I'm returning to this thread as stocking up for the coming cold season is on my mind. Recently I bought a LOT of bell peppers - red, yellow, and gold, ten each, to dice up and freeze for use later. The local Garden Fresh Market had reds for 89 cents a pound and yellows and golds for 99 cents a pound. I'm glad to know that a few months from now when I see them in Jewel or Dominicks for $3.99 or $4.99 a pound I'll feel all frugal and satisfied that I bought them much cheaper and chopped them up and froze them back in September.
I didn't buy any green bell peppers, because, as a recent Trib article said, no one in human history ever said, what I'd really like to eat right now is a green bell pepper. My thoughts exactly.
I followed the advice of some other posters and, whenever I bought celery this summer and used it in a recipe, I diced up and froze the rest of the bunch for later use.
I haven't had much chance to get to the nearest farmer's market this year, but I hope I can make up for it by keeping my eyes open for seasonal bargains this time of year and freezing vegetables I'm going to be craving later, in the dark depths of stew season.
I've tried blanching and freezing asparagus, but the thawed results were disappointingly mushy. Perhaps I did something wrong.
I read in a newspaper article recently that apples could be kept in a cooler for months after picking. Does anyone have any experience (recently, not back in the war years, I mean) with long-term apple storage? If it's feasible, I'll dedicate a camper cooler to the task and find a cool, quiet, dark corner of the garage to put it. How cool do I have to keep it?
And I'm cranking up my freezing containers of spaghetti sauce, tikka masala, soups, tetrazinis, lasagnas, etc., especially if they're rich in summer vegetables, for dinners later.
I think I'm the kind of person that would like to have a root cellar. Not a common house feature these days. I've been thinking about how, if at all, I could make part of the garage my root cellar. Right now it seems it's warmer in the garage than in the house, but that will change soon. I know you have to keep the onions away from the potatoes and both away from the apples, but that's about all I know.
Anyone else thinking of stocking-up strategies yet? I realize we're only a few days into autumn...
"Your swimming suit matches your eyes, you hold your nose before diving, loving you has made me bananas!"