Is a kitchen remodel or refresh in your future? Find out what kind of tech might be able to help you get dinner on the table, dishes off it, save time, save money, and even save the planet before you start your next project!
The sixth in a series of special collections of recipes for those of us (all of us?) experiencing a very different lifestyle for ... now. In these uncertain times, we're reaching out to help you and yours turn to the comforts of the kitchen to nourish yourselves, body and soul.
If you’ve thought about renovating your kitchen but you’re not quite sure where or how to start, the infographic featured here is well worth a read. It can help you prepare and make a plan that will make the process one that won't leave you lost!
As a culinary artist, you can minimize cooking catastrophes by doing a little less improv and following a few more tried and true cooking methods. Your creativity can still flow from you to your cuisine, but there will just be less mess when using these tips, tools, and hacks in the kitchen.
Sometimes I come across something on the Internet that I can't help but share with readers. This time around, I'm pointing out a series of amazing kitchen charts that will help take the guesswork out of everything from cutting vegetables to setting the table.
Menu planning is the art of planning your menu ahead of time. With the right skills, you can plan for a day, a week, or even a month. There are many advantages of menu planning and that's why thousands of parents like to plan their meals so that kids can get a healthy diet. Some benefits of menu planning are saving of time and money, healthy eating, and less wastage of food. So take some time this weekend to start your own good habit!
Ever have enough left over in your pantry, refrigerator, or freezer that you don't want to throw it out, but not really enough to use all on its own? I call them little leftovers and, given a bit of thought and creativity, they can be the work horses of your kitchen. Get some suggestions for some of the most common little leftovers I find in my home and share some of your own.
The combination of my own end-of-summer cold and an article with truly shocking numbers means it's time to share some useful information that will hopefully help readers to find ways to save time, money, and resources. Read up now and share widely!
The best way to save your food budget is by avoiding wasted food. By most estimates, a quarter to half of all food produced in the United States goes uneaten - left in fields, spoiled in transport, thrown out at the grocery store, scraped into the garbage or forgotten until it spoils. If the average American household wastes just 25% of the food they buy, that's $2275 per year directly into the garbage!