I have no idea how to do this. Lets say you buy a big 6 pack of sweet peppers, broccoli, tomatoes and a buncha asparagus (the vegetables I have in question)
The idea is not to freeze. What am I looking at here?
Basic understanding:
-weird stuff like asparagus and broccoli needs to be blanched for some period of time, dried, cooled and patted, then it can be vacuum sealed??
-sweet peppers??? Wash with a scrub brush, dry off, cut apart, deseed and then put in bags and refrigerate? (for sweet peppers I get the google range between 'a couple of days' and '8-12 days' for vacuum sealing.
-tomato ?? (this requires frequent amputations)
-avocado ?? (these things are a fucking problem, I end up making guacamole the second I get them and storing that or throwing away half when I forget about them, take your pick, makes me not buy them because I know I will have to deal with cooking the second I get home)
I understand that mushrooms, garlic, onion, cabbage, lettuce is considered non vacuum sealable.
Does anyone have time frames that I can expect for non storing stuff or other procedures or cautions? I understand dirt is potentially dangerous, but thankfully root type stuff seems to keep well.
Can you peel and vacuum seal carrots?
The idea is to smooth out the vegetable peak after shopping and allow some leeway with kitchen planning (like spread spectrum techniques for EMI compliance to vary the peak power on various frequencies).
I did not mess with vegetables because they are very confusing, hard cheese and meat having easy answer. I have had no problems with like gravey either, but I typically freeze that delicious substance after its sealed because there is little reason to keep it around defrosted. I want fresh grilled/fried veggies with less work basically to make side dishes that are healthy easier. Mass production with blanching I can handle but if I have to sit at 3 frying pans making absurd amounts of preprep stir fry its unappealing (this is the only way I did it up to this point and I want to stop doing it).