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Posts with tag frozen foods

Frozen Pizza Taste Test

Everyone loves frozen pizza. To satisfy your frozen pizza cravings and find the best frozen pizza read this frozen pizza taste test from Slashfood.
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Frozen Pizza Taste Test
Cheese Pizzas - Worst to Best

Ellio's
Our Verdict: Worst Cheese Pizza
Style: Cheese Pizza 16 oz
Cal./Fat g/Fiber g: 320 / 7 / 3
Crust (1-5): 1
Cheese (1-5): 1
Sauce (1-5): 1
Toppings (1-5): n/a
Flavor (1-5): 1
Overall appeal (1-5): 1

Comments: "How is this considered food?" "Not even in the middle of the night." "Looks like brain." "Tastes like dough. Tasteless dough."
Rachel Been, AOL. Shot on location at The Lofts at 45 White Street
Getty Images North America

Frozen Pizza Taste Test

    Cheese Pizzas - Worst to Best

    Ellio's
    Our Verdict: Worst Cheese Pizza
    Style: Cheese Pizza 16 oz
    Cal./Fat g/Fiber g: 320 / 7 / 3
    Crust (1-5): 1
    Cheese (1-5): 1
    Sauce (1-5): 1
    Toppings (1-5): n/a
    Flavor (1-5): 1
    Overall appeal (1-5): 1

    Comments: "How is this considered food?" "Not even in the middle of the night." "Looks like brain." "Tastes like dough. Tasteless dough."

    Rachel Been, AOL. Shot on location at The Lofts at 45 White Street

    Betzio's

    Style: Cheese Pan Pizza 24 oz
    Cal./Fat g/Fiber g: 175 / 5 / 1
    Crust (1-5): 1.25
    Cheese (1-5): 1.25
    Sauce (1-5): 1
    Toppings (1-5): n/a
    Flavor (1-5): 1.5
    Overall appeal (1-5): 1.5
    Comments: Our five-year-old friend Izzy thinks this slice is "Yummy!"; adults were less enthusiastic, calling it "Prison food." Final verdict: "Unbearable."

    Rachel Been, AOL. Shot on location at The Lofts at 45 White Street

    Lean Cuisine

    Style: Deep Dish Margherita 6 oz
    Cal./Fat g/Fiber g: 320 / 9 / 4 Microwave Only
    Crust (1-5): 1
    Cheese (1-5): 1
    Sauce (1-5): 2
    Toppings (1-5): 2
    Flavor (1-5): 1.5
    Overall appeal (1-5): 2
    Comments: A microwave mess: "Just awful." "This should not be mass-produced."

    Rachel Been, AOL. Shot on location at The Lofts at 45 White Street

    Jenos Crisp & Tasty

    Our Verdict: Highest Calorie Cheese Pizza
    Style: Cheese 6.9 oz
    Cal./Fat g/Fiber g: 440 / 20 / 1
    Crust (1-5): 2
    Cheese (1-5): 2
    Sauce (1-5): 2
    Toppings (1-5): n/a
    Flavor (1-5): 2
    Overall appeal (1-5): 2
    Comments: "Not awful tasting, just has zero taste."

    Rachel Been, AOL. Shot on location at The Lofts at 45 White Street

    Tony's

    Style: Original Crust Cheese Pizza 15.10 oz
    Cal./Fat g/Fiber g: 360 / 15 / 2
    Crust (1-5): 2
    Cheese (1-5): 1.5
    Sauce (1-5): 2.5
    Toppings (1-5): n/a
    Flavor (1-5): 1.5
    Overall appeal (1-5): 2
    Comments: "Sauce is not bad," was the highest praise we could muster. Otherwise, tasters "did not like the cheese at all." Also, "crust tastes too doughy."

    Rachel Been, AOL. Shot on location at The Lofts at 45 White Street

    DiGiorno

    Our Verdict: Biggest Letdown
    Style: Rising Crust 4 Cheese 28.2 oz
    Cal./Fat g/Fiber g: 320 / 11 / 2
    Crust (1-5): 3.5
    Cheese (1-5): 1
    Sauce (1-5): 1
    Toppings (1-5): 1
    Flavor (1-5): 1.5
    Overall appeal (1-5): 2
    Comments: "Looks amazing, but tastes like plastic." "Tastes weirdly artificial."

