Here is an extreme example of fast freezing while maintaining the natural ultrastructure (anatomy at the molecular level).
Now ancient neurobiological research used extremely fast freezing times to study how neurotransmitter vesicles fused with the cell membrane in electron microscopy (EM).
They used a series of tricks to do this:
- They had a nerve-muscle prep wired up to stimulate the prep at the proper time to catch the vesicles in the act of fusing to the cell membrane in response to the neural stimulation.
- The prep was cooled to as close to freezing as possible while still getting neurotransmission.
- At a proper time with respect to when the prep was stimulated it was mechanically slammed onto a block of metal (probably copper, good heat conduction) that was temp equilibrated with liquid helium (colder but more expensive than liquid nitrogen).
- The prep is physically very thin (a few microns) making it easy to freeze it quickly. Large objects have trouble conducting heat out of their interiors with any speed. The outsides shrink and then crack around the unshrunken unfrozen interiors. this can happen when you throw something into liquid nitrogen.
This resulted in extremely fast freezing, which forming
non-crystalline (amorphous) ice containing the cellular components which were then fractured and
viewed in EM. No crystals are formed, which is optimal, but the process involves lots of destruction of parts of the cellular structure. I doubt they have been tasted.
This is probably the gold standard of fast freezing, but is really limited to very small things. Seems to me that this should also be the best way to preserve food, but the volumes are too small to be useful. Adaptations would have to be made for larger things, like:
- Use as small pieces as possible (or maybe drill holes or drive pieces of conductive metal through it)
- Bring close to freezing
- Freeze quickly
Not sure if cracks would affect taste, but it would look strange. The big limitation will be removing the heat from the interior of a large thing frozen on the outside.
Thawing larger things with a microwave sounds like a good idea since it should penetrate well. Otherwise soak in warm water.
Freezing cells so that they can be brought back after being thawed usually involves:
- soaking cells in cryo-protective chemicals (probably not tasty)
- start with the cells close to freezing temps
- freeze at particular rates that depend on what is being frozen (something like one degree C/second.
- thawing is usually done rapidly (throw the 1 ml vial into a water bath of the temperature the cells are normally at) and then remove the cells from the freezing chemicals (by centrifugal)
Storing frozen cells at -80˚C or warmer will cause the largest ice crystals present in the frozen sample to get larger (at the expense of smaller ice crystals in the sample) and compromise cellular integrity. I expect this would also to affect food. Therefore, store in liquid nitrogen (LN).
This is also quite different from chunks of food.
Ice creme making works very well with LN (watch out for contaminants though). Just pour it in with the components and stir till frozen. Very fast.