4 Ways to Make Food More Fun

Whether it’s adapting the portion size or freezing extra servings, here are a few tips to make your food last longer.

Art Barg and his seasonal green tomato pie.

Content provided by Good Samaritan Society.

Making meals for yourself presents challenges if you’ve always cooked for a family. If cooking for one is the norm now, embrace the ease and freedom that comes with making whatever you want.

“I think there’s two ways to think about cooking for one,” says Marc Matsumoto, chef and author. “One is making a large portion of something, and preserving it or repurposing it. Or you make something that you can portion for a single person.”

Repurposing One Large Portion

If you have a favorite family recipe for something like roast chicken, you can still make it fit your single-meal needs. Simply repurpose the dish to get a week’s worth of meals out of one effort. Here’s an example of how to repurpose a roast chicken to stretch into six different meals:

Meal One: Roast chicken and whatever vegetables you roasted with it

Meal Two: Sliced chicken sandwiches

Meal Three: Chicken salad

Meal Four: Chopped chicken with pasta

Meal Five: Shredded chicken stir-fry

Meal Six: Chicken soup (use the carcass to make delicious homemade chicken stock)

Using Versatile Recipes to Adapt Portion Size

Soup or pasta can be a great meal for one because it’s fast, easy and offers many options for building unique flavors using whatever you have in your pantry or refrigerator.

Here’s Marc’s formula for foolproof pasta:

  • Cook the pasta, whatever kind you like
  • Add some kind of oil, like olive oil, butter or schmaltz (chicken fat)
  • Add some kind of aromatic, like garlic or scallions
  • Add a protein, like canned tuna, shrimp or chicken
  • Finish the dish with cheese of some kind, like mozzarella, Parmesan or Romano
  • Simple add-ons are favorite vegetables, herbs and spices.

Getting the Best Nutrition

No matter how many people you cook for, nutrition is key. Make sure to incorporate servings of grains, proteins, fruits and vegetables into each meal. Paying attention to how colorful the food on your plate is may help you see if you’re on the right track.

“As a general rule, you should eat the rainbow,” says Marc. “Different colors have different nutrients, and if you eat all the colors in the rainbow, you’ll cover your bases.

“Greens have vitamin A. Yellow and orange foods have beta-carotene. Red things, like tomatoes, contain lycopene. There’s not too many blue foods, but things like blueberries or blackberries have benefits.”

Marc cautions that people on special diets should adhere to their health needs — but otherwise, eating a variety of colors will boost a meal’s nutrition and appeal.

Stretching Your Food

If you’re hesitant to buy fruits or vegetables because you can’t eat them all before they spoil, become friends with your freezer. Freezing food in small batches will give you lots of options when preparing meals or repurposing leftovers.

“As we age, we find ourselves falling into routines, so whatever you can do to introduce something new breathes new life into your day. It makes it new, it makes it fresh,” says Marc.

“I think the kitchen is a great outlet for creativity.”

  Freezing Food:

  Vegetables: To freeze vegetables, cook the vegetables, drain them, and — before adding any sauce or other liquid to them — freeze in single-serving portions.

  Fruits: To freeze fruit, wash them, cut them up into small chunks (for easier defrosting), and freeze in single-serving portions.

  Soups: Prepare your soup as usual, let it cool, and freeze single-serving portions.

  Grains: Prepare your rice or other grain as usual, let it cool, and put single-serving portions into freezer bags; microwave it to reheat, and use it as you normally would.

  Storage: Use freezer bags rather than plastic containers to freeze food. Bags take up less space, don’t contain an air pocket when properly sealed, and allow food to freeze faster.

  What’s freezer burn? Freezer burn happens when there is air against the food and ice crystals form in the food’s tissues. When a food with many ice crystals thaws, the food becomes spongy or mushy. A fast freeze in a container with no air pockets reduces the chance of ice crystals forming.

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