    Rachel Been, AOL. Shot on location at The Lofts at 45 White Street

    Stouffer's French Bread Cheese

    Style: 10 3/8 oz
    Cal./Fat g/Fiber g: 360 /15 / 4
    Crust (1-5): 3
    Cheese (1-5): 2.5
    Sauce (1-5): 3
    Toppings (1-5): n/a
    Flavor (1-5): 2.5
    Overall appeal (1-5): 3
    Comments: "Not good. Not bad. Just frozen."

    Rachel Been, AOL. Shot on location at The Lofts at 45 White Street

    Tombstone

    Our Verdict: Middle of the Road (Which Is Just Fine With Us)
    Style: Original Extra Cheese 20.5 oz
    Cal./Fat g/Fiber g: 350 / 15 / 4
    Crust (1-5): 2.5
    Cheese (1-5): 3
    Sauce (1-5): 3
    Toppings (1-5): n/a
    Flavor (1-5): 3
    Overall appeal (1-5): 2.5
    Comments: "Tastes exactly how you'd think frozen pizza should taste." "Most average pizza ever, which is not really a bad thing." "Cheese is its strong point."

    Rachel Been, AOL. Shot on location at The Lofts at 45 White Street

    Red Baron

    Style: Singles French Bread 5 Cheese & Garlic 8.8 oz
    Cal./Fat g/Fiber g: 410 / 22 / 2
    Crust (1-5): 4.5
    Cheese (1-5): 4
    Sauce (1-5): n/a
    Toppings (1-5): n/a
    Flavor (1-5): 3.75
    Overall appeal (1-5): 4
    Comments: "Love the garlic, but it's a little too salty." "Too salty." "Tastes artificial and cheap. Made me feel dirty inside."

    Rachel Been, AOL. Shot on location at The Lofts at 45 White Street

    Red Baron

    Our Verdict: Great for Late Night Munching
    Style: Singles Thin & Crispy 4 Cheese 7.2 oz
    Cal./Fat g/Fiber g: 300 / 14 / 1
    Crust (1-5): 2
    Cheese (1-5): 3
    Sauce (1-5): 3
    Toppings (1-5): n/a
    Flavor (1-5): 3.5
    Overall appeal (1-5): 3.5
    Comments: "Do you think I could grab that whole thing before anyone else gets to it?" "That's just how I remember it tasting, and that's a good thing."

    Rachel Been, AOL. Shot on location at The Lofts at 45 White Street

Frozen Food Reviews

Slashfood stalwarts road-tested a month's worth of lunches so you won't waste another cent on sub-par frozen fare.
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Frozen Food Reviews
by Kat Kinsman
A recent AOL Food survey revealed that 85% of respondents are toting their lunch to work these days. We've certainly noticed an uptick in waiting time at our break room's microwaves -- as well as co-workers scrounging for snacks after their lunch failed to fill them up. Our editors road-tested a month's' worth of lunches so you won't waste another cent on sub-par frozen fare.
Rachel Been
Getty Images North America

Frozen Food Reviews

    by Kat Kinsman
    A recent AOL Food survey revealed that 85% of respondents are toting their lunch to work these days. We've certainly noticed an uptick in waiting time at our break room's microwaves -- as well as co-workers scrounging for snacks after their lunch failed to fill them up. Our editors road-tested a month's' worth of lunches so you won't waste another cent on sub-par frozen fare.

