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  1. Freezer Burn
    R2008 · Comedy · 1h 30m

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  1. Feb 17, 2020 · Freezer burn is the result of moisture loss from frozen food, which affects its quality but not its safety. Learn how to recognize, prevent, and deal with freezer burn in different types of foods.

  2. Freezer Burn - Yahoo Recipe Search

    Freezer Burnt Chicken Tortilla Soup
    Yummly
    Freezer Burnt Chicken Tortilla Soup With Skinless Boneless Chicken Breasts, Reduced Sodium Chicken Broth, Chicken Broth, Celery, Red Onion, Carrots, Jalapeno, Beef Broth, Chicken Soup Base, Diced Tomatoes, Black Beans, Cannellini Beans, Frozen Whole Kernel Corn, Parsley Flakes, Dried Basil, Ground C
    Freezer Burnt Chicken Breasts Rescue - Shredded Mexican
    Yummly
    Freezer Burnt Chicken Breasts Rescue - Shredded Mexican With Chicken Broth, Onions, Garlic, Cumin, Salt, Tomato Sauce, Chili Powder, Black Pepper, Cumin, Cayenne Pepper, Broth, Onion
    Roasted Brussels Sprouts With Pine Nuts
    Food.com
    When I saw this recipe on foodtv, I thought I would give brussels sprouts a try. I LOVED it. I get to craving these & will make a batch just for myself. The cooking time may sound too long, but I have never had either the brussels sprouts or pine nuts burn. I do like the suggestion to keep your pine nuts in the freezer - that should help to keep them from burning.
    Lemon Rosemary Skillet Chicken Thighs
    Yummly
    Got thumbs up from my roommates. And I had freezer burnt sprigs of rosemary, cuz I was too lazy to shop and get fresh. The lemon rosemary combo is aromatic
    Easy Beef Stroganoff
    Yummly
    This was excellent! Needed to use some freezer-burnt steak and this was the best thing ever! Will definitely be my new go to stroganoff recipe from now on. I
    Triple Threat Coconut Cream Pie
    Food.com
    We're in love with Tom Douglas' Coconut Cream Pie from Dahlia Bakery here in Seattle, but at $35 a pie plus a $5 deposit for the plate--I knew I had to come up with my own. I watched a demo of his on the local public television website, but still felt I needed to add my own touch. I'm proud to say it's a winner! Take that, Mr. Douglas. . . . One note: I would highly recommend you follow the instructions for a great pie crust below, for optimal crispiness and flavor. Otherwise, you can roll out a store-bought dough, and just before rolling it out, sprinkle the coconut on top and roll it in. Will be more susceptible to burning, but should be okay if you watch it close. I always make a big batch of my All Butter Pie Pastry, recipe #239831, and keep it in the freezer for easy prep. I've rolled the coconut into the prepared, thawed dough with no problem.
    French Macarons
    Food.com
    I have been asked by some of you to explain how to bake the perfect French macaron and while they are the divas of the cookie world, you can make them at home with a little bit of practice and patience. The result is worth it, as what you can achieve are perfectly smooth, rounded little sweets that you can colour to your hearts desire and fill with the most intoxicating flavours. Macarons are the picture of class, dainty tea parties and are perfect for any gathering you wish! First-off, what are they? Macarons are little, almond-meringue based cookies that have a crisp, eggshell-like top and a soft interior. Macarons are usually filled with buttercream, ganache or fruit gels and are a very dainty, fragile and sought after French/Italian pastry. A version of macarons have been produced since the 8th century AD and were a popular sweet in the household of Catherine de’ Medici and Henry II of France. In 1792, another version of the macaron was created by two Carmelite nuns who baked and sold the sweets to pay for their housing during the French Revolution. The colourful “sandwich” version of macarons did not exist until the 1830’s, their creation generally credited to the French patisserie Laduree . I first made these when I worked at Europea as the stand-in pastry chef when the restaurant lost theirs overnight. The macarons craze was just beginning and I had only just heard of them. I had to learn how to make the small sweets quite quickly as they were a staple on the menu and had to be perfect each time. As I had not been trained how to make them, I lost a few batches along the way. One night, after service, I started a batch of about 500 mini macarons intent on getting a jump on the next days’ mise en place. The executive chef sat in the restaurant, unbuttoned his pristine chef coat and cracked a beer as he waited for me to finish up. I followed all the steps closely, making sure everything was precisely measured, sifted and at the right temperatures. The batter looked perfect, I piped perfect little rounds on multiple baking trays and fed them into the convection oven, set the timer and cleaned the kitchen to a gleaming shine. When the timer went off, I flung open the oven doors and my heart sank to the floor, as every single macarons was cracked, dull and uneven. I still had about 20 baking