This post is for all those days when you’re standing in front of the fridge, wondering what you can make with the bits and bobs you see…. From a made from scratch (easy!) Curry to Baked Rice with Anything, Chinese Soup, Fried Rice and a Homemade Hamburger Helper, this list is proof that you can dine like a king even if your cupboards are (pretty) bare! {Click here for PDF version of this post.}
Nowadays, I go to the shops almost every day. Sometimes multiple times in a day if I’m doing a client shoot and things are not going to plan. My record is 5 times. FIVE TIMES! Boy was I grumpy by the end of the day.
However, back when I worked in corporate, I did my main grocery shop once a week on the weekend. Which meant that unless I did a meal plan, I was usually playing things by ear by Wednesday. Meaning: I’d assess the contents of my fridge and freezer, and that would determine what I was having for dinner that night.
As I sat down to do a brainstorm of all the recipes that I would have made on such evenings, I was pretty happy to see that I’ve published most of the recipes already! There are a few obvious gaps and I’ll get to them eventually. I guess they’re things that I thought you might find too boring – like pasta salads, frittata. Do you want to know how I make things like that?
So here’s my list! And some tips for how to make them using bits and bobs rather than the exact ingredients used in the recipe.
This is a post I was inspired to do after I did a “Fridge Forage” feature for Super Food Ideas magazine. I hope you find it useful!
Fridge Forage: 30+ Recipes From the Pantry
CREAMY CHOWDER WITH ANYTHING
Creamy Chowder with Anything – Got milk, flour, butter and broth/stock? Make a creamy chowder! Dig out those bags of frozen veggies, find bits of ham or chicken or leftover cooked meats. This type of recipe is ultimate proof that you should never throw out any leftover food – raw or cooked. You’ll always find an amazing use for it! Get the recipe.
CURRY
Easy (real!) Curry – A handul of spices, a can of tomatoes, broth, canned legumes and chopped veggies. You CAN make this with almost anything! Try this easy Indian Cauliflower Chickpea Curry or this Caribbean Chickpea Potato Curry.
ALL PURPOSE STIR FRY SAUCE
Ultimate Standby Stir Fry – You’ve met Charlie, haven’t you?? He’s my best friend for stand by fridge forage meals! He’s an all purpose Chinese Stir Fry Sauce, an exact replica of none but similar to many sauces of hundreds, possibly thousands, of stir fries. Couple of tablespoons of Charlie, some water, tossed in a wok with whatever proteins and vegetables you have. And you will be gobsmacked how delicious it is. It’s all about the sauce! Get the recipe for Charlie and how to use it / him.
Tip: Get a head start at the beginning of the week by chopping up veggies and storing them in airtight containers.
PS I call him Charlie because it’s a brown sauce and you know “Charlie Brown”, right? 10/10 for originality!
BUILD YOUR OWN STIR FRIED NOODLES
Fridge Forage Noodles – Got noodles? Got some veggie bits and bobs in the bottom of your fridge, or some tins of stir-fryable veggies? (That’s a word, right?) Toss them in a wok with Charlie and 5 minutes later, dinner is on the table! Add some zing with chilli paste, garlic, ginger, Five Spice Powder, schezuan pepper – the possibilities are endless! Get the recipe to build your own stir fried noodles.
Tip: Don’t forget tinned veggies! Baby corn, bamboo and water chestnuts are great stir fry add-ins!
HOMEMADE HAMBURGER HELPER
Homemade Hamburger Helper aka Cheeseburger Casserole – Who says this has to be made with beef? Use whatever ground / mince meat you have in the dark depths of your freezer, and toss in whatever vegetables you can find! Got a bag of mixed frozen veggies? Perfect. Get the recipe.
Tip: Make this with other pasta shapes like spirals, orecchiette, penne and ziti.
SWEET & SOUR STIR FRY
Sweet & Sour Stir Fry – Basically, when a sauce is this good, no one really notices what’s IN the actual stir fry! Get the recipe.
Tip: If you don’t have pineapple juice for the sauce, swap it out for orange or another fruit juice. Pinky swear, it works a treat!
CRUSTLESS QUICHE
Crustless Quiche – crustless quiche is everything you know and love about classic quiches like Quiche Lorraine, but FASTER and low carb, and you can literally put anything in it. It’s custardy and cheesy inside, puffy and golden on top. The recipe I shared is a Ham and Cheese version, but you literally use whatever proteins and veggies you have! Get the recipe.
Tip: For watery vegetables like mushrooms and spinach, saute them in a little oil or butter until the liquid leeches out and evaporates. Otherwise they will make the quiche watery.
CHINESE SOUP
Chinese Soup – When I worked in corporate, this was one of my all time most-made dinners during winter because it’s so versatile and fast to make. Throw together the soup with just chicken stock/broth, a knob of ginger and garlic (or use paste!), a dash of soy and Chinese cooking wine (or sherry!), and you’ve got an instant broth to add in whatever you want. Noodles, vegetables, proteins….or….I don’t suppose you’ve got a stash of frozen wontons in the freezer?? Get the recipe.
