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Tip of the Day: Product Shelf Life

How many times have you come across a certain ingredient in your pantry and wondered if was still safe to eat?
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Filed under: Tip of the Day, Ingredients

Unused pantry items? Here's how to use 'em

The downside to a new, unique recipe is that after you use that half-tablespoon of tamarind pulp/dark miso/black mustard seeds, the product sits stagnant in your cabinet, begging to be put to use.

The Washington Post has collected a few hard-to-use ingredients and provided recipes that use them. Have leftover cacao nibs? Mix them with nuts and cranberries for a jazzed-up trail mix, or substitute them in for chocolate chips in your next batch of brownies (and check them out sprinkled over lattes at right).

Kaffir lime leaves? Stuff them in your chicken as it roasts. Pomegranate molasses? Make it into a vinagrette, or drizzle it over ice cream.

If you still have questions, consult a site like Big Oven, whose Leftover Wizard tool allows you to choose three ingredients from the extensive drop-down menu and tells you if there's a recipe that incorporates them all.

Filed under: Newspapers, How To

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Familiar pantry meals

a shot of the contents of my pantry
There are certain dishes for which I always have the ingredients in my kitchen. Scrambled eggs (eggs and butter). My sister's Quinoa, Bean-wa, Green-wa (a mash up of quinoa, garbanzo beans, Trader Joe's Curry Simmer Sauce and frozen spinach). Lentil soup (dried split mung beans, carrots, celery and onion). My friend Cindy always keeps around Ramen Noodles and frozen peas for the nights when she can't deal with being creative. Another friend is never without the makings for fluffer nutter sandwiches.

These are the items I can make quickly, with my eyes nearly closed (chopping veggies without at least one eye open is a very bad idea). I know that they will taste good and stop me from being hungry, which is often all I ask from my food.

Okay Slashfoodies, confession time! What are meals you make time and again, and always keep the makings for around in your fridge and pantry?

Filed under: Stores & Shopping, Real Kitchens, Ingredients

Slashfood Ate (8): Things I hope to never have in my pantry

vienna sausages

...or if they're already there, they're gonna stay all the way back there, gathering dust until I bequeath them onto my children.

Nah, I wouldn't do that to them.

  1. Tuna Helper - I just don't like that the talking glove only has four fingers. That's scary.
  2. Dinty Moore Beef Stew - childhood trauma
  3. Hormel Corned Beef Hash - if you have ever seen it in the can, you will wonder if it was really Alpo that had been mis-labeled.
  4. Vienna Sausages - those tiny ones that come in the pull top can.  
  5. Boxed macaroni and cheese - okay, it's not that bad when you eat it, but when you make it and you see the cheese that looks like Tang, you have to wonder...
  6. Canned mushrooms - they're slimy and no matter what you do to them, they taste like metal
  7. Velveeta - someone, please, tell me how this is cheese
  8. Spam - 'nuff said.  

Filed under: Lists, Slashfood Ate, Spring Cleaning

Spring Cleaning: In the freezer

freezer

For Spring Cleaning, we've been talking a lot about the pantry - dried pasta, grains, beans, canned goods - but we can't forget about our freezers. We tend to store a lot of stuff in our freezers to use later, just like we do in the cupboard. Here's a list of a few things that are helpful to keep in the freezer:

  • Vegetables - while fresh vegetables are obviously the best, sometimes we want something that isn't in season where we live. Frozen is the next best thing. Canned vegetables, with the exception of plum tomatoes, always taste mushy and bad. The best frozen vegetables, I've found, are peas, broccoli, and spinach. 
  • Fruits - for making sauces and baking, frozen fruits work, and are awesome to toss into a smoothie
  • Homemade stocks - especially after Thanksgiving, stock made from the roast turkey is awesome to use for soups and stews
  • Tofu - it sounds weird, but tofu that has been frozen has a really interesting texture
  • Dough - you can keep store-bought pie-crusts, bread doughs, etc., but if you make it yourself, make enough to seal some up for later. 
  • Vodka - well, duh. It doesn't freeze, and ice cold out of the freezer, you won't have to dilute it with regular ice. 

Filed under: Vegetarian, Vegan, Lists, Ingredients, How To

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