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We asked 6 chefs for their secrets to reduce food waste — and we're stealing their tips ASAP

We asked 6 chefs for their secrets to reduce food waste — and we're stealing their tips ASAP

CNNa day ago

Whether it's stems and skins or past-their-prime protein and produce, you're probably throwing a lot of perfectly good food in the trash.
Such waste doesn't come cheap. The average American throws away $728 worth of food per year, which adds up to nearly $3,000 for a family of four, according to a US Environmental Protection Agency report.
Food prices jumped more than 23% between 2020 and 2024, per the US Department of Agriculture's Economic Research Service, which is 2% higher than the overall inflation rate during that time. So, it's no wonder we're hoping to maximize every dollar we spend at the supermarket. As it turns out, chefs are masters at the craft.
'Food waste can make or break a kitchen's financial month or year; our margins are always extremely thin and fragile. Many restaurants strive to waste 4% or less of their food cost. Here, we aim for 1% to 2%,' said Tim Mangun, executive chef of Majordomo in Los Angeles. Compare that amount with those of typical home cooks, who waste about 21% of the food they buy.
Reducing waste isn't just about saving money — although that's why many individuals and restaurants initially focus on it, said George Formaro, chef partner of Orchestrate Hospitality restaurants in Des Moines, Iowa. Every single thing that ends up in the trash takes time and labor to produce. Plus, the waste will directly affect Mother Nature. Food waste accounts for more than 20% of municipal solid waste, USDA data suggests.
'Uneaten food has enormous environmental, social, and financial impacts,' said Lindsay-Jean Hard, author of 'Cooking With Scraps' and writer for Zingerman's deli, bakery and mail-order food company in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
'All of the resources used to grow, raise, transport, and refrigerate that food are wasted right along with it,' Hard added. 'Then, when all of that wasted food ends up in landfills, it lacks the conditions to break down properly and, as a result, releases methane, one of the worst greenhouse gases.'
With the economy in flux and grocery prices continuing to climb, CNN asked chefs from coast to coast to share their most creative ways to decrease food waste and save money and the environment all at once.
Many of us shop with aspirations — I will eat five fruits and veggies daily! — rather than realistic intentions, said George Duran, a celebrity chef in New York City. When it comes time to put all those carrots and kale to good use, 'life often gets too busy before you discover that everything has wilted,' Duran said.
Chefs almost always write their menus before shopping for ingredients, and it's wise to follow suit. Jot down a rough meal plan, then make a list for ingredients, Hard recommended. Not only does a list reduce the risk for impulse purchases, but it also gives you more direction when shopping. Doing so will likely save you time.
'You can still roam around the farmers market and buy whatever catches your eye,' Hard said. 'Just take the extra step of figuring out how you're going to use what you got, and then fill in any gaps.'
Ideally, this meal plan will include recipes that flex fresh ingredients in more than one way, so you don't have stragglers hanging around at the end of the week.
Many home cooks and professional chefs neglect to plan to cross-utilize ingredients, said Ken Bell, head chef and co-owner of Over Yonder restaurant in Boone, North Carolina.
'Buying versatile ingredients that can be used in multiple different ways for several meals is a must to minimize food waste at home,' Bell noted. 'Had mashed potatoes for dinner, but made too much? Add extra milk, cream, or stock (and any other veggies you like) and blend it into a tasty potato soup, for example.' Or plan to use fresh kale in a soup one night, and in a blender pasta sauce later in the week.
Most professional kitchens have a process for inventory to keep tabs on what's in stock and what needs to be refreshed. Mangun has implemented a similar strategy at home: 'My wife and I write what we are low on, or run out of, on a white board, and generate our grocery list using this as a guide.'
Before you step foot into a grocery store or head to the farmers market, 'inventory what you have in your pantry, fridge, and freezer,' Mangun said. When you add new items to your refrigerator roster, remember the restaurant trick FIFO, which means 'first in, first out.' In other words, use the rest of last week's strawberries before diving into this week's pint.
Duran, a father of two, freezes much more than the average cook.
'My freezer is my food waste superhero,' he said. 'I freeze leftover herbs in olive oil. I even freeze onions and peppers and carrots, all chopped up in a resealable plastic bag for an instant mirepoix,' to start soups, sauces and more.
You can also freeze most leftovers for three to four months if you happen to make too much.
'Just remember to take the time to label what you put in so you aren't second-guessing yourself a month from now,' Hard said.
One thing many savvy chefs keep in the freezer: odds and ends that are destined for stock. Save onion skins, carrot peels, celery ends, excess herbs as well as bones from chicken, beef, pork or fish to make homemade stock. Even shrimp shells make stellar stocks.
'Homemade stock is always so much better than what you buy at the store, and the finished product also freezes well, so you can keep it for a long time and use it as needed,' Bell said.
You can coax out serious flavor and stretch your ingredients much further by simmering them in water for 30 minutes (vegetable stock) to eight hours (beef or pork stock) before straining, Formaro chimed in.
Another way to save surplus produce is to get in a pickle: 'Quick pickling is super easy,' Bell said. 'All you need is your favorite vinegar, sugar, salt, and water. You can pickle just about any kind of vegetable,' and the briny produce can hang out in the fridge for at least four weeks.
Choose your own flavor adventure with America's Test Kitchen's method: Boil 1 ½ cups vinegar, 1 ½ cups water, 3 tablespoons sugar, 2 ½ tablespoons kosher salt and your favorite seasonings in a saucepan, then take this off the heat and allow it to steep for 10 minutes. Pack 1 pound of evenly sliced, sturdy fruits or vegetables into jars, boil the brine once more, then ladle the vinegar mixture into the jars. Allow the jars to cool, add lids, then refrigerate for at least 24 hours.
Duran and his wife like to play what they call 'leftover roulette,' which is essentially a remix of the Food Network show 'Chopped.'
'We pull random ingredients from the refrigerator and figure out ways to put them all together for a meal,' Duran said.
You can also use artificial intelligence or recipe websites such as SuperCook or SideChef to plug in the ingredients you have and gather recipe recommendations to put those items to good use.
Both Hard and the EPA agree that composting is better than tossing food in the trash, 'but it's not a magical fix or the best solution for excess food,' Hard said. 'Before relegating something to the compost bin, think about how you might be able to use it instead. Question some of your habits. Could you save something for stock? Do those carrots really need to be peeled, or could you just rinse and scrub them?'
If you do end up composting or even throwing away food, take note, said Aidan O'Neal, chef partner at Le Crocodile and Bar Blondeau inside the Wythe Hotel in Brooklyn, New York.
'Take an audit. What are you throwing away — and throwing away regularly? Brainstorm ways to adjust your shopping accordingly,' O'Neal said.
Duran doesn't aim for perfection, just progress. If you implement even one of these nine tips, you'll probably trim down on how much you toss out.
'Reducing food waste doesn't mean you have to overhaul your entire life. Start with one habit at a time. Try to get your kids involved. They will understand pretty quickly why you're doing it: for their future,' Duran said. 'Best of all, you'll save money, eat better, and feel like a kitchen superhero. Who doesn't want that?'
Karla Walsh is a Des Moines, Iowa-based freelance lifestyle writer with more than 16 years of editorial experience.