    Rachel Been

    Monday
    Amy's Organic Ravioli Bowl

    Buy it again: Without a doubt
    Fills you up: Yes
    Texture: Perfectly cooked pasta
    Taste: If we got it in a restaurant, we'd be happy. The sauce was gorgeously seasoned, the generously, fluffily filled ravioli neither limp nor leaden and heck -- it's even organic.
    Calories: 380
    Total Fat: 12 g
    Sodium: 680 mg

    Casey Kelbaugh

    Tuesday
    Banquet Selects Classic Fried Chicken

    Buy it again: No way
    Fills you up: No
    Texture: Like deep-fried particle board
    Taste: The batter's seasoning wasn't so bad, but gnawing through it nearly undid years of orthodontia -- and for very little reward. The few shreds of meat within were stringy, gamey and overcooked, and the pool of grease in which the whole mess swam hardly added to the meal's appeal. The potatoes and corn are best left unmentioned -- and uneaten.
    Calories: 440
    Total Fat: 26 g
    Sodium: 1140 mg

    Casey Kelbaugh

    Wednesday
    Lean Pocket Applewood Bacon, Egg, & Cheese Breakfast Pocket

    Buy it again: No
    Fills you up: Yes
    Texture: Gummy
    Taste: We bit into what we thought was a potato cube, then checked the ingredient list. No potatoes. It would seem that the chewy, white blob was in fact the much-touted applewood bacon. It just got worse from there, with a creepy, over-processed filling.
    Calories: 290
    Total Fat: 8 g
    Sodium: 480 mg

    Casey Kelbaugh

    Thursday
    Southwest Style Grilled Chicken

    Buy it again: Just the potatoes
    Fills you up: Yes
    Texture: Misleadingly good
    Taste: If they'd just stuck with the taters, we'd be telling a different tale. Those spuds are fluffy, creamy and memorably savory. The chicken, however, was slathered in an inexplicably sweet and fruity goo that somehow lost direction on the way to the Southwest.
    Calories: 430
    Total Fat: 15 g
    Sodium: 1510 mg

    Casey Kelbaugh

    Friday
    Lean Pockets Whole Grain Turkey, Broccoli & Cheese Pocket

    Buy it again: Only on sale
    Fills you up: Yes
    Texture: A bit doughy
    Taste: It would hardly be our first choice, but in a serious pinch, we wouldn't turn up our noses at it. Let's get one thing clear, though -- while the whole-grain wrapper is a cute little stab at nutrition, you're still chomping down processed cheese and nuked broccoli. Health food, this is not.
    Calories: 260
    Total Fat: 7 g
    Sodium: 390 mg

    Casey Kelbaugh

    Monday
    Claim Jumper Chicken & Penne a la Vodka

    Buy it again: Maybe
    Fills you up: Yes
    Texture: A bit soggy
    Taste: We weren't immediately convinced and kept grabbing just one more forkful to figure out why. Wouldn't you know, we polished off the whole darned thing. It's not the most assertive sauce straight out of the box, but woke up with a dash of black pepper. Note -- while the prep notes call for a tablespoon of water on the broccoli, half that might have been a better idea to to avoid veggie sog.
    Calories: 500
    Total Fat: 20 g
    Sodium: 1350 mg

    Casey Kelbaugh

    Tuesday
    Kashi Lemon Rosemary Chicken

    Buy it again: Happily
    Fills you up: Yes
    Texture: Fresh
    Taste: If someone tried to pass this off as take-out from the health food place down the street, we'd take their word for it. Flavors popped, veggies crunched, chicken stayed moist, and our tastebuds rejoiced.
    Calories: 330
    Total Fat: 9 g
    Sodium: 640 mg

    Casey Kelbaugh

    Wednesday
    Stouffer's Pepperoni & Provolone Stromboli

    Buy it again: Sure
    Fills you up: Yes
    Texture: Better that we'd expected
    Taste: Holy stromboli! This is slightly dumbed-down pizza shop fare, but it's still a really solid surprise. While we'll nitpick that the bread could be a little better, the fillings proved hearty, meaty and overall pleasing. Keep a couple of 'em stashed in the freezer for lazy weeknight meals.
    Calories: 430
    Total Fat: 17 g
    Sodium: 1110 mg

    Casey Kelbaugh

    Thursday
    Lean Cuisine Cheddar Potatoes with Broccoli

    Buy it again: No
    Fills you up: We can't imagine trying to eat the whole thing
    Texture: Mushy
    Taste: It doesn't bode well for a dish when the tasters are having a hard time distinguishing potatoes from broccoli florets. The whole bowl was gummed together by a soggy, flavor-free mess that was advertised as cheddar sauce, but could just as easily have been wheat paste. Sure, this cuisine is lean, but it's 'cause no one can bear to eat more than a few bites.
    Calories: 230
    Total Fat: 5 g
    Sodium: 640 mg

    Casey Kelbaugh

The 'Joy of Cooking' Heads to the World of Reheating

joy of reheatingSome things are just plain wrong. Tight-rolled jeans. Ketchup on eggs. The cat lady. And now: The Joy of Cooking frozen foods.

