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I got a vacuum sealer and stored about 7 pieces of steak in 1 bag. I put it in the freezer and just now I decided to take out a couple of steaks to thaw out so I cut open the bag but all the steaks are frozen together. I know if I heat them all up I won't be able to refreeze the rest. What can I do? Should I re-vacuum seal the bag and wait until I can cook them all at once?

Also how do you use a vacuum sealer effectively with bulk meat? It doesn't work too well to store them all in one bag because if you are going to eat one at a time you need to re-bag everything each time.

rumtscho
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Celeritas
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1 Answers1

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Your best bet for preserving quality (and safety) is to re-seal the bag, then leave them in the fridge for a bit. You want them to thaw a little, so you can pry them apart. Its safe to re-freeze after this (as the meat never entered the danger zone, indeed it probably never got above ~30°F). There will be some quality loss from the partial thaw-freeze cycle. I recommend waiting to do this until you'll be cooking at least one of the steaks.

Now, how to freeze them:

Freezing in vacuum bags isn't special. Just like with freezing in ziplock bags, freezer paper, foil, etc., you need to freeze individual servings individually. If you want to economize on vacuum bags, you can try one of:

  • Wrap the steaks in plastic wrap or freezer paper to freeze. Once frozen, transfer to vacuum bag and draw vacuum.
  • Place two steaks in the bag next to each other, separated by ~1in (depending on thickness of steak, you want the bag to be able to conform to the shape of the steak). If you're using an external vacuum machine like a FoodSaver (as opposed to a $600+ chamber machine), the steaks may be pulled together as it sucks out the air; press your finger down on the plastic between them to keep them apart.
  • Separate steaks with freezer, parchment, or waxed paper (you can try plastic wrap, but they may freeze together anyway...) in one bag. You can stack them on top of each other, or put the immediately next to each other (without the 1in space), or both. Freeze after sucking air out.

There is a disadvantage to stacking things thicker to freeze (as in the last suggestion): generally speaking, the faster you freeze something, the more quality is retained. And of course the thicker it is, the longer it takes to freeze through.

If you're cutting from rolls, remember that each time you open and re-seal the bag, you're going to cut off an inch or so of plastic, depending on your vacuum machine. Cut the bag big enough to accommodate this.

derobert
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  • Whoa! You're the vacuum-seal guru, derobert! Very thoroughly and clearly presented! – Kristina Lopez Nov 02 '12 at 17:37
  • Ok thanks I've done what you've suggested. A couple things I noticed 1)is wrapping meat in plastic wrap defeating the purpose of using a vacuum sealer since they are already sealed air tight? Or is it not enough just to plastic wrap something and then freeze it? 2)I tried reusing the same bag to vacuum seal but it never worked properly, the sealing always had a small gap in it. Can vacuum sealing bags be reused? If no I guess ones best off using small bags for each individual steak (or whatever) since you'd end up throughing out a bag each time it's opened. – Celeritas Nov 02 '12 at 20:10
  • @Celeritas Those questions might be worth posting separately; it's a lot more useful to other people if they can find answers like that, rather than tucked away in comments. – Cascabel Nov 02 '12 at 23:33
  • @Celeritas (*very* quick answers here, I agree with Jefromi that you ought to ask those two as new questions): 1) plastic wrap is actually moisture permeable. The vacuum seal bag is much thicker (and a different plastic). 2) you should be able to re-seal them, provided you cut off the melted area. Make sure you don't have any food particles in the way, try wiping with a damp paper towel. – derobert Nov 03 '12 at 03:25
  • For prying apart, I usually use a butter-knife - it's easier to wedge into the spaces between foods, and it can work well with hard-frozen foods since that space between acts like a fracture point. Running the knife under hot water can help get that initial toehold, at least enough to wedge the knife in deeper. Since prying works better between hard surfaces, they can stay much more frozen than if you need to soften it enough to pull apart manually. Only the very edges would loose quality from thawing, as most of the inside never warms and the pried edges are still frozen and won't rejoin. – Megha Jun 15 '17 at 10:45