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A collage of alfredo pasta next to an image of shrimp on a plate.
Cheapism/grandriver/BWFolsom/istockphoto

It’s tempting to refreeze food after you’ve thawed it out multiple times in order to not waste a meal or ingredient. After all, how bad can it be to take bread in and out of the freezer over a few hours? However, there are certain foods that you should absolutely avoid refreezing. From cooked pasta to cream-based sauces, here are some foods you absolutely should not refreeze. 

1. Seafood

Raw fresh Seafood Cocktail close up with Mussels, Clams, Vongole, Prawns and Shrimps
Lisovskaya/istockphoto

Both fish and shellfish are extremely perishable and thus prone toward spoiling quickly when exposed to any temperature changes. Once you’ve actually thawed your seafood, you’d be wise to eat it sooner than later. Refreezing simply isn’t the way when it comes to seafood.

2. Raw Proteins

Chicken breast isolated. Raw chicken fillet on white background. Poultry raw. Chicken meat with clipping path.
Tim UR/istockphoto

When we say “raw proteins,” we’re talking about anything within the realm of seafood and meat. The key distinguishing factor here is that if your raw proteins are thawed in an environment that’s less than 42 degrees Fahrenheit, then you’re totally fine to refreeze them. However, if you thawed the proteins on your kitchen counter, or if they have any kind of suspect coloring or smell weird, you should probably toss them out.

3. Cooked Pasta

Homemade Vermouth Penne Pasta with Tomato and Cheese
bhofack2/istockphoto

While you wouldn’t necessarily be putting yourself in harm’s way if you ate frozen leftover pasta, you would end up having a miserable time trying to enjoy pasta that’s been repeatedly frozen and thawed. Pasta that’s undergone rounds of temperature fluctuations will end up coming out the other end as an unappetizing mess.

Related: 10 Popular Trader Joe’s Pasta Sauces, Ranked

4. Ice Cream

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MEDITERRANEAN/istockphoto

Sadly, many of us have found ourselves dealing with the melted to refrozen ice cream debacle. Ice cream that’s been left out at room temperature for too long and then hastily tossed back in the freezer can end up sporting a strange and undesirable icy exterior. Avoid it at all costs.

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5. Bread

5. Bread
flickr

Yes, you absolutely can freeze and then thaw out your bread without having to deal with any kind of loss in the overall quality of the bread. However, if you refreeze your bread time and time again, it’ll end up having an unwanted staleness.

Related: Stale It Ain’t So: Get the Most Out of Old Bread and Other Stale Food With These Smart Hacks

6. Eggs

6. Eggs
Costco

Of all the foods we’ve covered so far in this list, eggs seem like the biggest common sense food item to never refreeze. When you freeze eggs, they can end up expanding and then cracking. Once they’ve thawed out, their actual texture will also end up becoming rubbery. Nobody wants rubbery eggs.

Related: 13 Simple Ways to Cook Eggs

7. Fried Foods

McDonald’s

While you might assume that it’s all well and good to refreeze a fried food like French fries — after all, you can find plenty of frozen french fries at the grocery store — this is not the case. When you refreeze french fries or a fried food like chicken tenders, they can end up becoming soggy due to the moisture that’s trapped in the breading or coating.

8. Juice Concentrates

Spicy Mango Juice
pada smith/istockphoto

The fermentation process occurs at a much more rapid pace than you might assume. This holds especially true when you’re dealing with fruit-based drinks. While it makes sense that you’d want to get the most out of a leftover smoothie, your best bet is to consume it as quickly as you can.

9. Cream-Based Sauces

Close up of chicken and shrimp fettuccine alfredo being picked up with a fork
samuel howell / istockphoto

Unfortunately, you won’t be able to refreeze that jar of Alfredo that you have on hand. Whenever you refreeze a cream-based sauce, it can end up separating and becoming grainy when it’s frozen and thawed out in a repeating cycle.

10. Salad Greens

freshly washed romaine lettuce in a large bowl
stephanie phillips/istockphoto

You’ll definitely want to avoid refreezing any salad greens that you have on hand. Those temperature fluctuations can end up wilting the actual salad greens. They’ll become soft and lose much of their flavor once they’ve been frozen and thawed out.

Meet the Writer

Matt has spent the last 8 or so odd years as both a writer and editor in Seattle and Brooklyn, where he is now based. He loves escaping the tirelessly fast pace of the “Mad Apple” that is NYC by taking walks and runs through parks where he’s able to catch up on the latest tea about society from the city’s ever chatty, always hungry, occasionally rabid, pigeons. When he’s not taking his urban nature strolls, or dutifully combing the deepest rabbit holes of the internet to find the content that’s worth sinking your mind’s teeth into, he’s likely holed up at a dark-lit dive bar with a book and/or some friends, or just easily he could be on the hunt for the next addition to his steadily growing plant family.