Even if you disagree about the ketchup, you've got to agree that one of the most brand-diluting stunts in eons is word that "The Joy of Cooking" is now being used to sell new frozen foods. "The Joy of Cooking cookbook has brought dinnertime joy to kitchens since 1931. Today its classic recipes serve as the inspiration for the new line of family-style frozen products." Baked taters. Chicken Florentine. Multi-Grain and Cheddar Ciabatta Rolls. Vegetable Lo Mein.

Pardon my French, but this is f**king ridiculous. What a way to taint a good name. Joy of Cooking is one of the big classics -- the book that inspires new cooks and gets people making things from scratch. It should not be a gateway to dinner laziness and selling foods that you don't cook yourself. There's a reason that Joy of Reheating isn't a book. It doesn't have the same ring, the same magic, the same respectability.

Is there anyone out there who can whip up some magic mojo and bring Irma Rombauer back to life so she can kick the crap out of these people? I'm embarrassed for her.

Sometimes 'quick' dinners just means lazy dinners

It wasn't until I started cooking meals from scratch on a regular basis that I discovered just how much of a fallacy this whole pre-made foods business is. I'm not talking about one of those tasty, pre-roasted chickens or fresh meals you can buy at the supermarket, but rather canned and frozen foods. They are great in a pinch, but they are not a big time saver, and they're certainly not a decent substitute for fresh foods.

So, reading Astin Cubed's post on "Simple Food" today was like reading a rant of my own, without the obsession with snap peas. How can so many of us have forgotten the simplicity of fresh? Or heck, even balancing the two? If you have zero time to make dinner, throw the fish sticks in the oven, boil/microwave/shred and fry some potatoes, or maybe throw some Caesar dressing on some romaine. If you have enough time to go out, wait to be served, eat, wait to pay, and come home, you certainly have enough time to cook up some pasta, fry up some chicken, make a salad, steak, or even stir-fry. Or, even take a day with some free time, make up a lasagna, and eat it during the week, month, or year.

My favorite frozen food: Using those Thanksgiving leftovers to make REAL roasted, carved turkey meals that I can eat all year.

My favorite "fast" food: Leftover fried potatoes with a fried egg on a toasted baguette.

What's yours?

National Frozen Food Month: Frozen Waffles

homemade waffles
In the world of frozen food, the one frozen meal that has always perplexed me is the frozen breakfast. Why? Why do we make breakfast from the freezer?! Of all the meals in a day, breakfast is quite possibly the easiest one to make "from scratch." Heck, how hard is it to pop two slices of bread into the toaster? And yet the frozen food aisle has an entire section dedicated to frozen eggs with bacon, frozen breakfast sandwiches, frozen oatmeal. What is so difficult about making oatmeal that we have to turn to the frozen stuff?!

However, there is one frozen breakfast item that gets an excuse: the frozen waffle.

Waffles, you see, are not all that convenient to make. They're not difficult, but they do require the preparation of a batter as well as their very own, uni-jobber piece of equipment, a waffle-maker. A frozen waffle, if you find the right one, will not be anywhere close to as good as homemade, but are probably the least lame of the frozen breakfast foods. (About frozen pancakes, we are a little less forgiving because you don't need a special gadget or tool to make pancakes.)
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What's in your freezer?

Marisa's very full freezer compartment
Last night I had some people over for dinner. Despite the fact that I got a late start on the main dishes, everything turned out perfectly and a good time was had by all. The only slightly-embarrassing moment in the entire evening came when, before I could stop him, my friend's husband opened my freezer in pursuit of ice for his drink (I had forgotten to put any out).

