#leftover-recipes

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fromTasting Table
12 hours ago

Don't Throw Out Extra Deli Meat When You Could Make This Soup Instead - Tasting Table

Our favorite way to use up extra deli meat is to make a rich and creamy chicken cordon bleu soup. While this recipe typically calls for raw chicken and ham that you need to cook, you already have both on hand, pre-cooked. This means it will be even faster and easier to make a flavorful soup. Along with your extra deli chicken and ham, you'll also need chicken stock, onion, cream cheese, heavy cream, and cheddar cheese.
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fromTasting Table
1 week ago

Fry Up Leftover Mashed Potatoes To Create A Crispy, Craveable New Dish - Tasting Table

Leftover mashed potatoes can be transformed into crispy, flavorful croquettes by binding with egg and breadcrumbs, chilling, and pan-frying or deep-frying.
fromTasting Table
2 weeks ago

Turn Leftover Rotisserie Chicken Into This Cozy, Old-School Casserole - Tasting Table

All it takes is some shredded chicken, a quick cream sauce made from a good can of condensed soup (like Campbell's Cream of Chicken) plus a bit of sour cream, and of course, poppy seeds, and you've got a comforting classic that can bring everyone to the table, then send them off satisfied. But rather than making it from scratch, if you've got a rotisserie chicken leftover from the other night's dinner, the good news is you can have
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fromTasting Table
3 weeks ago

James Beard's 1949 Tips For Smart, Waste-Free Cooking Feel Remarkably Modern - Tasting Table

James Beard had answers for that all the way back in 1949, when he published The Fireside Cook Book, which reads like a modern manual. It teaches two habits that still work now: buy well, use it all, and plan ahead. Beard framed thrift as quality, and his line advising to use "the best ingredients available and waste nothing" is a timeless system for great flavor and few scraps.
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fromBoston Herald
1 month ago

Grilling some corn? Make it hot and spicy

Just husk the corn, remove the silk and grill those cobs naked so they're lightly charred, sweet, slightly crisp with a roasty popcorn taste. While you can't beat a thick smear of butter, a sprinkle of coarse salt and pepper, I love anointing the cobs with a tangy-hot Mexican sauce and a dusting of salty cheese. The tangy-hot combination is remarkably simple. Just whisk together good mayonnaise, lime juice, chili powder, salt and pepper. It amplifies the corn's grilled flavor and balances its sweetness.
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