Artwork for podcast Bending the Spoon
BTS - Episode #5 - Leftover Love
Episode 525th November 2022 • Bending the Spoon • Chef Laura Bonicelli
00:00:00 00:16:23

Share Episode

Shownotes

In this episode of Bending the Spoon, entitled Leftover Love, Chef Laura discusses the love/hate relationship we have with leftovers. She shares some of her best methods for managing and loving leftover food - including her Turkey Tetrazzini and Stuffing Muffins.

Bio: With over 13 years of professional cooking experience with her meal delivery and catering business and restaurant, Chef Laura founded Bonicelli Cooking Club in 2018. Chef Laura brings professional cooking techniques, knowledge, great recipes, and inspiration to home cooks and food lovers everywhere. She is known for her love, support, and advocacy for local, organic, and well-sourced food, and her expertise in navigating dietary preferences and issues. Chef Laura has a cookbook coming out in the Spring of 2023.

Timestamps

  • [00:00] - Intro
  • [0:52] - Background of leftovers
  • [04:09] - Featured ingredient
  • [05:50] - What to do with leftovers
  • [08:33] - Stuffing Muffin Recipe
  • [10:33] - Tupperware
  • [12:29] - Top Tool
  • [13:42] - Timing out your leftovers

Key Takeaways

  • our relationship with leftovers
  • featured ingredient
  • history of leftovers
  • food management ideal
  • Top Tool

If you love recipes, we have a huge searchable recipe library that you can access for only $5 per month. You can sign up and learn about all of our memberships here!

You can sign up for our email list and get five free recipes if you fill out the pop-up form here!

For the video format of this podcast go to my channel on Youtube - please like and subscribe.

If you like what you're hearing, please leave a positive review on Podchasers.com and your favorite podcast venues.

Links mentioned in the episode:

Bonicelli Cooking Club

Bonicelli YouTube

Benable - Food Storage

In the next episode of Bending the Spoon, "Cooking and Traumatic TV", I'll be discussing the impact of television competitive cooking shows on America's food culture. This is a passionate topic for me - please tune in!

Transcripts

Laura:

Leftover love.

Laura:

Why do some people hate leftovers while others make extra food just to

Laura:

have them because they love leftovers?

Laura:

We'll talk about the ins and outs and dos and don'ts of leftovers and much,

Laura:

much more today on bending the spoon.

Laura:

But before we get to that, I'd like to remind you that if you like recipes, go

Laura:

to bonicellicookingclub.com and sign up for my email list and check out all of

Laura:

the options of participating in the club..

Laura:

And if you like what you hear today, hop over to Podchaser.com and leave

Laura:

Bending The Spoon a positive review.

Laura:

Also, for the video version of this podcast, subscribe to

Laura:

Bonicelli Cooking Club on YouTube.

Laura:

Now, let's talk about leftovers.

Laura:

Everyone has a stance on leftovers from a holiday meal and leftovers in general.

Laura:

Some people love them, even plan extra food to have them while other

Laura:

people pack leftovers up and give them away just to get them out of the.

Laura:

The term leftover in and of itself implies subpar quality, even low class,

Laura:

something you'd never served a company and not as good as the first time around.

Laura:

Now, I don't have to tell you that it's not always a case.

Laura:

Sometimes food improves in flavor after time.

Laura:

For example, my father's chili was better on the second.

Laura:

My balsamic beef pot roast better on the second day, even the third.

Laura:

In fact, I usually make it a day or two ahead so I can reheat it to serve.

Laura:

So technically, even though I didn't eat any of it, it's leftover for me.

Laura:

Creative use of leftovers is a big part of how I plan my menus for the week.

Laura:

I maximize the potential of the food and I minimize waste.

Laura:

I created a business based on those principles, so I consider myself to

Laura:

be somewhat of an expert, and those skills are particularly handy now

Laura:

with food prices being what they are.

Laura:

But I think that many people don't think that strategically, probably

Laura:

because they weren't brought up with that and haven't developed

Laura:

the mindset to plan for leftovers.

Laura:

I wasn't brought up that way either.

Laura:

I learned how to manage food when I became an adult, and really when I started

Laura:

cooking professionally, so much changed with food in the early 1950s and 1960s.

Laura:

There was a huge transition away from cooking.

Laura:

I was born in the middle of all of that during that time, so fast food and frozen

Laura:

meals were a big part of my growing up.

Laura:

We had a stack of Swanson TV dinners in the freezer and a set

Laura:

of TV trays by the television.

Laura:

Friday nights, we had fish sticks and frozen fries because we were Catholic.

Laura:

Unless it was a holiday, there wasn't a lot of actual cooking going on.

