My food habits changed a lot since the last Zero Waste Week all about food in 2013. I learnt a lot from taking part and from being part of a group on a mission and it was a lot of fun because my daughters were both at home and we cooked up all sorts of things to use everything up. Some things have since become regular family recipes.
But there's one habit that doesn't seem to have gone away... and that's the jars that breed in the back of my fridge, well all over my fridge actually.
Just look at what I'm faced with today!! What am I going to do with all this lot, I wonder?
I woke up really early this morning despite a very late night (working on that little surprise that Rachelle and I have planned for you). So when my ZWW email arrived, and I saw the zero waste week challenges for the day, I decided that I'd have to empty my fridge of jars to see if there was indeed anything lurking.
The bread challenge was easy. I keep my bread in the fridge if I'm going to use it up soon, or in the freezer sliced, ready to pick out the exact number of slices I need. I know people say you shouldn't keep bread in the fridge but I have never had a problem with it. I do have a problem if I leave it out in the kitchen when my Rayburn is lit. The kitchen gets very warm and cosy and just as I like the warm and cosy kitchen so does the bread mould.
I only had two crusts of bread in my fridge left over from cricket tea so I had those with toast and jam for breakfast.
While I was clearing out the jars from my fridge, I got out the rest of my spring onions (it's ok, no dentist appointment today) and some red pepper, a green chilli and a few other veg. Yesterday I was going to make a vegetable curry, inspired by the #ZeroWasteWeek Twitter-Chatter .
But then I started worrying about all the milk I had, so opted for pasta with a cheese sauce, some fresh tomatoes from the garden and black olives and basil. It was yummy!
Lunch is sorted in the form of the very round-about version of mushroom soup that I made yesterday to use up all my salad bits. It just goes to show how much the eyes contribute to our perception of taste. Now it looks like something familiar, I'm tasting it and finding it delicious. So much so that I tasted it three or four times just now before I realised I was almost going to be eating my lunch just from taste-testing.
Looks like mushroom soup now! |
That means, I'm going to cook up a vegetable curry for tonight. I'm going to start it off sometime this afternoon so that I can enjoy the smell and let all the spices infuse nicely while I work.
In the meantime, when my mind slips away from the work in hand, which it is known to do on occasion, then I'll have a little think about what to do with the breeding jars! Ideas please...
I think you should start a stall from your driveway! That is a LOT of jars. I'm going to stop you buying any for the rest of the year until you've used these up!
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