......... Great Northern Beans ...... (ingredients, frozen, healthy, coffee)
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Just made a big ole pot of Great Northern Beans with onion & Ham Hock.. My question is can you freeze the beans. If so how long in the freezer. Been awhile since I made beans..
Just made a big ole pot of Great Northern Beans with onion & Ham Hock.. My question is can you freeze the beans. If so how long in the freezer. Been awhile since I made beans..
I freeze all kinds of bean soup when we have it left over. it does not affect the quality much.
I donno about great northern, but I used to fix pinto, but took them up just as they started to get soft to freeze them. If I waited until they got done, they got mushy when I thawed them. I always made enough to eat and enough to freeze. I took out what I intended to freeze and let what I wanted to eat immediately cook until done.
I freeze all kinds of bean soup when we have it left over. it does not affect the quality much.
I take about a 1/2 cup and run it through a hand blender then add too the rest as a thickener..Been so long since I made beans I can't remeber what I did. I have enough for small army..
I dunno about great northern, but I used to fix pinto, but took them up just as they started to get soft to freeze them. If I waited until they got done, they got mushy when I thawed them. I always made enough to eat and enough to freeze. I took out what I intended to freeze and let what I wanted to eat immediately cook until done.
They will only be frozen for a couple weeks.. Been awhile and I could not remember if they came out flat and grainy.. It's worth a test too see what happens..
I donno about great northern, but I used to fix pinto, but took them up just as they started to get soft to freeze them. If I waited until they got done, they got mushy when I thawed them. I always made enough to eat and enough to freeze. I took out what I intended to freeze and let what I wanted to eat immediately cook until done.
Went to college and lived in Kentucky for 17 years. Travelled eastern Kentucky for a number of those in my sales rep job. I always heard that in eastern Kentucky and Tennessee, Pintos were called "mountain strawberries" and a "Georgia Sunday" was grits in a bowl with a fried egg dropped on it!
I'm a huge bean fan (beano, too!) including pintos, northern, kidney, limas, and anasazi (popular in the far west). But I've never, ever frozen any!
So those of you who do this, please post your results.
Not a problem at all. I ran a small coffeehouse for several years. Used to make big enough batches of soup for 2-3 lunch hours, serving some, freezing the rest. Never an issue with any bean, and we used to go through a lot of cannellini and great northern for Italian soups.
Uncooked ingredients like beans, no, but any cooked food should be OK. Freezing will turn moisture to ice crystals which explode cell membranes and break food down. Dried beans should keep forever almost. Its dried to keep. Eventually insects will invade that stuff in the cup board tho'.
Just remember plastic is NOT a vapor barrier. If you freeze bread, for example, I quadruple bag it in plastic shoppers tote bags. The fridge constantly re-circulates air in it to eliminate frost. It will freezer burn your food.
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