The door open, he stood and gaped for a moment and said, " Who eats all this food?" I quickly tried to explain that I like to keep a fairly stocked freezer so that I can pull meals together easily. I also tend to have three or four varieties of nuts, some summer fruit and homemade chicken broth stashed away as well. He shrugged and said, "Often when you open our freezer, all you see in there is a bottle of Skyy Vodka."

The picture above is my very own freezer, complete with half a bag of Trader Joe's string beans, a pound of chicken legs from Whole Foods and more frozen chicken broth than you can shake a stick at. In return, I want to know, what do the rest of you have in your freezer? Please share the mundane the quirks as inquiring minds want to know (and be assured that they aren't all that strange).

Cookie Magazine put organic baby foods to the test

Baby Food
There's no doubt that parents are more and more feeding their babies organic foods. The question now isn't whether or not the food should be organic, but how that organic food is packaged -- glass jars, directly from the vegetable bin, or frozen. With no kids of my own, and basically no knowledge of this part of the kitchen, I'm looking at Cookie Magazine for advice. Cookie Magazine writers Deirdre Dolan and Alexandra Zissou say that while jarred foods are probably the most convenient, they're not the most nutritious because the foods are heavily cooked and many have preservatives to prolong shelf life. They taste tested organic baby foods on their own kids and highlighted these seven, most frozen:

Coming Soon: Martha Stewart frozen foods

Martha StewartCome on, you just knew that this was going to happen sooner or later: Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia has reached a deal with Costco to offer frozen and fresh refrigerated foods for customers. The items will start showing up in Costco locations in 2008.

This article makes a good point about how this will affect Martha Stewart's image. It's one thing for Martha to tell us how to make neat crafts and how to clean our homes and where to vacation and how to decorate, and give us recipes and kitchen tips, but what if we try these foods -- foods that the company has made, supposedly -- and we don't like them, or they're just "typical grocery food?" As the piece says, drapes and paints cannot spoil in the refrigerator."

But they'll probably be fine. But I wonder what foods she'll offer? Probably something a little fancier than corn dogs and Salisbury steak.

Slashfood Ate (8): Summer food resolutions

Who says you have to wait til January 1 to make resolutions?

Below are eight foods I resolve to eat this summer (and beyond) and stuff I resolve not to eat. Some I've chosen because they're good for me (like #1), some I've chosen because, well, I just want to eat/drink them (#8). What about you?

1. Water. Believe it or not, I don't drink that much water, one of the healthiest things you really need. I drink it, but it's usually in the form of tea, diet soda, or fat free milk. It's time to get back to drinking water straight. It's good for you.

Continue reading Slashfood Ate (8): Summer food resolutions

Neat way to keep track of freezer inventory

freezer inventory with magnets
I live by myself, so having a stocked freezer isn't something to which I am accustomed, but I do know that for large families, keeping track of a well-stocked freezer is a necessity. Otherwise, during that regular freezer clean-out, they'll find fish fillets from 1986.

Lunch in a Box has a neat way of keeping track of things in the freezer -- make magnets out of cutouts of food from the weekly circulars from the market and put them up on the freezer/refigerator door to indicate whether it's something you've got inside. Pretty cool idea!

How to freeze anything

I hardly ever freeze anything. I mean, yeah, I freeze that I buy frozen and are supposed to be put in the freezer, like ice cream, frozen dinners, and, um, ice. But I've just never been the type of guy who freezes leftovers or freezes foods to be used for another day. I guess I'm a cook-it-and-eat-it guy.

AOL Food (from Real Simple) has a guide to everything you need to know about freezing though, including tips on how to prevent freezer burn (you can eat food that has freezer burn, just make sure you cut off the part that has the discoloration).

They also have a list of foods that should never be frozen, including cake batter, raw celery, corn on the cob, garlic, and mayonnaise. Though I can't even think of why you'd want to freeze mayonnaise. "Frozen Mayo" is a great name for a band though.

