There's no reason for any garden produce to go to waste when freezing is so quick and easy. Even one or two bags of frozen veggies is valuable when you need it for something you're cooking during the Winter and don't have to run out for it or substitute. Berries, tomatoes, onions, celery and peppers need no processing. Berrys and tomatoes can be frozen on cookie sheets, then put into bags. Onions, peppers and celery can be cut to your liking; then packaged and put in the freezer. These are all great for winter soups, stews, sauces and casseroles.
If you are using plastic bags instead of containers, I first package small portions (usually 1-2 cups) in inexpensive snack or sandwich bags; then put them in one large ziploc freezer bag. This saves on the cost of freezer bags and eliminates wasted food when you only need a small portion.
If you are doing a lot of one veggie, save and freeze the blanching water. If there are ends, leaves or stalks that you are not freezing (asparagus ends, broccoli stalks, corn cobs or celery leaves) add them in the blanching water and cook slowly for an hour or so to add extra flavor to your broth. Package the broth in one cup portionsas above, but be sure it is totally cool first as it will otherwise leak in the small inexpensive bags. I use this frozen broth for making rice, pasta, couscous, etc; or if a recipe calls for water, I use this instead. It definately adds more flavor to your dish.
My niece, Sue Jones, and I froze Asparagus and Broth.
We'll enjoy soups this Winter--see recipe file for Asparagus Soups.
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