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Kitchen Keeping: Don't Throw Away...?

2007_09_27-Banana.jpgKeeping the kitchen healthy and happy means cleaning out the fridge fairly often, and pitching things that don't belong anymore.

But there are many things that can have second lives, even after they look like they should be thrown away, and frugality and good kitchen keeping can offer them a second chance. Here are some of our salvageables - what are yours?

Cheese rinds and bits of leftover cheeses - Take any combination of hard and soft leftover cheeses and make fromage fort, "strong cheese," by whizzing in the food processor with wine and herbs. This gives new life to those scraps of cheese you have sitting around in the fridge. Here's an Alton Brown recipe.

 
 

Black bananas - Put in the freezer and thaw later for banana bread or cake.

Brown vegetables - Keep a large plastic bag in the freezer for these and throw browned vegetables in here - we have scallions, carrots, and celery tops in ours - for use later in stock.

What do you salvage?

Tags

Tips & Techniques, Ingredients - Vegetables, Ingredients - Pantry, Frugality, GREEN IDEAS

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Comments (18)

Remember to take the peels off the bananas before you freeze them. It's a pain to get them off when frozen. I use the frozen bananas for Blueberry Oatmeal Smoothies.

posted by Jake007 on September 27th 2007 at 6:03am
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Over-ripe bananas are also great mixed into pancakes, waffles - and most-recently I discovered - brownies!

posted by phillymama on September 27th 2007 at 6:34am
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I find cutting the bananas up into small pieces before freezing makes it much easier to use them in smoothies or thaw them for banana bread.

And since my freezer isn't big enough to spread them out on a cookie sheet so they can freeze individually instead of in a big clump, I put them in the compartments of an ice cube tray to freeze, then throw 'em in a baggie. It works great!

posted by MsHuisHerself on September 27th 2007 at 7:03am
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You can also use cheese rinds in soup:

http://chocolateandzucchini.com/archives/2004/02/broccoli_mimolette_soup.php

posted by rube on September 27th 2007 at 7:38am
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We've got bananas that have been in our freezer since we moved into this house. I was in fifth grade then. I wonder if they're still usable.

posted by Jim of ChewOnThat on September 27th 2007 at 7:40am
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Jim - if you happen to be related to my mother-in-law, then yes, they're still usable!

posted by mangosteen on September 27th 2007 at 9:02am
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Stale cookies can be used for pie crust, and stale bread or crackers can be used for bread crumbs, pot pie crust, or the bottom layer of a casserole- or to thicken soups/stews.

posted by lauraloo on September 27th 2007 at 9:20am
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I have so many ziploc bags of odds & ends in the freezer, it's getting hard to keep track! The things I always salvage, though, are shrimp shells (for stock, when I've accumulated enough), partly-used cans of tomatoes, bananas (blended with vanilla soy milk, they make a great shake), and minced chipotles in adobo.

posted by MinimallyInvasive on September 27th 2007 at 9:26am
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Stale cookies? Never heard of such thing.

posted by Kassie on September 27th 2007 at 10:03am
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Stale bread = bread pudding.

woo hoo!

posted by Nicole R on September 27th 2007 at 12:41pm
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Ha ha Kassie, I'm with you on that one!

posted by J on September 27th 2007 at 3:59pm
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I mash my bananas first and put 3 per medium ziploc bag, which I then smush flat for easy stacking in the freezer. (I do 3 because that's how many my banana muffin recipe calls for). Mashed bananas are easier to thaw or just break into bits to add to smoothies, than whole ones.

I also put old veggies and trimmed veggies bits (e.g. leek tops) in the freezer for stock, and same with chicken bones.

I whirl stale bread in the blender to make breadcrumbs.

posted by angorian on September 27th 2007 at 5:08pm
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Whenever I open a can of tomato paste (for the 1-2 Tbsp I need), I freeze the rest in ice cube trays to make useful portions.

posted by angorian on September 27th 2007 at 5:09pm
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I don't peel the bananas before I freeze them. When they thaw they seem almost liquid and I just squeeze them out of the skin. I haven't ever had any problems peeling them.

I have seen Jacques Pepin make a cheese mixture like that on one of his shows, and yes, I save the rinds of parmesan to put into soup.

posted by Charlotte on September 28th 2007 at 1:18am
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Stale cookies? just throw a piece of bread in the bag.

posted by kygirl on September 28th 2007 at 8:47am
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Thank you thank you for the Alton Brown link! I made some yesterday, spread it on a baguette and topped it with slices o heirloom tomatoes from our CSA. Perfection!

Another great use for leftover cheeses is to throw them into a frittata. I'll use whatever I have laying around (favorites are goat cheese, asiago and cheddar), and it always turns out well.

posted by emilymch on September 30th 2007 at 6:41am
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after cooking chicken or beef, i freeze the bones to use in a stock later.

posted by pedalpowered on January 26th 2009 at 11:40am
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My mom used to save any random meat leftovers: e.g. one cooked chicken breast, half a hamburger, an uneaten pork chop and when the ziploc bag was full she would chop them all up together and make eggrolls. They have always been my favorite eggrolls on the planet, and when the meat is chopped fine, you can't even tell that it was some random mix.

posted by Domestic Intellectual on April 17th 2009 at 3:12pm
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