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People Who Slept With Their In-Laws Are Revealing How It Went Down, And I Can't Believe What I Read
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People Who Slept With Their In-Laws Are Revealing How It Went Down, And I Can't Believe What I Read

I recently came across a Reddit thread where user u/haddamhussein69 asked "People of Reddit who have had sex with an in-law, what happened? How did you get into that situation? And did anyone find out?" The stories they shared were beyond messy. Here are the most interesting ones: 1."I did the deed with my mother-in-law once. It still makes me feel dirty when I think about it. I was separated from my wife at the time (we were in the process of divorcing), and I went to my mother-in-law's house to help her move some furniture. Afterward, we ended up sitting around, having some cocktails, and talking about my separation from her daughter. Fast-forward to midnight and six drinks later, and all of a sudden, I'm looking at her with her jeans to her ankles and bent over the kitchen table. I swear to this day, I really don't know who made the first move or how it got to that point. It was crazy." "I saw her numerous times after that, and neither of us acted strangely. We just erased it and acted like nothing ever happened. At the time, I was about 30 and my mother-in-law was about 50. I've never told anyone until now. —msk1974 2."I dated my brother-in-law while he and my sister were married. They had an open relationship. They split up and we got married." —tabitha1221 3."At the wedding of my sister and my brother-in-law, I slept with his sister. It makes for some awkward family gatherings, which I make worse by calling her sis." —Smoke__Me__A__Kipper 4."I had a fling with my former sister-in-law. I split with my ex when she cheated on me back in 2011, and I effectively cut contact with that side of the family, including my sister-in-law. My sister-in-law was never on my bad side, per se, but it was easier to cut her out and call it a day than try to surgically remove everyone else but her. She wasn't a model, but she wasn't bad-looking either. She and I got along well enough during my marriage because we married into the insanity." "Fast-forward to last year, I found out my ex-SIL (I'm long divorced by this point) and ex-wife's brother separated because ex-BIL started cheating on her. I unblocked her and reached out. I've been down this road and know how to handle the family in court, so I figure I'd lend assistance. I met up with my ex-SIL, helped her do some errands (ex-BIL left nothing for her, not even a car), then headed back and hung out. We started drinking, certain things came out about one another, and next thing I know, we're in the bedroom going at it. We met up a few times until about a month ago. She found a guy that she wants to date so I stopped becoming her Plan B. No one has found out, and I'm pretty sure it'd be a mess if anyone did." —pm_ur_untrimmed_bush 5."I had a drunken hookup with my sister-in-law. I went to a NYE party because her family loves me, and we were all drinking, and my sister-in-law was being very friendly and nice and pulling me aside to ask about my life and stuff. Obvious signs are not being missed. A little after 1 a.m., I went to the bathroom, and my SIL followed me in. One thing led to another, and we had our fun. My mother-in-law heard noises and tried blackmailing us with it in exchange for money. We continued our sexy rendezvous over the next few months, and eventually her mom told people. We denied the hell out of it despite her mom revealing obvious proof, and we aren't invited to any more family get-togethers." —pissed_as_a_fart 6."My great aunt married the boy next door at age 18 in 1945 or so. Turned out he was gay, and he wanted her to be his beard. She was very unhappy. Her husband was estranged from his father, who had already divorced his mother. So the father-in-law joined the Navy at the outbreak of the war and spent the war building airstrips all over the Pacific and Southeast Asia. He got back from the war and met his son's wife. He and my great aunt had instant chemistry. They apparently start banging almost immediately. He'd been off at war, and she's in a sexless marriage. So there was a lot of pent-up sexual energy." "Of course, they get caught after a while. Mid-act, the son and ex-wife show up. It actually provided a great out for the gay son, as he could divorce her, be the wronged party, and now be single with no questions about his sexuality. My great-aunt suffered some social ostracism for this, as it was juicy gossip for the city they lived in. However, when the divorce came, she married her former father-in-law. They remained married until his death in the mid '90s (both his age and the year), after nearly 50 years together and three kids (plus grandkids). They were quite happy, but this story has always been one my mom