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Monday, July 6, 2009

How to Preserve Tomatoes in the Freezer



I have sure been enjoying fresh tomatoes out of the garden the past few weeks, juicy and sliced nice & thick onto sandwiches, or as big, meaty chunks in a salad, and while I do have a few green ones still out there and a few more blossoms popping up, I think it's time to put a few away, don't you?

By the way, that is an untouched photograph y'all ... aren't they just gorgeous? I might not have gotten any peppers or beans to produce this year, but I sure had some purrtaay 'maters!!

Anyhoo... I haven't gotten into the whole canning thing with home vegetable gardening. For one, I just don't have that nice pantry storage space like many of you do. For another, I only do a small kitchen garden due to limited sunny areas in my yard, so I've never had a huge garden that really produced enough to "put away." What I do have, however, is a stand-alone freezer, so I like the freezer method of putting away tomatoes.

Now, you can't use these tomatoes as a substitute for fresh - you'll have to go pick one fresh out of your garden for those kinds of recipes, but these tomatoes are perfect for use in pan sauces, soups & stews, skillet dinners & casseroles - which is really mostly what I used canned tomatoes for anyway. Now if you prefer canning, well, I am clueless, but there are tons of tutorials out there to show you how to put up tomatoes properly. The freezer method is just one good way to preserve tomatoes, but it's a great way to put up tomatoes if you don't want to fool with canning.

Did you know that you can freeze an entire whole tomato without even removing the skin? Just rinse them well, cut away the stem and upper core and line them on a baking sheet that has been sprayed with non-stick spray. Put them just like that into the freezer and once they are frozen, bag 'em up in a freezer bag. When you go to use them, running them under warm water will usually be enough to pull the skins off. Understand though, they are bulky to freeze like this so they'll take up more room.

I prefer to skin mine before I put them up, however, and then either bag them whole (flash freeze in the same manner), dice them, cut them up into chunks or sections, or puree them.

Skinning a tomato is easy. Simply bring a pot of plain water to a full, rolling boil and carefully ease the tomatoes into the boiling water. You can cut a little "x" into the bottom of each tomato before putting them in the boiling water which seems to help speed up the process.


Once it comes back to a boil, just keep an eye on the tomatoes until the skin begins to split, usually about a minute or so, if that long. Remove and plunge into an ice bath to stop them from cooking. The skins should peel right away now.

Remove all of the skins and cut up the tomato, preparing them in the manner that you want to store them - chopped, pureed, diced. This group of tomatoes right above are Romas, and I just wanted the meat of the tomato, so I also seeded and cleaned them. These are perfect for my Angel Hair Pasta with Crab and in fact, that is exactly what they will be used for. Ya gotta try that recipe it is scrumptious!

These are ready to go! Place them into a labeled freezer bag.

I do some like this as pictured by count for skillet dinners and pasta dishes, others that are diced up or chopped are done by weight - or, you can do cups. Most canned tomatoes are about 15 or 28 ounces. I also like to flatten the bags so that they stack well on top of one another in the freezer.

That's it! Easy, simple and no managing hot glass jars.

Click here to learn how to make Creole Tomato Sauce.

How to Put up Freezer Stewed Tomatoes

Remove skin as noted, then core and cut the tomatoes into quarters. Do this over a rimmed plate so that you retain all the juices. In a saucepan, add the tomatoes and juice, and if you'd like to add anything to your stewed tomatoes such as onion, celery, bell pepper, green chilies, or hot peppers, add those ingredients in here. Cook until tender about 10 to 15 minutes.

Once tender, remove from heat, set aside to cool, or plunge pot into a pan of iced water to speed up cooling. Label and package in freezer bags as noted.

6 comments:

Donna-FFW said...

This is such useful information, I am printing it all out. Thank you.

sherri said...

Thanks for the tip!

Mary said...

When we're hammered by the snows of winter we'll appreciate the tomatoes in the freezer - thanks to you. Have a great day.

Krista said...

Your tomatoes look gorgeous! I've canned quite a few tomatoes in my 32 years, but never ever frozen them. This is good to know!

Sarah@HomeschoolinRealLife said...

I don't even have a garden and I still end up with more tomatoes than I can use - thanks to the gardens of friends and family - or even from over zealous grocery store trips HAHA!
I don't know why I never thought of freezing them. Thanks!

Janis said...

Thank you soooooooooo much for saving me all that sloppy, endless canning work. I'm so happy with frozen tomatoes...and I don't have to worry about food poisoning! Love your site! Janis

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