101 tips for a zero-waste kitchen

Kathryn Kellogg

Book - 2024

In America, more than 20 percent of all food waste comes from residential kitchens. Here's how you can make a difference right now. The average family of four spends $1,500 a year on food that they don't eat. It's time to make better choices that can make your kitchen routines better for the planet, more manageable, and even more enjoyable. Not sure where to start or what to do? Kathryn Kellogg shows you how to plan and prep effectively. She provides scores of practical, easy-to-follow tips and recipes.

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640.286/Kellogg
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 640.286/Kellogg (NEW SHELF) Due Oct 28, 2024
Subjects
Genres
handbooks
recipes
Handbooks and manuals
Recipes
Published
New York, NY : The Countryman Press, an imprint of W.W. Norton & Company [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Kathryn Kellogg (author)
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
xv, 240 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781682688922
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. Grocery Prep and Meal Planning
  • Chapter 2. Maximizing Your Produce
  • Chapter 3. Saving Your Fruit
  • Chapter 4. Saving Your Veggies
  • Chapter 5. Prolonging Your Pantry
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this rewarding guide, Going Zero Waste blogger Kellogg (101 Ways to Go Zero Waste) offers advice on how readers can reduce the amount of food they throw away. She contends that creating a meal plan each week before grocery shopping lowers the likelihood that one will buy foods that go unused. For food that's spoiled, Kellogg details how to compost, explaining that the bokashi method employs lactic acid bacteria and yeast to break down organic waste, while vermicomposting uses worms. To keep produce fresh, Kellogg encourages readers to only wash fruits and vegetables "just before consumption," since moisture can accelerate spoilage. Because apples, bananas, and peaches release a natural plant hormone that speeds up ripening, Kellogg recommends they be stored separately from berries and citrus fruits, which are sensitive to the hormone. Many of the suggestions are common sense, entreating readers to "utilize your freezer" and prioritize eating food prone to spoilage sooner rather than later. Other guidance is more helpful, as when Kellogg explains how to "revive stale bread" by lightly wetting it and then heating it in the oven. Recipes for banana bread, croutons, raspberry jam, and other foods show how to make use of ingredients that are past their prime. Sustainability-minded readers will appreciate this. (Aug.)

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