kept from me until I was 30." —mobileoctobus 7."My brother decided to have an affair with his sister-in-law. He slept with his wife's brother's wife. It was messed up beyond belief. The pain it caused so many people is unbelievable, and two families were left in shambles. There are approximately three billion other women in the world with whom he could have attempted this with. But instead, he did something that was awful, without regard to his children, and created a situation that will likely end with two divorces." —None 8."I had a one-night stand with a girl I met at a friend's party, and then a few years later, I was invited to my new girlfriend's parents' house for Thanksgiving, and her sister walked in. Yep, I slept with my sister-in-law before I even met my ex. They don't look alike, and nothing was ever said to my ex." —Eldergoth 9."I married a man 10 years younger than me. He had a younger brother who was around 8 years of age at the time they met. My daughter from a previous relationship is the same age as my brother-in-law. They kind of grew up together. Fast forward to a year ago, she turned 18, dropped out of high school, and moved in with my brother-in-law and his parents (my in-laws). They all hid the fact that she was staying at my mother's and father-in-law's house from me. None of them thinks there is any issue with it, and cannot understand why I had a problem. It destroyed my marriage and the almost decade I put into building our lives together. We had two children together. I've never seen something that took a decade to build fall apart so fast. Obviously, there is more to it, but that is the summary. It destroyed my family. Keep it outside your family's for Christ's sake." —angel_pa7 10."I met my husband through his brother. His brother and I dated several times before I met my husband, and began dating. My husband's brother and I had sex several times when we were dating and before I met my husband. I've always had a fond place in my heart for my now brother-in-law because of those special times we shared when we dated each other. My husband has always known his brother and I had sex when we dated, as well as knowing how close we are now because of those times in the past." —None 11."My grandfather married his sister-in-law when his wife died, and my cousin married his son's mother-in-law. The second one is only really weird because both couples live with my great aunt in one house, and both have kids a few months apart. The two oldest girls are in the same school and grade." —LordDinkus 12."I had sex with my brother-in-law, and my family does know but pretends not to. My sister was married for a short time to a guy who worked and lived abroad most of the year. I never particularly liked the man; I think he wanted to be married to an attractive younger woman who would pretty much do what he says. Also it was wild because he was away eight months of the year. My sister was young and naive in a lot of ways, didn't really get on with his friends and family, and generally felt like she'd been abandoned. Anyway, my sister, rather than live at his home when he was away, would move back in with my parents. He gave my sister access to a certain amount of money, and much hilarity ensued." "So I was in my first year of university, and he found out that my sister had been cheating on him, not only that, she'd done it with several people he knew, and he was not surprisingly angry. My parents, being idiots, decided to hire a lawyer who made things worse, and then the issue over what was happening with the money came up. So I came home from university, and my family was about to be put out of their home. Also, I should mention he'd paid for some of my university expenses. I'm making this way too complicated, but essentially, I ended up having sex with him in return for him calming down, and letting my sister and family climb out of the financial hole they were in. The sex was pretty weird, and he enjoyed doing me in my sisters bed way more than he should have, in the end though he got out of my family's life and that was the end of it." —katies_nothome 13."I had sex with my cousin-in-law. My brother's wife's niece. Not sure if it counts, but basically she was hot, we were teenagers, and got drunk at my brother's house one night after my brother and his wife had supposedly fallen asleep. The next morning, he told me, inadvertently, that he had heard everything since the vent to his guest room and his room allowed virtually all sounds to be heard between the rooms. Felt pretty awkward until he gave me a high five." —ItsallLegos finally, "My kid brother got married before me to a woman with three sisters, two of them were twins. I ended up marrying one of the twins (thus marrying my sister in-law). 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The $3.99 Aldi Find So Good I Went Right Back And Bought More
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timean hour ago

