

    as for blanching, I believe it is purely an aesthetic thing. It holds the color and makes the thawed veggies "pretty".

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