Meet the Other Phone. Protection built in.

Meet the Other Phone.
Protection built in.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Food/recipes

For related content, visit our food content hub.

Not suitable for freezing

6 replies

Kezla · 15/12/2022 17:30

I have a chicken tray bake thing that I bought from Morrisons. It's got mushrooms and stuff in it too. In a foil tray.
Says not suitable for freezing?
I've got it out of the freezer and had it defrosting all day and I'm planning on having it for tea.
Why wouldn't it be suitable to freeze and am I going to get the shits from eating it 😂

OP posts:
MrsElm · 15/12/2022 17:31

It will be fine. Enjoy 😉 👍😋

talkingmorenonsense · 15/12/2022 17:31

It says that when it’s been previously frozen.

Georgyporky · 15/12/2022 17:39

Raw mushrooms don't freeze well - safe to eat when cooked but unpleasant texture.

The other ingredients might be the same.

MolesOnPoles · 15/12/2022 17:41

I’d eat it if it looks/ tastes / smells fine when cooked. I quite often freeze ‘unfreezable’ things (not stuff like seafood which might be tricky and/or previously frozen). It’s almost always totally fine, if there are any issues it’s usually about texture.

bloodywhitecat · 15/12/2022 17:45

talkingmorenonsense · 15/12/2022 17:31

It says that when it’s been previously frozen.

No, it doesn't. If it has been previously frozen it states it has Do Not Freeze on it. 'Not suitable for freezing' means the quality may be affected but it won't be harmful if you do freeze it.

toastofthetown · 15/12/2022 20:18

It might have been previously frozen, or it might just be a quality issue. I wouldn't read too much into the wording of "do not freeze" vs 'not suitable for home freezing" as each brand will have their own chosen wording and there aren't legally protected phrases for different situations. Either way I probably wouldn't worry too much about it.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread