4 year old frozen stock
Discussion
Planning a seared scallop consommé this weekend, had a ratch in the freezer for a batch and found a lamb one that I can't even remember making. It'll go well with the meal as the main is a rack of lamb although the reason I can't remember making it is it is dated easter 2017!
My thoughts, frozen in sealed freezer bag-what could possibly go wrong in our freezer that's kept well below 0?
My thoughts, frozen in sealed freezer bag-what could possibly go wrong in our freezer that's kept well below 0?
I'd be wary. I make a lot of stocks and sauces specifically for vacuum packing and freezing in a commercial freezer at around -29/30. These have a life of 13 weeks at work which is very cautious, I have used a few at home around the 12 month mark and they were fine but I wouldn't fancy much older.
https://www.stilltasty.com/fooditems/index/16776
Google spits out this, 6 months is still good but reckons if kept frozen it'll keep indefinitely. Obviously I'm not using for commercial purposes but I don't exactly want to kill the wife!
Google spits out this, 6 months is still good but reckons if kept frozen it'll keep indefinitely. Obviously I'm not using for commercial purposes but I don't exactly want to kill the wife!
All good so far, interestingly it did seem to provide a slightly weak tasting stock-where on earth does the taste go? And how??
However I was worried about it overpowering the scallop and in the end it matched them perfectly without being all about the consommé. Dressed with a little julienned cucumber and celeriac.
Escoffier’s recipe and method for the consommé worked perfectly.
Trick I use for frozen stocks, which is less messing around than using egg whites. Put a couple of layers of muslin cloth in a colander/strainer and stick above a bowl. Put the frozen stock in the muslin and leave until is melts. Ditch the jelly like residue in the cloth and do not wipe the bottom of the colander/strainer in to the bowl as this can also contain the 'contaminants'. Works most the time - can't rememebr which chef I got that from, Maybe Heston Blumenthal or Nigel Haworth
Mobile Chicane said:
That will be rank.
Fat goes rancid.
It wasn't.Fat goes rancid.
It was however, weaker in flavour than i expected however it suited the dish perfectly (more through luck than anything). I have read that Escoffier's method of clarification does rob the stock of some taste as the egg whites take on that part of the stock as they coagulate. A little salt was all that needed to be added.
I should have tasted before I started the consommé to see if the lack of favour was down to the method or the age of the stock.
Im most fascinated as to how something can remain in your freezer for 4 years and not be eaten or chucked away. My teenage kids clear out the fridge and then set upon the freezer on a regular basis, food shop arrives and the process resets itself.
Was it a deep chest freezer in the garage or similar?
Was it a deep chest freezer in the garage or similar?
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