Refrigerated lunchboxes turn soggy
When I steam vegetables or boil rice I leave it to cool off for a few hours and then put it into a plastic lunch box and then into the fridge. After a day the vegetables get very soggy with a pool of water at the bottom of the lunch box. The rice turns brittle and tastes like sand.
I don't have time to cook everyday, I try to get as much cooking done as possible on Sundays and store the result in the fridge.
I try to Google things about avoiding moisture or drying vegetables but this gives me unrelated results.
Can anyone give me advice for avoiding these problems?
Thank you very much.
Best Answer
From personal experience, rice doesn't refrigerate well; I tend to buy quick-cook rice that I can just microwave so it's fresh when I need it, but I hear that it freezes better, with less moisture loss. Perhaps the vegetables can be frozen as well? If you spread them out on a baking sheet when you freeze them, they should be easily portionable later, but I don't know which vegetables you're cooking or whether they are hardy enough for the freezer.
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Answer 2
Make your rice a big batch at a time, let it cool until handleable, then pack individual servings in snack sized zipper-top bags. Throw them in the freezer. Rice freezes beautifully, I take the frozen packs and throw them straight into the microwave (it would work just the same way in a steamer basket, even simmering water, just don't open the bag), the hot product is virtually indistinguishable from fresh, hot rice. Unless you're making fried rice, refrigerating cooked rice very quickly ruins it. I freeze rice like this this all the time - trust me, it works.
[EDIT] - Oh, and if you must steam your veggies in advance, line your "lunch box" with a few layers of paper towels or a dish towel.
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