Exotic is what's hot in frozen foods

The new trend in frozen foods is pushing our taste bud frontiers with exotic and unusual ethnic dishes. Supermarket surveys have shown that customers want to see more ethnic cuisines on the market shelves and that we aren't afraid to taste a few spices.

For some time brands like Ethnic Gourmet have been producing frozen entrees and sides with Asian dishes from China, Thailand, and India; now they have added other cuisines like American Southwest and Italian, amped up with a bit more spice and flair than we are used to. Many other brands are stretching the culinary envelope into areas like Morocco, with Fairfield Farm Kitchens making refrigerated soups like Moroccan Stew, Tibetan Curried Soup, and Hungarian Vegetable Noodle Soup, all based on a recipes from the well known Moosewood Restaurant. They also have other offerings like Jamaican Style Jerk Chicken with Wehani rice and Thai Style Chicken Curry. Paani Foods Inc. is exploring other areas of African cuisine with Jollof Rice with Chicken and Peas, a mainstream Nigerian dish, and a West African Meat Pie. Two frozen entrees I can't wait to try.

Expect to see Latin cuisine defined by national dishes and regional recipes from places like the Yucatan showing up in your grocers freezer. Indian food has had a strong showing lately and now we can expect to see the tastes and spices amped up so that if the box says spicy, it will be. Also you can expect many of these frozen ethnic foods to be organic and from humanely raised livestock. I love that we are going to be exposed to more varied offerings in the freezer aisle. For many this will be first tastes of new cuisines, with the opportunity to explore safely from our home. I can't think of a better way to get exposed to the varied food of our global society as we eat our way deeper into the 21st century.

Sharp refrigerator freezes and quickthaws?

sharp quick thawing refrigeratorWe're becoming more and more aware of food safety, even in our own homes, and though we will never forget to scrub everything that has come into contact with fresh poultry and now, to wash all our produce, we should also remember that the safest way to thaw frozen meat is quickly. In other words, don't take out a couple of frozen T-bones in the morning and leave them on the counter all day.

According to Engadget, this Sharp refrigerator has a warming drawer that allows you to quickly thaw your frozen foods. However, we can't tell for sure because the original site is in Japanese. A few of the commenters on the Engadget post have tried to help with the translation, but if there's any one of our Slashfood readers who knows Japanese, let us know what we're missing!

Of course, if our interpretation of the what the fridge actually does is off, at least we were reminded to always quick-thaw our frozen meats!

Linda McCartney's veggie food line sold

The next year could see lots more of Linda McCartney's frozen vegetarian foods on shelves throughout the U.S. and Europe. The former Beatle's former wife's line of food was recently bought from Heinz by American company Hain, according to The Guardian. Hain produces products like Celestial Seasonings teas, Terra Chips and Soy Dream. The figures involved in the deal weren't made public. Perhaps the best of the headlines to come out of the deal is Newsday's: "Hain Celestial and HJ Heinz 'Come Together' Over McCartney Foods."

Best foods for busy women

Health magazine put together their list of what they considered to be the "best foods for busy women." What they clearly meant to say was the "best pre-packaged meals/snacks for busy women". There isn't anything necessarily wrong with this sort of meal, but I would hardly go so far as to say it is the "best," since my definition of "best" does not generally include a lot of shelf-stable pre-packaged meals. Nevertheless, here are their picks:

Breakfast
South Beach Diet Denver-Style Breakfast Wrap
Post Raisin Bran Cereal Bars

Lunch
Starkist Albacore Lemon & Cracked Pepper Tuna Fillet
Thai Kitchen Thai Peanut Noodle Car

Dinner
Lean Cuisine Dinnertime Selections Chicken Portobello
Uncle Ben's Ready Rice Whole Grain Brown

Snack
Kettle Brand Bakes Hickory Honey BBQ

Dessert
Edy's/Dreyer's Slow Churned Light Ice Cream French Silk
100 Percent Whole Grain Chips Ahoy! Cookies

Continue reading Best foods for busy women

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Tip of the Day

While rice is an easy-to-prepare grain, removing its residue from pots and pans is no small feat. With these tips, it's a breeze.

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