sheets left to bake and I foolishly hoped that maybe the next trays would come out better than the last, which they did not. Needless to say, I was very embarrassed and I didn’t know what to say to the chef who had waited for hours for me to finish. At 2 am, I shame walked out of the kitchen, wringing an imaginary towel in my hands, and timidly explained that the whole batch of expensive macarons were ruined and that I had wasted his time. Oh my goodness… My heart felt like a sinking ship and my fingers and toes were tingling with embarrassment. Luckily I wasn’t scolded, as he was exhausted and a few beers in. Instead, he began to chuckle, which turned into a loud, deep, hearty laugh and tears formed in the corners of his eyes. He walked me back into the kitchen and looked at the costly disaster I had made, picked up some of the ruined macarons and crushed them in his chef-scarred fist, letting the crushed cookies sprinkle down to the baking sheet like shattered egg shells. “Look, it’s decoration! Not all is lost.” he exclaimed. My heart stopped racing, the tears burning the back of eyes subsided and I realized that although I royally screwed the pooch, it was OK… As the years have passed, I have come up with my own little tricks to ensure a 98% success rate when making macarons, and I have since made thousands. Once you get the hang of it, macarons will become one of your favourite sweets to make and you can play with colours and flavours to create your own version. There are many ways to make these beautiful little sweets, and while I am going to walk you through my favourite way to make them, you can always try a different way and see how it goes! While I pray you succeed, and I will instruct you so that you have the best chance of success, remember this story the first time you mess these up, because as I did, so will you, a few times. Don’t feel bad, just crush them up and use them on ice cream, cakes, add the crushed cookies to icing for texture or top your favourite mousse for some crunch. The crumbs will keep in the freezer for quite a while! follow on Instagram @fairytaleflavour
    Shrimp Linguine with Garlicvermouthbutter.
    Food52
    Butter + Garlic+ Shrimp...but how to make a unique and wonderful butter sauce for pasta? My mind kept wandering to the legendary Chef Alfredo tossing fettuccini with copious amounts of butter and cheese gently endlessly over a heated plate with his golden forks, delivering the shimmering strands practically into the mouths of anxiously awaiting diners. But really who has that kind of equipment, golden forks, heated plates? Then I wondered if I could dare to write a recipe that instructed the eater to eat from a pan over the stove? I guarantee that each and every one of us has, at one time or another indulged in such private slurpy platelessness, however unless you have a truly generous size stove it could prove awkward during a dinner party. Then I remembered a dish called linguine e cartoccio, al dente pasta, just tossed with tomato, hot peppers, fresh seafood & a bit of pasta water till it just comes together, then wrapped in the shape of a ship in parchment paper and baked in the oven until the juices mingled and were absorbed, presented to each diner like a gift, opened table side, piping hot. And then I thought, I bet I can do this with butter, and garlic, and shrimp. Now that all being said a note on the accompanying photos...they are not fabulous, I've no excuse except somehow it became Wednesday ...and there was a sleet storm which turned to "Thundersnow" here in Philly, and I chose to stop at the wine store over the fishmonger. I used small shrimp because they were what I had in the freezer, and I burned the breadcrumbs, but it was 9pm, and the cuisinart had already been cleaned. I do not suggest using small shrimp in this recipe, they get tough from cooking that long, if that's your only option, don'te sautee them, toss the pasta in garlicvermouthbutter and then toss in raw shrimp before putting it all in the parchment packets. Regardless of burnt breadcrumbs and kind tough shrimp, it was still pretty darn good.
    Bar Pizza-It's What You Crave
    Food52
    There has never been a more one-of-a-kind pizza like the bar pizza. For the most part they are never good, many times they are awful, but that has never stopped anybody from ordering one. Patrons order them because they are drinking. Combine it with hunger and it makes these pizzas far better then they would ever be if a shot of better judgement was in hand. Without exception a bar pizza reigns over the pink pickled eggs languishing in the murky liquid of the large glass jar back by the whisky. Bar pizzas are also infinitely better then the microwavable cups of Spaghetti-Os or the burritos ensconced in a cardboard tortilla. Even so, that doesn't make them good. Here is the catch, in Indiana this food exists and maintains a life all its own because in Indiana if a bar sells liquor by the drink it has to be able to serve food to a minimum of 25 people at all times. On top of that many bars(mostly working class bars) don't have room for a kitchen