Entry tags:
culinary ideas wanted
I'm in a bit of a rut, so I turn to you, oh LiveJournal readers, in hopes that you won't be shy. :-)
My congregation maintains a freezer of ready-to-reheat food to send to homes where people are sick, someone has just died, etc -- families in the congregation that, at the moment, have more important things to worry about, and the least we can do is bring them dinner. Since, at the time of cooking, we don't know where it's going, I try to cook for a family that might or might not have kids, people with food allergies, diabetics, etc. (It should go without saying that everything gets a complete ingredient list.) Naturally, it should be kosher. (Not everyone keeps a kosher kitchen, but I do and label my contributions to so indicate.)
My standard contributions are: roasted chicken; baked chicken with some sauce (usually barbecue); chili (mild); cheesy noodle casserole; quiches. Occasionally I bake. You'll notice that this is pretty light on vegetables; aside from soup, what are good veggie options that freeze well?
What else would you cook if you were doing this?
My congregation maintains a freezer of ready-to-reheat food to send to homes where people are sick, someone has just died, etc -- families in the congregation that, at the moment, have more important things to worry about, and the least we can do is bring them dinner. Since, at the time of cooking, we don't know where it's going, I try to cook for a family that might or might not have kids, people with food allergies, diabetics, etc. (It should go without saying that everything gets a complete ingredient list.) Naturally, it should be kosher. (Not everyone keeps a kosher kitchen, but I do and label my contributions to so indicate.)
My standard contributions are: roasted chicken; baked chicken with some sauce (usually barbecue); chili (mild); cheesy noodle casserole; quiches. Occasionally I bake. You'll notice that this is pretty light on vegetables; aside from soup, what are good veggie options that freeze well?
What else would you cook if you were doing this?

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Veggies are harder. Sweet potato preparations freeze okay if they haven't been too heavily processed (not too many eggs, dairy, that kind of stuff). Maybe winter squash is worth looking into, also. My best veggie things that freeze well are soups and kugel-type things.
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Spinach pesto.
(If you're interested let me know and I'll dig up the recipes.)
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I cook-and-freeze a lot of chili, lentil soup, black bean soup, or chicken soup, all of which have lots of veggies thrown in and can be one-pot meals.
The last group cookoff resulted in crazy amounts of chicken soup and vegetarian soup (both intended to go with the frozen matzoh balls though we've been forgetting to include the matzoh balls lately... I need to check with the person whose freezer it is to find out the status of the matzoh balls) and chili (turkey-based and beef-based). Other items included quiches, roast chicken in various sauces, meatloaves, enchiladas (which I thought was a great idea)... what else? Oh yes, Swedish meatballs.
If our dishes are light on veggies, we often send along a bag of salad greens or a frozen bag of mixed veggies.
Does that help?
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http://hautecuisinefortheeverydaycook.blogspot.com/search/label/lasagna
S
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Bean soup (made with turkey "ham") also freezes well.
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Also, you can make eggplant gratin (far better when frozen than noodle lasagna), pumpkin curry, or stuffed mushrooms. :)
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from Carrie in AK
(Anonymous) 2009-10-04 03:57 am (UTC)(link)Also, things I've made and frozen:
Tzimmes
Squash kugel
Carrot kugel
Stir-fry
Brocolli-rice casserole
Re: from Carrie in AK