Laura:

And when there was, occasionally my mother would make her version of chop suey,

Laura:

which was delicious, or my father would make his chili right on the second day.

Laura:

But by the time the third day rolled around, it wasn't special anymore.

Laura:

Holidays were a whole different story.

Laura:

There was a lot of cooking and it was pretty festive, aside from the

Laura:

fact that my grandmother usually contributed a homemade pasta and

Laura:

a couple of amazing side dishes and her fantastic cranberry sauce.

Laura:

Our Thanksgiving meals were pretty typical, Midwestern fair, Turkey,

Laura:

mashed potatoes gravy, green bean casserole, sweet potatoes and brown

Laura:

sugar, and marshmallows, and some sort of jello cool whip thing.

Laura:

Oh, and pie.

Laura:

We'd have leftovers for days, and by the time we were done, we were happy

Laura:

to wait a year to do essentially the same meal all over again.

Laura:

Now judging by the amount of frozen prepackaged food in the stores

Laura:

and skyrocketing sales for home delivered restaurant food companies,

Laura:

I'd say that many people only deal with leftovers on holidays.

Laura:

The trick is knowing what works, what reheats well, how to reheat it, what

Laura:

will freeze, and what just won't hold up more on some leftover food management

Laura:

ideas in a minute, but for now, it's time for our featured ingredient.

Laura:

This week's featured ingredient is the mushroom.

Laura:

I love mushrooms.

Laura:

Here in Minnesota, we have so many resources for beautiful mushrooms.

Laura:

We have several companies that forage and others that grow

Laura:

mushrooms in controlled environ.

Laura:

I've even been lucky enough to happen upon a few morels popping up in my yard.

Laura:

Now, from a culinary standpoint, mushrooms are delicious and earthy

Laura:

with each type being distinctive in shape, texture, and flavor.

Laura:

Now, I've always known that mushrooms are good for you, but a couple of

Laura:

years ago I read in food and wine that a quarter cup of mushrooms per

Laura:

day could reduce your chances of getting any type of cancer by 30 to 40.

Laura:

Any type of cancer, 30 to 40% a quarter cup done.

Laura:

Mushrooms are linked to so many other positive health outcomes,

Laura:

and here are just a few improved.

Laura:

Sleep, reduces stress, alleviate seasonal allergies, boost immunity.

Laura:

They are super high in antioxidants.

Laura:

They also may mitigate the risk of developing other serious health

Laura:

conditions such as Alzheimer's, heart disease and diabetes.

Laura:

And don't forget cancer.

Laura:

Medicinal mushrooms have been used in Eastern medicine for thousands

Laura:

of years and have gained even more popularity as of light here, usually

Laura:

sold as a powder or tinctures.

Laura:

You'll see them added to all kinds of things, even smoothies and latte.

Laura:

One of the easiest ways to get your mushrooms, though is to add

Laura:

them to your omelet or your stir fry, your pasta sauce, or just

Laura:

saute or roast them as a side dish.

Laura:

Note that mushrooms aren't a cure all.

Laura:

In fact, studies are still new to Western medicines, so think of them

Laura:

more like little helpers for your immune system, working hard against

Laura:

stress, inflammation, and cancer.

Laura:

Mushrooms are this week's featured ingredient.

Laura:

Okay.

Laura:

I have to be honest with you, other than their astounding and impressive health

Laura:

benefits and general deliciousness, I decided to feature mushrooms because

Laura:

I have a recipe I want you to try.

Laura:

This recipe is the highest use of leftover Turkey meat that I can think of.

Laura:

Please go to my website and get the Chicken Tetrazzini recipe.

Laura:

Skip the chicken part in the recipe and use your leftover turkey.

Laura:

Chicken Tetrazzini.

Laura:

And now Turkey Tetrazzini is an American dish named after an Italian opera singer

Laura:

who was debuting as Gilda in Rigoletto in San Francisco in the early 1900's.

Laura:

My version of this recipe is large, a full nine by 13 inch pan to the brim.

Laura:

So again, you'll have leftovers.

Laura:

But the cool thing is it freezes beautifully.

Laura:

Make it, eat it, freeze it.

Laura:

You will love it.

Laura:

No doubt.

Laura:

Your inbox is like my inbox today is after all the day after Thanksgiving, and it's

Laura:

inundated aside from Black Friday stuff.

Laura:

It's inundated with creative leftover ideas.

Laura:

Now this year, my favorite one, which I'd never make, but it made

Laura:

a really interesting picture, was a sandwich with literally

Laura:

everything from the big day's dinner.

Laura:

Layered inside of it.

