Well, here is a simple step that could save a family of four $1,500
a year: Stop wasting food.
It sounds flippant, but it is not. About 40 percent of the food
America produces goes to waste.
Separate out households from commercial entities like restaurants,
and around 20 percent of what we purchase at the supermarket
eventually finds its way into the trash bin, estimates Dana Gunders,
senior scientist at the National Resources Defense Council and
author of the new book "Waste-Free Kitchen Handbook."
It is not a minor expense: The USDA estimates that food waste
amounts to around 2 million calories a year for a family of four,
costing roughly $1,500, which is over $100 a month for the family,
or $375 per person annually.
"Nobody wakes up in the morning wanting to waste food, but it
happens in little bits and pieces," says Gunders. "We are so
price-sensitive in the store, but when we get home and eventually
throw out a quarter of the cheese we just bought, we don't realize
that's another $1.50."
Reducing food waste takes planning and discipline.
The book by Gunders gives 85 tips for reducing waste in various food
items. Some of these are:
-- Shop deliberately, from a list, for just a couple of meals ahead
of time. Otherwise your eyes will be bigger than your stomach, and
much of what you buy will end up in the trash.
-- Use up leftovers by making catch-all dishes like soups, stir-frys,
fried rice, frittatas and risottos.
-- Stale bread? Make menus involving croutons, French toast, or
bread pudding.
-- Learn to store food properly. For instance, lettuce usually lasts
longer in the crisper, while apples, mushrooms and peppers need more
aeration and do better outside those drawers.
-- Do not get freaked out by expiration dates, Gunders advises.
These are just a manufacturer's best guess about peak freshness. Use
your judgment; do not throw away food just because of a number on a
carton.
For more pointers on maximizing food budgets, we talked to a few
high-end chefs. In the restaurant world with its razor-thin margins,
if you do not utilize every possible scrap of food in your kitchen,
you are out of business.
* Fish heads
Most consumers toss them, but Marjorie Meek-Bradley, executive chef
of Washington, D.C.'s Ripple, and a contestant on "Top Chef," likes
to debone the head and make lettuce wraps with the meat.
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* Carrot tops
Along with the leafy tops of other root vegetables, says
Meek-Bradley, they make the foundation of an excellent pesto sauce.
* Potato scraps
Don't get rid of them, say Bruce and Eric Bromberg of Blue Ribbon
Restaurants. They are ideal for making potato pancakes.
* Kale stems
The natural instinct is to toss them, but they make crispy, healthy,
kale fries, say the Brombergs.
* Citrus juice
If you have some left over, it makes an ideal kitchen cleaner, says
John Johnson of Four Seasons New York. It is biodegradable,
non-toxic, and degreases like nothing else.
* Bones
"I always use leftover chicken or turkey bones to make soup," says
Troy Guard, chef of Denver-based TAG Restaurant Group.
* Plant scraps.
Tomato insides, carrot peels, day-old brown rice, mushroom stems?
You have got yourself a tasty veggie burger, says Guard.
Or, if you have some wildflowers or leftover herb cuttings from your
garden, they can provide delicious flavoring for jars of honey, says
David Wardynski of Omni Amelia Island Plantation Resort.
* Protein trimmings
Obviously not every scrap of meat will make it onto a nicely plated
steak, chicken breast or pork chop. But Guard says those extra
trimmings can easily go into enchiladas, tacos, or on top of
homemade pizzas.
(Editing by Beth Pinsker and David Gregorio)
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