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The $3.99 Aldi Find So Good I Went Right Back And Bought More

Only Aldi could successfully sell a pizza that tastes like lemon drops. Well, it's not technically a pizza, it's a pizza cookie. Even better! While I often write about my love of Mama Cozzi's pizzas, this unexpected flavor caught my attention during a recent shopping trip. Instead of picking up something for dinner, I left the store with a sweet and citrusy Mama Cozzi's Lemon Drop Pizza $3.99 for a 9-ounce cookie Why I Love It: This oversized treat warms up in minutes, but also tastes great straight out of the fridge. Slice into triangles to share at a summer potluck or picnic.I assumed I'd serve this for dessert. Instead, my son immediately ate two-thirds of the cookie, which went straight from the refrigerator into his 15-year-old belly. 'It doesn't need to be warmed up in the oven,' he explained to me. 'It tastes great by itself.' This is true, though Mama Cozzi recommends warming the cookie before you eat. I had to go out and pick up another Lemon Drop Pizza Cookie to review for this story, but the extra trip was worth it. The package says to heat in an oven for three minutes at 425°F. (I did barely three minutes at 375°F because our oven gets really hot, really fast.) While I warmed up the pizza cookie, a gentle, lemony smell filled my kitchen. By the time I took it out, it was perfect. In every bite, the lemon and softened white chocolate chips taste like liquid sunshine. 'What I like about it is that it is lemony, but it's a sweet kind of lemon, not sour,' my son told me. The package says this nine-ounce cookie contains eight servings, but it would be more accurate to say four servings. It can also apparently be eaten as a single serving, unwarmed, by a high schooler. By itself, it's the perfect summer cookie. If you want to fancy things up a bit, add a scoop of vanilla ice cream. For an even more decadent treat, add the ice cream plus a spoonful of lemon curd and a dollop of whipped cream for party-ready ice cream cookie sundaes. Any way you serve it, it's fantastic. Look for Mama Cozzi's Lemon Drop Pizza Cookie in the deli section at your Aldi, situated above Mama Cozzi's flatbreads. To learn more about our approach to product recommendations, see HERE. Read the original article on SIMPLYRECIPES

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