Freezing: Sweet & Green Peppers
This year, I’ve been experimenting with freezing vegetables, mostly because I love convenience. There’s nothing better than having ingredients ready to go whenever I need them. Combine that with my love of a good deal and determination not to waste food, and freezing peppers just made sense.
I always stock up when peppers go on sale, but a sale usually means buying at least six. That’s more than I can use before they spoil.
After a little trial and error, I learned that both sweet peppers (red, yellow, orange) and green peppers freeze beautifully, no cooking or blanching required.
Here’s what works for me:
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Slice or chop the peppers as soon as you get them home. I usually slice most and chop a few for recipes that need smaller pieces.


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Freeze sweet and green peppers separately. Their flavors are different, so keeping them apart works best.

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Place them in freezer-safe bags, squeeze out the excess air, and store them in the freezer.
When I’m ready to cook, I just grab a handful of frozen chopped peppers and toss them right into the pan. They thaw almost instantly as they cook. For salads, I throw in a few frozen slices and they thaw quickly, keeping much of their texture.
What I love most is buying peppers at my price, never wasting any, and always having them ready to use. That’s a win in my book.
These are a few of the items used in the post above.
Cutting Board
Years ago my staff bought me this bamboo cutting board and I use it daily. Its still in fabulous shape and I do NOT baby it. A good wood cutting board is a necessity in my book.
Reusable Ziplocks
I still do use the plastic throw away ziplocks but I am incorporating much of my freezer meals into these reusable ziplocks. I keep excess flour, breadcrumbs, freshly made butter, homemade pasta, etc.



Olga Tutanaru/https://unsplash.com @otutunaru