I just made an entree which required the use of 3/4 of a cup of plain low-fat yogurt. Seeing as how there’s no place around here I can get a small cup of plain yogurt, I was forced to buy the quart size and I’ve got a lot of yogurt left over. Can I freeze it, or will it turn gross on me?
Also, is there a particular word to describe cutting meat (in my case, a boneless, skinless chicken breasts) apart so that you have two pieces that are half as thick as the original piece was to start with? ‘Cut lengthwise’ isn’t it, because that gives one the impression that you cut the breast into two halves at the midpoint of the breast, which isn’t what I am trying to describe.
I’m not sure about the first question, but I’ll offer an answer to the second question. If someone were to tell me to “butterfly” the breast half, I would cut it as you described.
Another vote for “buttterfly”. Long ago when I spent some time cooking for a living, I had someone order the filet mignon butterflied Pittsburgh rare (cut butterfly fashion, then seared quickly over high heat, leaving the inside very rare). Things like that make chefs cry.
As for the yogurt, why not slice up some strawberries and make a nice desert?
Well, you’ve actually made this two questions now - the type of yogurt made into frozen novelties does indeed freeze nicely, but it also contains other ingredients like guar gum and carrageenan that may promote that. Will plain ol’ yogurt freeze well? And will it separate and be gross after thawing?
I am under the impression that butterflying involves splitting meat at the median of the cut, but only halfway or so, in order to promote quick cooking - hence the piece looking a bit like a butterfly in shape. Am I wrong about that?
Because I can’t eat dessert currently, and I’d like to save it as is if possible, so I don’t have to go out and buy yet another quart of yogurt later just for this recipe.
Edited to add: if my definition of ‘butterfly’ is correct, then that’s not what I’m talking about. I’m talking about cutting something in half in such a way that you end up with two thinner pieces that are still the same width across as they were originally. I wish I could draw a picture …
No, I think you’re spot on. I guess the kind of cut to which you’re referring would be a butterfly cut that continues until there two, separated halves, right? In other words, you lay the breast flat, put your hand on top of it (palm side down), and with your knife parallel to the cutting board slice the breast in half.
Yes, this is what I mean. If the breast was perfectly round like a penny, for instance, you’d end up with two thinner rounds, not two semi-circles (which is what I think a lot of people would do if you just say ‘cut the breasts in half’). I’ve got to wonder if there’s a particular term for this, since you are cutting all the way through - scalloping, maybe?
I don’t know if “scallop” cuts it. When I think scalloping, I think cutting the meat into even slices and, to carry it further, fanning the slices slightly (if cutting a finished product). My knife is either perpendicular or at a forty-five degree angle to my cutting surface. Also, I think of the finished product of something I’ve scalloped as disks. So I would scallop, say, a pork ternderloin. I’m sure that’s not the meaning of the term, but I don’t think it’s what you’re looking for, either.
What you’re doing is flaying it, almost, except there’s no skin involved.
Yes, that’s it, except cutting it all the way through. That site says the finished product is called a paillard or scallopine. Maybe I can use that in some way …
I’ve been trying to explain this to my friend - I’m thinking it’ll just be easier to tell her to buy the thin-cut breasts instead of the whole ones!
My impression has always been the same as yours, UrbanChic. Butterflying, not scallopine, is exactly the right term. Any restaurant would know what you meant if you asked for, say, a butterflied filet.
And freezing yogurt doesn’t make frozen yogurt any more than freezing milk makes ice cream.
I wouldn’t freeze yogurt. I haven’t tried it, but I’ll bet that the fluid portion would differentially freeze out of it and be very difficult to properly stir back in.
I’ve enjoyed ordinary commercial yogurt that has been frozen. We used to do this for kids who were taking lunch to school and would not have a place to refrigerate it. By lunchtime it would be just about thawed out, and it was like having ice cream for lunch. If it’s the kind that has fruit preserves or whatever on the bottom, you do have to stir it up before you freeze it, though.
If the container is really large, what I’d do is separate it into portion sizes that you’d be likely to use, and put the portions into individual freezer bags. Just be sure to have as little air as you can manage in each baggie.
No fruit - it’s just plain yogurt that I needed for my recipe. I think I’ll try an experiment and take a small portion, as you say, and freeze/thaw it. If it works out, then I’ll portion out the rest and freeze it all. If it doesn’t work, then the dog gets what’s left in the fridge :).
I once froze a container of yoplait to see if it would end up as something resembling “frozen yogurt”. It didn’t. I recall I had to let it thaw a bit, and at that point the consistency was way off… too many ice crystals, etc.
I let it fully thaw, and stirred it up, at which point it was pretty much the same consistency of regular yogurt. I don’t think it’ll destroy it to freeze and fully thaw, but you won’t get “frozen yogurt” just by throwing it in the freezer.
When I was talking with a friend about my little experiment, she told me that it would actually work if you used the yoplait whipped version. Haven’t tried it yet though.
I’d think that the term you could use would be fillet, and yes, yogurt does freeze ok, my dad used to make it, and freeze the excess. As other’s have noted, just be sure you have all the air out, and I’m not sure how long it remains “good” when frozen. I dislike yogurt though. I can’t eat it, I’ve tried because I didn’t want to hurt dad’s feelings, but it tastes like vomit to me.