defrosting it, then cutting to the required size, before putting in your freezer
I was sure the current thinking was that thawing food and then refreezing was unwise, as thebunk alluded to above. Does this apply to vegetables, specifically broccoli, or just to cooked foods and pieces of animal?
I quite enjoy the thought of the surgical 'precision' of using a cleaver and then flash-freezing the thawed cut in liquid nitrogen.
so as a broccytree lover your problem is the amount you're getting... and you want to reduce that amount?!
sir, you're not well.
moving on from my internet diagnosis, have you never heard the phrase "like a hot chainsaw through frozen brocolli florettes" before?
thawing isnt a problem, its the re-freezing with green vegetables... unless you've got a super cold section of your freezer that 'fast-freezes' the water inside the cells will expand slowly and burst.. thus making your veg floppy and rubbish.
Can you not just hack the small floret ends off the stalk with a big knife?
I don't think thawing-refreezing is that bad for the broccoli in a bacterial sense, but it'll ruin the individual cells and leave you with a kind of cold broccoli puree. It brings to mind the problem facing the Larkins in "The Darling Buds Of May", Series 2, Episode 1 - "Oh! To Be In England". All attempts to freeze the Larkin's strawberries result in a delicious but soggy mess, due to the action of the slowly expanding water within the strawberry cells, as alluded to by philconsequence above. Charley solves this with deft use of liquid nitrogen, effectively freezing the strawberries double-quick and not giving the water inside chance to expand. Therein lies your solution. Defrost to cut, then refreeze with liquid nitrogen.
Surely what you need is a Broccolli Spear!