Laura:

It had turkey, stuffing potatoes, sweet potatoes, green bean casserole,

Laura:

some corn concoction of some sort,

Laura:

cranberry sauce and it was all on bread with a gravy.

Laura:

Dipping sauce.

Laura:

I think most families have some traditional leftover strategy

Laura:

for their traditional foods.

Laura:

Now, my brother would take charge of the pumpkin pie, often taking

Laura:

it to his bedroom for safe keeping.

Laura:

He, by the way, had a special set of rules in the house.

Laura:

US girls never would've gotten away with that, but he thought it made a good

Laura:

breakfast and wanted to stake his claim.

Laura:

For me, my routine is I slice some of the Turkey for sandwiches.

Laura:

I usually freeze it for later, and I shred the rest for the tetrazzini

Laura:

or whatever new dish I'm working on that can use leftover Turkey.

Laura:

The Turkey carcass goes into a pot of water to start the Turkey soup, which

Laura:

I always make with barley because if I decide to freeze it, the barley holds up.

Laura:

Well.

Laura:

Other than that, I usually plan a completely different meal for the day

Laura:

after Thanksgiving, so that when I pull out the leftovers the next day,

Laura:

there's a little distance between having essentially the same meal twice.

Laura:

And I have another idea for you.

Laura:

It's time for our tip of the week.

Laura:

The tip of the week is a leftover idea with a recipe, and that

Laura:

idea is to make stuffing muffins.

Laura:

That is muffins out of your leftover stuffing.

Laura:

Other added ingredients.

Laura:

This is a flexible recipe because your stuffing is already done, so

Laura:

feel free to play around with what you add, given what you have leftover.

Laura:

I'd say the only thing you really need to stick to is the amount of stuffing,

Laura:

five cups and the number of eggs.

Laura:

Three.

Laura:

Here's the recipe grease, a 12 cup muffin tin, and preheat

Laura:

your oven to 350 degrees Fahn.

Laura:

Put five cups of leftover stuffing in a large bowl.

Laura:

Add two thirds of a cup of shredded cheddar or your favorite cheese, a half

Laura:

a cup of chopped roasted Turkey, a half a cup of chopped cooked vegetables,

Laura:

one tablespoon of chopped herbs of your choice, and three beaten eggs.

Laura:

Stir all of that together and if the mixture seems dry, stirring up to one

Laura:

half cup of chicken or Turkey stock, spoon the mixture into your tin.

Laura:

Bake in the 350 degree oven for 25 to 30 minutes until the muffin

Laura:

tops are lightly browned and crisp.

Laura:

Cool.

Laura:

The muffins for 10 minutes.

Laura:

Remove them from the tins to a cooling wrap.

Laura:

Now you can serve them warm or cool them completely and refrigerate for later.

Laura:

Our family stuffing, my dad's that he never wrote down is a bread stuffing

Laura:

with Italian sausage and sage.

Laura:

That stuffing is absolutely fabulous as a stuffing.

Laura:

Make stuffing muffins and that is your tip of the week.

Laura:

You are listening to Bending the Spoon, the podcast dedicated

Laura:

to making you a better cook.

Laura:

I'm Chef Laura Bonicelli, and I want to remind you that if you like recipes, go

Laura:

to Bonicelli cooking club.com and sign up for my email list and check out all of

Laura:

the options of participating in the club.

Laura:

And if you like what you hear today,

Laura:

hop over to Podchaser.com and leave bending the spoon of positive review.

Laura:

Also, for the video version of this podcast, subscribe to

Laura:

Bonicelli Cooking Club on YouTube.

Laura:

Now back to our episode.

Laura:

Did you know that there are still Tupperware parties?

Laura:

Maybe it's just me.

Laura:

I don't travel in the right circles anymore or something, but I had no idea.

Laura:

I mean, I was sure Tupperware was around, but I didn't know

Laura:

the home party was still a thing.

Laura:

I used to get invited to those all the time, so my cabinets

Laura:

were full of this stuff.

Laura:

If you were invited, you had to buy something, even if

Laura:

you didn't attend the party.

Laura:

There was no written rule about that.

Laura:

It's just how it was.

Laura:

So it was kind of a lot of pressure.

Laura:

But Tupperware did design a container for every possible situation,

Laura:

and for a long time they were the gold standard in food storage.

Laura:

Now, Tupperware was invented in 1946 by a guy whose last name was, It's

Laura:

amazing to me that they did so well when people, mainly women in America

Laura:

were cooking less because they started working and weren't home.

Laura:

It must have been those pictures of those entire cabinets and

Laura:

refrigerators filled with.

Laura:

Perfectly stacked, colorful, beautiful Tupperware.

