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thaw a roast faster

Ever forget to take a roast out of the freezer soon enough? The Damsel has committed this crime many times.

Here are a couple of tricks that will help thaw that slab.

1. Put the roast, still in its packaging, in a sink of warm water. Turn it now and then so that both sides get the chance to be in contact with the warm water, since it will float. Or maybe you can rig something to keep it submerged. When the water cools, refill with warm water. The Damsel has heard you shouldn’t use hot water, but she’s observed little harm in the water being Quite Warm. Boiling would be not so great, though.

2. Yes, the Damsel does use the microwave betimes. But you’ve got to be careful, or you’ll end up with partially cooked meat. Set your microwave to a low power setting and check it often. If you have the time, use the microwave to thaw the meat halfway and then thaw the rest of the way in the refrigerator, to avoid a rubbery half-cooked, half thawed excuse for a piece of meat.

3. The Damsel has heard that pouring vinegar over a frozen roast will lower the meat’s freezing temperature, causing it to thaw faster. Bonus: the vinegar will also tenderize the meat. They say it won’t make the roast taste vinegary either. The Damsel is going to try this the very next time roast is on the menu.

With any of these methods, be vigilant that your slab-o-beef doesn’t remain at room temperature too long. Ideally, you should begin cooking the roast while it is still very cold.

But here’s an even easier idea…if you’ve got four or more hours, put the thing in the oven, rock solid frozen, at 250 degrees F. (Along with several cups of water or broth and whatever seasonings you like. Cover.) No fooling!

  • Chloe Rowles

    Ha! I hadn’t heard about the vinegar trick. Neat!!

  • Chloe Rowles

    Tee hehehe. If you can taste the vinegar, you could call it Portuguese Roast, since they (and a few other South American countries) deliberately marinate their meat in vinegar for the flavor.

  • Sande Nascimento

    mmmm. slab o beef. roast beast…mmmmm

    Let me know how that vinegar thing goes.

  • http://teachmetowalk.blogspot.com Andrea

    I’ve never heard the vinegar trick, either. I’ll have to try it. I love the first picture, by the way.

    • damsel

      frozen beef, haha!

  • http://gottoeat.blogspot.com Lynne Powell

    If you have a stoneware covered baker (I have the Pampered Chef one) you can actually bake a roast from frozen in the microwave inside the covered baker, and it comes out tasting like a roast beef and not like a rubber beef :) It works for a chicken, too.

  • damsel

    I’d like to learn how to do that non-rubber beef. I’ve got a clay baker thing I’ve hardly used.

  • http://gottoeat.blogspot.com Lynne Powell

    I am not sure on the timing because I do a lot of “cook for 1/2 hour, test temperature” cooking when it comes to my microwave experiments, but I will actually MAKE a roast from frozen sometime this week or next and get back to you! (I’ll post my results to my blog, too!)