Also you may find this helpful.....
Don't Freeze These Foods
• Salad greens and crisp raw vegetables to be used in salads and sandwiches — such as celery, onions, and sweet peppers — will lose their crispness and become limp after freezing.
• Eggs in the shell will expand and crack the shell. Hard cooked egg whites will become tough and rubbery.
• Creamed cottage cheese will change texture, becoming grainy. Freeze only uncreamed or dry-curd cottage cheese.
• Sour cream will separate when frozen and thawed.
• Heavy or whipping cream will not whip high after freezing.
• Potatoes become mushy if frozen raw, and watery and tough if boiled and then frozen.
What cooked food is good to freeze?
Pasta sauces. You can take advantage of in season veggies to make pasta sauces in bulk.
Soups and Stews. Freeze these as meals as well as individual portions for work lunches. Stock is also perfect to freeze - either in ice cube trays or in 2-3 cup portions.
Meatballs, rissoles and patties.
Pies and sausage rolls. Great for unexpected visitors or an anytime snack.
Cooked Chicken. Can be used again on its own or in a sauce, soup or stew.
Cooked cakes, biscuits, bread and muffins. Bake a little extra each time you bake and you'll always have some rescue cake on hand. Uncooked biscuit dough also freezes well.
Know before you Freeze
You must let hot food cool down before you freeze. Heat will not only affect the ability of the food to freeze uniformly but also could raise the temperature of your freezer.
Cool precooked dishes as quickly as possible before they are placed in the freezer.
For fastest cooling, place the pot of hot food in an ice water bath - either in the sink or in a larger pan. If you're cooling a soup, stew or sauce, stir occasionally to help it cool evenly.
Once the dish is cooled, portion it into meal-sized containers. Label and date the containers so you're never left wondering 'What IS this?'. Place them in a single layer in the coldest area of your freezer until completely frozen. Rearrange as necessary later.
Freezing Tips
Poorly wrapped foods run the risk of developing freezer burn and unpleasant odors from other foods in the freezer. Follow these simple wrapping and container tips to ensure the quality and safety of your food:
If you can, use freezer bags or wrap; they will be stronger and more odor proof.
When freezing liquids in containers, allow a small amount of head room for expansion. When using freezer bags, be sure to remove as much air as possible before closing.
Wrap solid foods like meat and cakes tightly in alfoil before you bag them.
In most cases, raw meat wrapped by the butcher should be fine to freeze as is. However, supermarket meat in plastic trays should be bagged or wrapped out of the tray.
Freeze in small containers with no more than a 1-litre capacity to ensure that freezing takes place within four hours. Food that is 5cm thick will take about two hours to freeze completely.
When storing foods long-term, the freezer should be set at -18 degrees C.
How long can I freeze food for?
Tomato / vegetable sauces 6 months
Soups and stews 2 to 3 months
Lasagne and pasta bakes 6 months
Meatloaf, meatballs and patties 6 months
Pies and sausage rolls 6 months
Poultry (cooked, no gravy or sauce) 3 months
Poultry (cooked, with gravy or sauce) 5 to 6 months
Uncooked pizza dough 3 to 4 weeks
Bread and muffins 2 to 3 months
Un-iced cakes 6 months
Iced cakes 3 months
Raw meat 1 year
Cured meat 1 month
Thawing frozen food
With the exception of muffins, cakes and other baked goods, don't thaw food at room temperature. Bacteria can grow in the thawed portion of prepared food, potentially making it unsafe to eat even after cooking.
An exception here is frozen stock - you can put that straight into the pot in which you are cooking the soup, stew, risotto liquid or whatever you are using it for. To ensure that your food is safe to eat, follow one of these thawing techniques:
In the refrigerator: This is the slowest but safest thawing technique. Small frozen items might thaw in a few hours, while larger items will take significantly longer - overnight or longer.
In cold water: Place the frozen food in a leak-proof bag and place in a large container or sink of cold water.
In a microwave on the defrost setting: Plan to cook the food immediately after it has thawed in a microwave, because some areas of the food might have begun cooking during the defrost cycle.