Laura:

It made.

Laura:

You just have to have it.

Laura:

But I don't have any Tupperware nesting bowls anymore.

Laura:

I prefer simplicity in food storage.

Laura:

A few things that do a lot instead of a lot of things that only work

Laura:

for one thing and also lots of containers and do dads I never use.

Laura:

And lids.

Laura:

I really like interchangeable Li.

Laura:

So there are some cool companies out there doing cool things with food storage.

Laura:

I've got a link in the show notes to view some of my favorites.

Laura:

In a commercial kitchen glass is basically not used because

Laura:

of potential breakage at home.

Laura:

I have some glass and ceramic food storage containers that I love, um, trying to keep

Laura:

the use of zip locks and to a minimum.

Laura:

But for most of my food storage, I use one type of container.

Laura:

I'll tell you more about it in our Top Tool.

Laura:

There are so many ways that being a professional chef has influenced

Laura:

my home kitchen, and it certainly has when it comes to storing food.

Laura:

Now, since we're talking about leftovers, I thought I'd share my favorite storage

Laura:

containers for most of my leftovers stocks and freezable items, and they are pint

Laura:

and quart deli containers with lids.

Laura:

Why do I love these so much?

Laura:

Well, they are reusable and they are inexpensive.

Laura:

They are plastic.

Laura:

And that's sort of a downside because the world has a big plastic

Laura:

problem, but for food storage, glass is an issue because it can break.

Laura:

Now plastic can break two, but these are pretty durable and

Laura:

as I said, they are reusable.

Laura:

My favorite thing about them is they come in two cups and four cups, and it's great

Laura:

to know that because I often use them to measure liquids, and I always know how

Laura:

much of any given item I have that comes in very handy with stocks and leftovers.

Laura:

Another great thing is they stack inside each other completely, so you don't

Laura:

need a dedicated Tupperware cabinet.

Laura:

They store efficient.

Laura:

So that's my top tool.

Laura:

Pint and Quart Deli containers with lids.

Laura:

You can find out more and where to get them.

Laura:

On my Benable site, there's a link in the show notes.

Laura:

My husband and I were talking the other night about saving food that you have

Laura:

absolutely no intention of eating.

Laura:

You know, put the leftovers in the fridge to time out so you can throw

Laura:

them away without feeling guilty.

Laura:

Now the only time I've done this.

Laura:

I believe is when I've been making something that I didn't like.

Laura:

I try not to do that either, but I'm an inventor when it comes to cooking,

Laura:

so I experiment when I'm writing recipes, and even though I don't

Laura:

like it, I'm not afraid of failing.

Laura:

So every once in a while I do.

Laura:

We always give it a fair shot and taste and discuss it, and then it goes into

Laura:

the fridge and the clock starts ticking.

Laura:

Speaking of a ticking clock, if you're wondering how long things really do

Laura:

keep in your refrigerator, I have a fantastic free app suggestion for you.

Laura:

It's called Food Keep.

Laura:

It was developed as a joint project between Cornell University's Department

Laura:

of Food Science, food Marketing Institute, and the US Department of Agriculture's

Laura:

Food Safety and Inspection Service.

Laura:

That was a mouthful.

Laura:

You can even enter the food in your refrigerator into it, and it will

Laura:

alert you when it needs to be tossed.

Laura:

When I first started cooking, I wasn't fond of leftovers.

Laura:

Maybe because I was obsessed with cooking and once I made something, I wanted

Laura:

to move on and make something else.

Laura:

But I realized early on that managing leftovers well is a significant

Laura:

part of successful home cooking.

Laura:

If you wanna have food for you and your family that is healthy and delicious,

Laura:

if you wanna save money, which is critical to everyone right now, it

Laura:

takes planning and a lot of knowledge.

Laura:

So here are some things to think about.

Laura:

How long will each leftover last?

Laura:

What are you going to simply reheat and eat?

Laura:

What can be frozen and what can be an element of a completely different dish.

Laura:

And of course, that should be my Turkey tetrazzini and the stuffing muffins.

Laura:

The next episode of Bending the Spoon is about America's

Laura:

obsession with competitive cooking.

Laura:

I'm calling it cooking and traumatic tv.

Laura:

Till then,

Laura:

Thank you so very much for listening to this episode of Bending the Spoon.

Laura:

If you like this episode or if you think someone else would find it useful,

Laura:

please leave a review on pod chaser.com, and if you have any questions for

Laura:

me, find me on Instagram or YouTube or go to bonicellicookingclub.com

Laura:

and leave me a message.

Laura:

Thank you, and go and make some magic in your kitchen.

Chapters