much less the money for one. To get around this law most bar fly type establishments bring in a microwave, a toaster oven labeled as a pizza oven, or a snack rack where pork rinds rule. Sporks and disposable tableware abide, as do paper towels used as napkins. It is less then the bare minimum and ordering anything while the bartender is busy is likely to make him/her hate you. In the moment though, when hunger and alcohol meet, a bar pizza is the best pizza ever. It doesn't happen often but it does happen enough that people continue to order them. If all things aline, it hits the sweet spot—that meaty place on the bat that makes hitting a home run feel effortless. In food speak it is the moment when something is at its best, it is perfectly ripe for eating, and waiting longer is to watch perfection in its decline. Here is the problem, why would I want to make one of these awful pizzas at home? If I do make them at home it doesn't mean I am drinking at home, well not often anyway. It means I have kids, kids that want pizza—all the time. I make a great pizza dough. I make great pizza but then there are those nights where I don't want too. It is readily apparent to me why I need to perfect this pizza. Make it a dinner everyone requests on any given night. The point is, this is a great pizza to have in your back pocket and I never would have thought much about it until I read an article at Serious Eats. At that moment I knew I was going to start making bar pizzas, I was diving in deep and going for it, and I did. Like lots of recipes though, and maybe even more so, this one takes practice. Myself, I always make a recipe three times before I give up on it and in this case it took all three times. It's okay, there is nothing wrong with eating your mistakes when it comes to food. Besides it is not a lot of work and here is why. My kids love spaghetti and there is rarely a day I don't have a homemade tomato sauce of some kind in the fridge. Bacon, ham, salami, or even pepperoni are always in the deli drawer. I almost always have some sort of mozzarella too, either fresh or grated. I have taken too keeping tortillas in the freezer for quesadillas, so adding tortillas as pizza crusts to the list of uses is a plus. . Even so, if you had none of these specific ingredients you have something, say eggs, ham, and gruyere. If not you won't make this pizza anyway. But as I said, I am looking for the sweet spot, with practice I found it, and ever since making bar pizzas is like effortlessly hitting one out of the park. 1. When it is time to sauce the tortilla put a dollop of sauce in the middle of the tortilla and using the back of the spoon spiral your way to the outer edge. If this were a regular pizza I would tell you to stop short of the edge by about 1/2-inch but with this kind of pizza take the ingredients to the edge. It keeps the tortilla from being charred beyond recognition. 2. I have used all kinds of pans to make this pizza, stainless steel, enamel, cast iron and a comal (pictured). I like the camol best but I also know not everyone has a comal. I made these in a 12-inch cast iron skillet for a long time before I started using the comal. I use a comal simply for ease of access to the tortilla. I makes the pizza easier to assemble. 3. Turn on the broiler before taking anything out of the fridge or putting a pan on the stove. It needs time to get hot. 4. Keep all the ingredients at pans edge. These go fast and you have to be ready with the ingredients. 5. It is important to brown the the tortilla deeply before turning it. If it isn’t brown enough the pizza will lack the crunch that makes it so good. 6. Place the top oven rack 7 to 8 inches from the broiler. This prevents the pizza from cooking to fast and keeps the edges from burning.
  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Freezer_burnFreezer burn - Wikipedia

    Freezer burn appears as grayish-brown leathery spots on frozen food and occurs when air reaches the food's surface and dries the product. Color changes result from chemical changes in the food's pigment. Freezer burn does not make the food unsafe; it merely causes dry spots in foods. [2]

  4. Feb 25, 2024 · Freezer burn is when frozen food loses moisture and changes color, texture, and flavor. Learn how it happens, how it affects different foods, and how to avoid it with proper storage and wrapping.

  5. Oct 21, 2015 · Freezer burn is dehydration on the surface of frozen food due to air exposure. The telltale signs are whitish splotches—ice crystals—on the food itself. Meat or fish might look discolored or...

    • Janet Rausa Fuller
  6. Mar 29, 2021 · Freezer burn is a chemical process that dehydrates and oxidizes frozen foods, affecting their flavor and texture. Learn what causes freezer burn, how to identify it, and how to prevent it with proper freezing practices.

  7. Jan 12, 2024 · The solution to freezer-burned food is simple: “If food does suffer from freezer burn, cut off the affected areas — before or after cooking — and use the rest of the food,” staff writer ...

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