Australian_Yoga_Journal-January_2018

(Ron) #1

52


january 2018

yogajournal.com.au

New life for leftovers


Got any of these things hanging around? Whip


up a new dish with a few strategic additions.


Potato skins
or carrot
peels

Drizzle with olive oil and salt, and roast at 200°
until crispy, about 10 minutes, for healthy “chips”

Extra carrot
or beet
greens

Chop, toss with olive oil, sauté, and then purée
with Parmesan and pine nuts for a pesto-like
topping for pasta
Leftover
Chinese food

Add enough beaten eggs to cover the leftovers in
a baking pan, then bake at 180° for 25–30 minutes
for a Chinese-takeout frittata
Leftover
vegetables

Add 1 can chickpeas (drained and rinsed), 1 cup
tomato sauce, 1 tsp cumin, and 1 tsp paprika, and
cook over medium heat until heated through for
veggie stew
Mushy
blueberries

Roll 2 cups berries in flour and combine with 2½
cups oats, 2 cups water, 1 cup applesauce, 1 tbsp
vanilla extract, and honey to taste. Bake at 200°
for 30 minutes for blueberry oatmeal muffins
Overripe
bananas

Combine 3 overripe bananas with 2 cups flour, ½
cup sugar, 1 tsp baking powder, 1 tsp baking soda,
1 stick butter, and 2 eggs; bake at 180° for 1 hour
for quick banana bread
A bruised
apple

Purée with 1 banana, a handful of berries, and 1
cup almond milk in a blender for a berry smoothie
Leftover
chicken

Dice and combine with 1 cup pumpkin purée, 2
cans diced tomatoes, 1 can kidney beans, and 2
cups chicken broth; cook over medium-low heat
for 30 minutes for pumpkin-chicken chili
Leftover
cooked rice

Toss with fried eggs, salad greens, and chopped
veggies for a hearty entrée salad

IF YOU HAVE MAKE THIS DISH

DO IT SMARTER


PHOTO: CBCK-CHRISTINE/ISTOCKPHOTO.COM

AT THE STORE



  1. USE THE BULK AISLES AND SALAD BAR TO
    YOUR ADVANTAGE Be sure to read your recipes before you
    shop and make a detailed list to remove the guesswork, says
    Sara Haas, a culinary dietitian. For example, if a stew or soup
    recipe calls for a small amount of seeds or grains, such as
    sunflower seeds or barley, use the bulk section to measure out
    only what’s needed instead of just buying large bags. Or,
    if you need five olives for a recipe and no one in your household
    devours them, don’t buy an entire jar! A handful from the
    salad bar will do the trick, says Amy Gorin, a dietitian.

  2. SHOP SMALL Try to buy only for the week ahead, says
    chef Eddie McNamara, which may mean eschewing a larger
    portion that is on sale. Just because you can get 10 bottles of
    salad dressing for the price of five doesn’t mean you should.
    Odds are low that you’ll use it all before the expiration date.

  3. BUY PULSES FOR YOUR PANTRY Keep lentils,
    chickpeas, and dry peas on hand to jazz up your leftovers.
    And try stashing a jar of minced garlic in the fridge to add
    flavour to those legumes in a flash (it also cuts down on food
    waste—how often have you bought a head of garlic and just
    used one or two cloves?).

  4. GIVE UGLY A CHANCE Sellers typically toss
    “irregular” produce that’s perfectly fine but doesn’t look ideal,
    assuming buyers want picture-perfect items. Thankfully, some
    stores now have a special section for ugly fruits and veggies
    that taste the same as the pretty stuff and cost less too.


IN THE KITCHEN



  1. PREP VEGGIES FOR THE FREEZER Late-summer
    bumper crops like tomatoes and capsicum best retain flavour
    when they are roasted before they are frozen. Brush with olive
    oil, sprinkle with salt, and roast at 200° until skin is charred,
    30 minutes; then freeze. Zucchini keeps well when it’s sliced
    into rounds, blanched in salty boiling water for 2 minutes,
    and then shocked in ice water and dried before freezing.
    Green beans, snap peas, and wax beans do well when
    frozen raw; just remove the ends, snap in half, and freeze.


2.SAVE SCRAPS FOR SOUPFreeze parts of food that
are typically trimmed and tossed, like mushroom stems or
eggplant tops, in a zip-top freezer bag, says Gorin. When
you’ve collected quite a bit, make a vegetable broth: simmer
veggie scraps in a pot of water for 2 hours; remove and strain
the liquid. If you’re not going to enjoy it right away, freeze
the extra broth in ice cube trays, then pop the cubes into
small freezer bags for storage.


  1. GROW YOUR OWN HERBS Create a little herb
    garden in a sunny windowsill for recipes that require only a
    sprig of favourites like basil or thyme, says New York City
    chef Gabe Kennedy, winner of ABC’s The Taste. It’s gorgeous,
    fragrant, and allows you to trim only what you need.

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