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The Only Frozen Veg I Buy Is Petit Pois....
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But I was wondering, if you don't overcook it, is frozen veg as good for you as fresh? In the past at other peoples houses I might add, I have found it water logged. Probably due to over cooking. Unless you clever people know different.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.In the winter I buy a lot of frozen veg and find its how you cook it that counts. Green beans, sprouts and broad beans benefit from a quick steam around 3 mins then finish in a little butter in a hot pan to get rid of excess water. Spinach I only ever use frozen -put in pan with tiny amount of water, once defrosted put in sieve and squeeze out as much water as possible, then finish with a little cream or butter. I use frozen casserole mix and frozen mediterranean veg for lasagnes and other dishes. Frozen chopped peppers and onions are ideal for quickness. Veg I've tried and doesn't seem to work: Cauliflower,broccoli,carrots (other than in a casserole) and that vile mixed veg that reminds me of School dinners.
I've just thought back and realised that I buy peas and sweetcorn to use as icepacks for injuries....turns out sweetcorn is much cheaper than peas.
Nutritionally frozen peas tend to be better than fresh as they are preserved so quickly and not transported from farm to processing plane to DTC to supermarket whilst claiming the peas are fresh..
So on the face of it the only frozen veg I eat is spinach, and not all that often at that.
Nutritionally frozen peas tend to be better than fresh as they are preserved so quickly and not transported from farm to processing plane to DTC to supermarket whilst claiming the peas are fresh..
So on the face of it the only frozen veg I eat is spinach, and not all that often at that.
Frozen Sprouts are the work of the devil.
They manage to be overcooked and slimy on the outside, whilst always retaining a hard core of inedible green vileness.
I cannot think of a single culinary purpose for the abomination - I suppose they might be just useful (whilst frozen) as an ad hoc speed bump for slowing down mad old gits on mobility scooters .... [ see other threads passim ]
They manage to be overcooked and slimy on the outside, whilst always retaining a hard core of inedible green vileness.
I cannot think of a single culinary purpose for the abomination - I suppose they might be just useful (whilst frozen) as an ad hoc speed bump for slowing down mad old gits on mobility scooters .... [ see other threads passim ]