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Anyone Freeze Cheese?

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October 16, 2022, 06:38 PM
lastmanstanding
Anyone Freeze Cheese?
If so does it work and to what degree? Reason I ask is we have been getting 5lb blocks of a good quality sliced cheese. They are not individually wrapped and there are 120 slices per block. We have now gotten a third block in the last four weeks. We have given out as much as we can to family,friends, and whoever shows up at the door and will take some.

It's close code dated so the food shelf won't take it even though it's perfectly fine. As I said it's a good quality cheese not the cheap greasy slices you can buy. I've searched the web and get different answers. I've vacuumed sealed a couple 10 slice bags and have them in the freezer to see how it works out. Just wondering if anyone else has tried it and if it worked. If it doesn't work it will save me a lot of time not having to do all the separating sealing and freezing.

We get these from a food service guy we know through our distribution business and we exchange products back and forth. We also get a good array of other products including meats so we don't want to say no to anything he has to exchange.


"Fixed fortifications are monuments to mans stupidity" - George S. Patton
October 16, 2022, 06:40 PM
bald1
Only cheese I've ever frozen has been aged extra sharp cheddar. Found after it defrosts you need to use it fairly quickly, so smaller portions in vacuum sealed freezer bags is the way to go.



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October 16, 2022, 06:54 PM
Pipe Smoker
I’ve never frozen cheese, but well wrapped it keeps good for a long time refrigerated. I can’t quantify “long time” because I’ve never seen it go bad. I’ve seen some cheese last 6 weeks.



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October 16, 2022, 06:56 PM
NavyGuy
Kept properly most cheeses will last quite a while in just the fridge. It is cultured dairy which get's it's flavor from ageing in merely cool tempters. Swiss for an example, I've kept sliced swiss in the fridge for 30 some days. We eat it up before that so I don't know how it would fair longer, but if I saw some minor mold, I'd just cut it away (before my wife saw it) and make a nice sandwich.



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October 16, 2022, 06:58 PM
lastmanstanding
quote:
Originally posted by bald1:
Only cheese I've ever frozen has been aged extra sharp cheddar. Found after it defrosts you need to use it fairly quickly, so smaller portions in vacuum sealed freezer bags is the way to go.

Yeah that's what I'm attempting now as mine own experiment but I only started doing it a week or so ago. I'd like them to sit in the freezer several months before I pull them out to see how they fare. I don't think pulling them out after a week is going to tell me much.


"Fixed fortifications are monuments to mans stupidity" - George S. Patton
October 16, 2022, 07:19 PM
Appliance Brad
It becomes crumbly. We freeze both soft and aged cheese. We also store aged cheese in the original unopened package for a year or more in the refrigerator.


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October 16, 2022, 07:36 PM
PASig
It will freeze but becomes way more crumbly/fragile

I wouldn’t try to freeze slices, you may never get them apart again. Block or even grated maybe, vacuum sealed or just sealed up well in double freezer bags.


October 16, 2022, 08:52 PM
SIGfourme
I buy the pre sliced Costco provolone or cheddar. Separate into 2 inch stacks in a Ziplock and freeze. Lasts about 2 months with no change in texture or taste.
October 16, 2022, 09:17 PM
Sweet Chuckie
I buy the Costco cheddar. I portion it out to about 1" of slices, then put it in sandwich baggies I remove what air I can before sealing. As I'm old and forget a bit, I've used it over a year later. Agree with previous posts about separating when it's been in the freezer over 6 months, but have never noticed any flavor problems. Also, when I thaw out a baggie, I shake out what ice particles I can while still frozen.
October 16, 2022, 10:26 PM
DougE
Vac sealed shredded cheese works pretty well. I buy the shredded cheese in packs, cut the seal off the packs, seal in a vac bag, and freeze.



The water in Washington won't clear up until we get the pigs out of the creek~Senator John Kennedy

October 17, 2022, 05:18 AM
downtownv
I vac sealed: Swiss, American and provolone no issues. Cream cheese will change texture however still fine for use as an ingredient. Same as milk however light and heavy cream, cooking only.


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October 17, 2022, 06:25 AM
tsmccull
Have frozen blocks of Swiss, Colby and Cheddar successfully. Also already grated packages of mozzarella, pizza and Mexican cheese Kroger sells will freeze and then thaw well (i.e., doesn’t seem to affect flavor or texture significantly). The wife freezes containers of cottage cheese for later use by putting them in ziploc freezer bags and sticking them in the freezer. Seems to work ok.
October 17, 2022, 08:41 AM
ZSMICHAEL
I would not. I lived in Wisconsin and would have the local cheese factory mail me a brick of cheddar. Kept in at room temperature for months. No problem.
October 17, 2022, 09:06 AM
Flash-LB
I freeze Philadelphia Cream Cheese on a regular basis.

It needs a nuking process in the microwave to make it smooth again after it thaws, but it works fine.
October 17, 2022, 09:09 AM
lastmanstanding
Thanks for the responses all. One thing that keeps popping us is people say separate your slices and put pieces of parchment paper in between slices. Sounds tedious but I'm determined to waste as little of this as possible. It pains me to throw out food. I can buy 4"X4" squares of parchment paper on Amazon and try that. Figure I can freeze in packs of 10 and do some meal planning around cheese! Lot's of 'mater soup and grilled cheese!

This is what I have been getting with more possibly coming.




"Fixed fortifications are monuments to mans stupidity" - George S. Patton
October 17, 2022, 10:00 AM
ZSMICHAEL
That is the size we used to get, but it would have a red coating on the outside.
October 17, 2022, 11:42 AM
konata88
I've never had the impression that cheese freezes well so I've never really tried. At least not w/ the types of cheeses I buy.

That being said, I have had success freezing parmesan cheese, which is lower milk fat and inherently dryer already. And it helps with grating as well. But only for short period (used w/in a month).




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October 17, 2022, 05:02 PM
lastmanstanding
It finally dawned on me to email the Bongards company (turns out it's a Minnesota processor) itself and ask them. The response was they do not recommend freezing their products but it can be done. They stressed wrapping it tight (what does that better than a vacuum sealer) and to thaw it slowly in the fridge for best results.

Ordered the parchment squares so I'm going to spend some quality time standing in front of the chamber vac playing with cheese this week I guess.


"Fixed fortifications are monuments to mans stupidity" - George S. Patton