Monday, July 23, 2012

Homemade Frozen Burritos



Here's the July Edition of my meal swap recipe. Frozen Burritos x 90

This is a combination of several recipes and my own family's taste preference, and they turned out really great! They were seriously kid-approved, and since I used ground turkey rather than beef they were healthier than some other varieties out there. 

I made the following recipe x 9 (for approximately 90 burritos) for my Meal Swap, and once I got my basic recipe down it was a relatively easy assembly line. 





Homemade Frozen Burritos
Makes approximately 11

1 pound ground turkey
1 Cup chopped onion
2 Tbsp minced garlic
1 (4 oz) can green chilis, diced
1 pkg taco seasoning (or make your own: recipe)
1 (8 oz) pkg cream cheese, softened
1 1/2 Cups black beans (or 1 can, drained and well-rinsed. I made mine from dry beans)
1 can fat-free refried black beans (always choose fat-free, otherwise you're eating lard - YUCK!)
12 large tortillas (get 2 packages of 8, you will be able to find a use for the others, easy)
1 1/2 Cups shredded cheese

Extras: aluminum foil for individually wrapping burritos. KEEP the tortilla bags, 10 finished foil-wrapped burritos will fit very nicely inside a tortilla bag to pop in to the freezer at the end. 




                   THE BEGINNING...






All the ingredients ready for my mega assembly line. I got a deal on 3 lb packages of ground turkey. My original recipe called for taco sauce (on the right side of the picture) but I didn't use any. Rather than be stuck with 4 jars of taco sauce I froze them in to ice cube trays and distributed a baggie of the cubes along with the servings of burritos to my meal swap pals. 










                      STEP 1




Saute the onions, garlic, and green chilis in a skillet with some oil, for 8 minutes or so. The onions won't get very brown due to the extra moisture from the chilis. This is okay. Add the ground turkey and mash it up into the onion/chilis. Continue to mash and stir until the ground turkey is fine and brown. You don't want big chunks, rather a smooth texture. Add the taco seasoning and simmer approx. 10 minutes.


My skillet was WAY not big enough for the 3x batch I was making, I had to do some pot shifting to accommodate it all. The dried black beans are getting a quick soak in the silver pan here. 









                    STEP 2






Transfer the meat mixture into a larger bowl/pot (unless you were smart and started sautéing in a stock pot). Add the softened cream cheese and mix thoroughly (I softened it in the microwave so it was very soft). Add the refried beans and mix thoroughly. Add the whole black beans and mix thoroughly. It should be nice and smooth. Refrigerate the whole thing for easier handling later. 












              STEPS 3 & 4


Get comfortable, especially if you're making in large quantities. Download a nice audio book from the library, and figure out how to arrange the items around you for easy reach. In this shot you can see I was placing the finished tortillas on a baking sheet to flash-freeze them. I changed my mind later, and individually wrapped them in foil because I had so many (and flash freezing 90 burritos takes a long time).

STEP 4: Scoop a half-cup of meat mixture on the bottom half of the tortilla, sprinkle on about 2 Tbsp of cheese. 












          STEP 4 Continued. . .



Fold the bottom of the tortilla over the meat and kind of smoosh it around to get out any air. Fold over the sides, and do one more roll. I had to tuck in some left-over flaps. 

<--This is really a two-handed process hence the not-so-great picture. Also, I used less than a half-cup in this picture so the burrito was smaller (if you use less meat then there will be extra tortilla to roll up, and you'll end up with a chewier end-result. Still tasty. 












             TO FREEZE:



I wrapped the burritos in aluminum foil, and then tucked 10 in an empty tortilla bag and then popped the bag in to the freezer. The tortilla bags are not official freezer-bags but the extra layer of foil should keep the burritos fresh for up to 3 months. If you want to flash freeze them, place the just-made burritos on a baking sheet and freeze for 2 hours, then place in a labeled freezer bag. 

<-- prior to packing the tortilla bags I printed up labels with reheating directions, with a swatch of clear packaging tape on the label to prevent the cold from making the label fall off. 



                    






 TO REHEAT:





Oven (for a crispy outside): Bake burritos at 400 degrees for 30 minutes, turning over half-way through. 
Microwave: for 1:45 minutes on each side. *I like the potential of grabbing a foil-wrapped burrito and popping a sauce cube in a mini-tupperware to take to lunch. 

<--Ox really, really liked these burritos and was fascinated with the whole process. I may have to make mini burritos for his school lunch, to eat cold. 














Librarian that I am I did a bit of research for this recipe, and feel the need to give credit to the useful sites I used. CamillesCasa was very helpful, as was This Recipe on AllRecipes (specifically the comments on it, I love reading what other readers have done), but probably the most useful was Macheesmo's Making Frozen Burritos At Home. I am very interested in incorporating rice into the burrito, so I am sure I'll be trying out his specific recipe later. Thanks!! 



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4 comments:

  1. Can't wait to get my batch. Yum!

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  2. Made these last night - ate some tonight and froze the rest. I was a little nervous about them because I don't really like cream cheese or beans, but I was brave ... and they were good! And my husband really, really liked them. Definitely going to be making this recipe again. Also, super impressed by how many this made. One batch made enough for 3 meals and I spent $10, tops.

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  3. Still enjoying the wonderful dishes your meal swap club shared with us! Such a wonderful help on a busy night. Do you have an archive of your club's recipes somewhere? Any good resources you recommend for finding the recipes to multiply?

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  4. Nancy yes!! I should put it all down, I have spent a lot of time browsing good-to-multiply meals. My #1 rule is "can I see myself immersed in these ingredients for a few hours?" Which usually means I have to like the way they smell and feel. #2, limited amount of chopping. I made a million gumdrop cookies for our Dec. swap and had a major carpel tunnel relapse for a good 2 weeks after since the gumdrops did not agree with my pampered chef chopper and I had to do 'em all by hand.

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