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Cooked Breakfasts - Freezing?

TheChillPill
Posts: 658 Forumite

I very rarely have time for breakfast in the morning (especially the preparation and cleaning up thereafter), however last weekend I bought so 'breakfast ready meals' that I could just stick in the microwave.
Having been having these all week, I've found having a breakfast makes a big difference to my energy - and more importantly, I'm having 3 set meals a day and sticking to it (whereas before I would 'nibble' stuff throughout the day).
So, I figured I could prepare a load of breakfasts at the weekend, stick them in some tupperware and freeze them, taking them out and into the fridge the night before I need one.
Before I go ahead and do this, is it ok to cook, freeze and microwave these? I'm thinking of adding - Sausages, Bacon, Beans, Hash Browns, Black Pudding and possible mushrooms.
Just want to be sure I don't poison myself :rotfl:
Having been having these all week, I've found having a breakfast makes a big difference to my energy - and more importantly, I'm having 3 set meals a day and sticking to it (whereas before I would 'nibble' stuff throughout the day).
So, I figured I could prepare a load of breakfasts at the weekend, stick them in some tupperware and freeze them, taking them out and into the fridge the night before I need one.
Before I go ahead and do this, is it ok to cook, freeze and microwave these? I'm thinking of adding - Sausages, Bacon, Beans, Hash Browns, Black Pudding and possible mushrooms.
Just want to be sure I don't poison myself :rotfl:
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Comments
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What a great idea.
Id like to know this too.
Can anyone help?
LGworking hard at this thing called life0 -
Question for Ladygrim please -
What is the Babycham bottle?You can't stay young for ever,but you can be immature for the rest of your life.0 -
well, you must be able to do it and they sell them frozen like that, but I don't know if they are cooked then we warm them when microing
someone must know on here??'If you judge people, you have no time to love them'
Mother Teresa0 -
TheChillPill wrote: »So, I figured I could prepare a load of breakfasts at the weekend, stick them in some tupperware and freeze them, taking them out and into the fridge the night before I need one.
Before I go ahead and do this, is it ok to cook, freeze and microwave these? I'm thinking of adding - Sausages, Bacon, Beans, Hash Browns, Black Pudding and possible mushrooms.
Just want to be sure I don't poison myself :rotfl:
It is perfectly safe to cook, freeze, defrost then microwave a sausage.
Cooked, frozen, defrosted microwaved bacon is safe (I have done this as part of sauces etc)
Beans microwave of course, but I have no experience of freezing them first. I have frozen other beans (eg canellini within a sauce) and they have reheated fine.
Cooked hash browns will reheat fine
No experience of black pudding (just NOT my thing!!)
Mushrroms will freeze OK, but I find they can be a bit watery when microwaved - maybe try them separately first to see if you like them - they will be safe, you just may not get on with their texture.
hth0 -
I can't see any problem with any of the ingredients.Sounds like a good idea to me and might nick it for hubby as he works odd shifts and you can eat a cooked breakfast at any time of the day
Lesleyxx0 -
I've seen recipes on American websites for something called a "Breakfast Burrito" which seems to be an entire cooked breakfast wrapped in a tortilla which can be frozen then microwaved-don't think they include black pudding though!0
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Thanks for all the replies, I'll go ahead and give it a go then :-)
If I'm never heard from again, you know black pudding isn't safe to freeze and reheat :-D0 -
Hi,
you could also try making a batch of pancakes, freeze them, and then do them in the toaster. Add some fruit and yoghurt. V. quick.
Lol.:A :A :A :A
DFW Nerd No.: 789 Ligthbulb moment: 23/09/07
Challenge: No bank loans and CC gets cleared every month.
Need to think about restarting the Grocery Challenges
Sealed Pot Challenge: Put change in and give to charity when full.0 -
Black pudding is cooked already (Boiled) - I usually buy a big one from my local butcher (Made from Happy Pigs) - I then slice it and freeze it flat on a tray to be boxed when frozen) - these slices then fry in a little butter on no time and taste great - plus they aint full of MRM that the supermarket ones are!
Cooked eggs do not freeze well - they go rubbery - the supermaket frozen egg things are full of additives (and are usually wet eggs from battery hens so not happy hens) - better to cook freeze then other items and add to fry pan with fresh (free range) egg to thaw and cook into a B'fast omlet or treat as my fav microwave meal from my youth - a couple of slices of bacon (raw), a few sliced mushrooms (raw), a hand full of grated cheese, fresh cracked pepper and a couple of eggs over the top. Pop this in the M/Wave for a few mins and slap between two pieces of fresh bread or toast with masses of butter and
brown sauce!0
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