Freezer cleaning.

You know those $2 ribeye steaks sold out of a truck in parking lots? Yeah. Now keep it in the freezer for two years. Combine that with a tiny amount of frozen salmon donated by someone a year ago and some instant mashed potatoes and corn.

I’m half asleep and this is what I get from that.

Cost per person $3.25 not including the peanut butter and jelly I will definitely eat after this.

    • FauxPseudo @lemmy.worldOPM
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      10 hours ago

      Properly flash frozen and vacuum sealed stuff is less likely to go freezer burned and chest freezers don’t have frost free function which also dramatically decreases freezer burn risk.

  • Bluegrass_Addict@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    can you do a freezer tour or something? why is all your meat old, and seemingly from a guy that sells meat in the parking lot. so curious

    • FauxPseudo @lemmy.worldOPM
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      1 day ago

      A lot of the freezer meat shows up frozen and in tiny quantities. Like “gotta combine two to get fried rice out of it” small. So it sits there.

      There is a thing where you see an ad or post about "20 ribeye for $20”. You go to the parking lot of your local Tractor Supply at the appointed time. Some guy tries to sell large packages of frozen beef, poultry and seafood, all from his farm. 800 miles away and deep inland so the seafood portion is sketchy. They only have like 6 of the ribeye deal. They are the thinnest cut possible and like three ounces of won’t-hold-themself-together when thawed. But it’s cheap protein so you get them. The more you use them the more stingy you get about using them until there are just two left in the back of the freezer hidden behind the emergency chicken nuggets that are $13 for 5 pounds in the freezer section of the local meat store.

      That’s how it happened.

    • FauxPseudo @lemmy.worldOPM
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      21 hours ago

      For long term preservation of cooked food I prefer canning. Most of the stuff in the freezer is factory sealed.

      I love a good food poisoning mystery and am constantly warning people in canning groups about unsafe practices. Even if it gets me banned because some groups have very strict rules about warning people they could die from doing things like water bath canning unpeeled fermented beets. True story.

      • kalpol@lemmy.ca
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        13 hours ago

        Give us your safe canning tips oh guru. I can broth currently but only after ive boiled it a few hours and then steam bath another hour or two. So far so good.

        • FauxPseudo @lemmy.worldOPM
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          11 hours ago

          I recommend any of the modern Ball handbooks for the basics.

          But I can’t recommend boiling for hours. Botulism spores do not die until they reach 250° or reach 240° for an extended period of time. Water boils at 212 at sea level, 158 on Mount Everest and, 212 at the Dead Sea. 212 will never kill botulism spores. Doesn’t matter if you do it for 5 minutes or you do 4 hours. Steam can only reach above 212 in a pressurized environment. This is the concept behind a pressure canner. Creating an environment that allows water to achieve temperatures at 240° while still being at sea level.

          “so far so good” is survival bias. People that aren’t so good can’t speak for the dead have no voice.

          If that pH is greater than 4.6 then steaming or boiling isn’t going to prevent botulism. And it’s orderless and colorless. There is zero way to tell if something is off by with any human senses.