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Kitchen Pantry Hacks during COVID-19 Distancing

Duke experts share strategies for staples that make healthy, low-maintenance meals

Part of the Mastering Wellness and Fitness During COVID-19 Series
Kitchen Pantry Hacks during COVID-19 Distancing.

Peggy Luu, who hadn鈥檛 been to a grocery store in two weeks, was down to kitchen staples when it came time to fix dinner.

Luu looked in her pantry and used chicken broth, rice noodles, frozen broccoli, frozen sausage, chili oil and frozen ginger to make noodle soup, a meal that would hold her over until the next trip to the store. 

鈥淏efore COVID-19, I was someone who went to the grocery store each time I made a meal,鈥 said Luu, an application analyst for Duke Health Technology Solutions. 鈥淚 now go maybe once every other week. I want to be purposeful about using all the food I have at home to reduce my grocery shopping.鈥

Dietitian Annie Scott shares her list of pantry staples during a Food Matters webinar.Luu is not alone in scraping together a meal with what鈥檚 around her kitchen. During last week鈥檚 鈥淔ood Matters鈥 webinar, 53 percent of the nearly 120 participants said they are likely to cobble together dinner using pantry staples when they don鈥檛 have a meal planned during distancing times due to COVID-19. 

鈥淪taples are items you cook with on a regular basis and that last a long-time on the shelf, frozen or refrigerated,鈥 said Annie Scott, a dietitian with LIVE FOR LIFE, Duke鈥檚 employee wellness program. 鈥淎s we reduce our trips to the grocery, our staples are what we can turn to for making easy and healthy meals.鈥

鈥淔ood Matters,鈥 a weekly webinar series hosted by , provides grocery tips and healthy guidance during stay-at-home orders. The next webinar on May 6 is about eating well on a budget. Sign up to participate.

Meanwhile, here鈥檚 how to use your pantry staples to make quick and nutritious meals. 

Prepare a balanced plate

Half of your meal should include fruits and vegetables, according to the U.S. Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion. Photo courtesy of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
LIVE FOR LIFE Dietitian Lauren Kruse follows the U.S. Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion鈥檚 guidelines for making meals, especially when she dips into her pantry to cook from staples such as pasta, beans and frozen vegetables. 

The Office of Disease Prevention鈥檚 鈥溾 recommends half of your plate be fruits and vegetables; one quarter be grain and the other quarter of the plate be a lean, low-fat protein. The guidelines also suggest eating low-fat or fat-free milk or yogurt; proteins such as chicken and beans; and making half of grains consumed whole grains. 

鈥淔illing up half your plate with fruits and vegetables is going to make you full for very few calories,鈥 Kruse said. 鈥淭hink of a serving of grains or protein as being the size of the palm of your hand. It helps you with moderation.鈥

Tracy Stell has reduced the amount of meat he consumes after subscribing to 鈥,鈥 a meal kit service that sends ingredients and recipes for meals to your home. Blue Apron provides smaller portion sizes for meat. 

鈥淣ow, when I鈥檓 cooking chicken breasts or thighs on my own, I cut it in half before serving,鈥 said Stell, assistant director of staff education and development for Duke Regional Hospital. 鈥淚 leave more room on my plate for vegetables.鈥

No recipe required

Dietitian Annie Scott makes a snack meal for her family with raw vegetables, cheese, turkey, fruit and hummus. Photo courtesy of Annie Scott.
One of Jane Shealy鈥檚 and daughter Maggie鈥檚 favorite meals is 鈥渟nack supper.鈥

The two get out a giant wooden board and fill it with raw vegetables, olives, cheeses, cured meats and fruit and take it to the couch to eat while watching classic movies like 鈥淧ride and Prejudice.鈥

鈥淣o cooking and very little dishes are involved,鈥 said Shealy, communications manager for the Duke Global Health Innovation Center. 鈥淥ur cooking style is whipping things up in the spur of the moment.鈥

LIVE FOR LIFE Dietitian Annie Scott recommends recipe-free meals that use three to five of the 鈥2015-2020 Dietary Guidelines for Americans鈥 food groups: vegetables, fruits, dairy, protein and grains. 

Scott鈥檚 no-recipe meals include pasta with tomato sauce and frozen vegetables; stir fry with protein, rice and vegetables; and breakfast for dinner.

鈥淒inner doesn鈥檛 need to be anything that takes a lot of time or is fancy,鈥 Scott said. 鈥淵ou can make a well-balanced meal in a matter of minutes.鈥 

For her go-to, no-recipe meal, Kruse, the LIVE FOR LIFE dietitian, creates a mini pita pizza in about 10 minutes. She spreads tomato sauce, saut茅ed spinach, mushrooms and shredded mozzarella and microwaves or bakes it. 

鈥淚t wasn't a gourmet meal by any means, but I got it on the table fast,鈥 Kruse said. 

Use wilting greens  

Save your leftover vegetable scraps to make vegetable stock. Photo by Jonathan Black.
There are ways to save wilting greens, overripe bananas and cooked rice. 

Steaming or sauteing spinach, kale and collard greens that are on the verge of wilting brings the greens back to life. Store vegetable scraps 鈥 carrot and potato skins, outer layers of onions and celery 鈥 in a container in the freezer for vegetable stock. And very ripe bananas are always delicious in smoothies or pancakes.

鈥淲e're trying to keep our kitchen waste-free as much as possible because we're going to the grocery store less frequently,鈥 Kruse said. 鈥淲e want to maximize the use of the things we do have.鈥

Meal apps and resources

The 鈥淢eal-O-Matic鈥 helps you make basic recipes with kitchen staples. Photo courtesy of doctoryum.org
Use a meal app or website for inspiration when you鈥檙e feeling short on cooking creativity.

Christine Tenekjian, a clinical dietitian for the Duke Diet & Fitness Center, recommends 鈥溾 to her clients. The website has a free tool called 鈥溾 to help you make meals with ingredients you have on hand. 

You choose what style of meal you want 鈥 stir-fry, curry, casserole, soup, pasta, salad or grain bowl 鈥 and the 鈥淢eal-O-Matic鈥 guides you through how to make a flavorful meal with ingredients in your kitchen. 

鈥淒octor Yum shows you don鈥檛 have to follow a recipe exactly to get a delicious dinner,鈥 Tenekjian said. 鈥淚t educates you on the basic concept of cooking. It鈥檚 like a choose-your-own-adventure recipe.鈥

Scott, the LIVE FOR LIFE dietitian, enjoys ,鈥&苍产蝉辫;鈥,鈥&苍产蝉辫;鈥,鈥&苍产蝉辫;鈥溾&苍产蝉辫;补苍诲&苍产蝉辫;鈥.鈥 Each resource will provide a list of recipes based on ingredients you have, dietary restrictions and cook time.

鈥淲e can get in a rut and tend to use the same recipes over and over again,鈥 Scott said. 鈥淪ometimes it's nice to branch out and try different things.鈥

Help us share the proactive and extensive work being done by all Duke community members during the COVID-19 outbreak. Send ideas, shout-outs and photographs  or write us at working@duke.edu.