I think that there has been a lot of wonderful information provided in this fresh vs. frozen debate. I am also thinking that when we must quibble over such things as the temperature that the food is frozen and what kind of freezer is used that we are running the rick of being too intent on details and are perhaps unable to view the forest while we are so focused on just one tree, so to speak.
Consider that foods that are frozen commercially are usually frozen in a nitrogen environment and at temperatures that no household freezes can hope to attain. So while there are many fine points that are nice to know and entertaining are not applicable to the average homeowner or to the person who preserves their own food produced from their own garden or orchard.
I live in a small rural town, actually the town is twenty minutes away if I am lucky. Still it is the largest town in the county and the whole county shops there. I make a list for groceries and any other thing that I need to do in town or on the way to town to consolidate trips and to conserve resources. If I run out of something, that is too bad as I will have to make do until my next trip into town.
Some people will go to town if they run out of one item and complain about the price of the quart of milk that they just spent $5.00 going to town to get, all without realizing that it cost them an extra five dollars , talk about high prices... Yes, there are those that live in town and maybe can afford to fun to the store for a quart of milk or what ever.
The technicalities of much of the information is such that it is pretty much moot from the time the food reaches the grocers or the home as we do not use the same methods of preservation at home that are used commercially and the commercial food processors do not use the same methods as do the scientist who are working to improve the way the food is preserved.
All of the scientific data supplied is great but most of it is never applied to any of they foods that you and I have to eat. All of the data supplied does show me that perhaps in the future there will be even better ways available to preserve our foods, but how much actually impacts the average persons food supplies? I do hope that you both realise that for the food that is available to the average person that you are both right.