Tip: When I’m feeling extra lazy, I cook the noodles in the same broth. Just be aware that this reduces the amount of broth because it’s sucked up by the noodles, so add an extra ¾ cup of broth (or water) per serving if you take this shortcut!
FRIED RICE
Fried Rice – arguably the ultimate leftovers food in the whole world? Get the recipe: Choose from Chinese Fried Rice (it’s Kylie Kwong’s recipe!), Indonesian Nasi Goreng or Thai Fried Rice.
Tip: Keep bags of cooked rice in the freezer. Defrost in less than 1 minute in the microwave. Use long grain rice to make fried rice (the rice grains are dry = perfect for fried rice) and medium or short grain to serve with dishes (because they stay a bit sticky after freezing).
QUESADILLAS
Quesadillas – You put anything and everything in Quesadillas too, right?
Tip: BAKE ’em so you can make loads in one go, rather than slaving over the stove! Just make sure the filling is cool (helps them bake crisp). Get my Baked Quesadillas recipe or Stovetop here.
BAKED RICE WITH ANYTHING
Baked Rice with Anything – So here’s the formula: 1 cup of rice to 2 ½ cups of liquid, bring to simmer on the stove then bake at 180C/350F for 30 minutes covered and 10 minutes uncovered. I have so many tips and variations, I’m going to list them (seriously, I should just do a recipe post on this, shouldn’t I???):
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I always start my baked rice by sautéing chopped onions and garlic in olive oil or butter because it makes it tastier. Then I add the liquid and rice, bring to simmer then bake;
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To add minced/ground proteins and veggies like zucchinis, capsicums and mushrooms, cook onion for 1 minute then add these and cook, then add rice etc. The meat will go beyond the point of overcooked to tender;
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To add pieces of chicken, use this One Greek Chicken and Lemon Rice recipe as a guide;
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To add chopped meat like chicken or pork pieces, cook them separately then remove into bowl, and add them back into the rice right at the end after it is cooked. Residual heat will reheat the meat (if you leave it in the rice the whole time, it will be horrendously overcooked);
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For instant-wilting veggies, like fresh spinach, add them at the end when you fluff up the rice;
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Consider adding a can of beans to fill it out! Baked Chickpea Pilaf anyone?
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For a lemon (lime or other juice) flavoured rice, use zest + ¼ cup of lemon juice as part of the total liquid;
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For a tomato version, use 1 cup of rice, 2 cups of chicken broth/stock and 1 can of crushed tomato + 1 tbsp tomato paste if you want a more intense tomato colour/flavour; and
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For a Mexican rice, use this One Pot Mexican Chicken and Rice or One Pot Enchilada Chicken and Rice recipe, here’s a Middle Eastern Chicken Shawarma and Chickpea Rice, a Peruvian Chicken with Garlic Butter Rice and here’s a Baked Chinese Chicken and Rice!
I have to stop here otherwise I will keep going. I really think I’ll do a full recipe post on Baked Rice with Anything!
PILAF (AKA FLAVOURED STOVETOP RICE)
Stovetop Rice Pilaf with Anything – The basic formula for stovetop cooked rice in my world is 1 cup of rice to 1 ½ cups of liquid, cooked over medium low heat with the lid on (no stirring!) for 15 minutes or until the liquid is fully absorbed. Then stand for 10 minutes, fluff and serve. This makes rice that is what I call “Asian” standard – tender and fluffy, not soft and sticky which I think Asians all over would consider soggy. (Note: This is for long grain, medium, short grain white rice, basmati and jasmine. Use packet directions for brown and other rice).
Now the more interesting part – the add ins! Typically, I start off by sautéing onion and garlic in butter or olive oil, add other chopped veggies or meat (ground or chopped), spices and other dry flavourings of choice. Cook until just cooked, then add the rice, liquid (I use broth/stock unless making plain rice) and other liquid flavourings of choice (if you use really thick ones like tomato paste, you need to add a bit more water).
The possibilities are endless! I feel like I should do a Stovetop Rice With Anything recipe too….it’s such a fast dinner! Here’s a Middle Eastern Lamb, Spinach and Lentil Pilaf to tide you over in the meantime, and pictured above is Mejadra, a wonderful Jerusalem spiced pilaf.
ALL YOU NEED IS A GREAT DRESSING
Salads Made Interesting – My friends and I always chant that a great salad is “all about the dressing”! Even the most basic salad – like just plain iceberg lettuce leaves – can be made so delicious by just drizzling over a fabulous dressing. So whatever you have in your fridge, you can make an awesome salad with it using a great dressing!
Tip: Make your life easier by having a stash of homemade dressings on standby in your fridge at all times!! Here are 8 dressings that can be stored for 2 weeks+, and here are all my salad recipes (Avocado Dressing anyone?)
RISOTTO WITH ANYTHING
Risotto Anything – You can seriously almost add ANYTHING into risotto! Here’s a classic risotto base recipe: Chicken and Mushroom Risotto, here’s a tomato based risotto: Chorizo Risotto and here’s how to make a baked risotto!
Tip: Load up the baked risotto with vegetables by sautéing them before adding the rice.
CREAMY PASTAS WORK WITH EVERYTHING
Pasta + Cream + Anything = sinfully delicious. Really. Use the Italian technique of emulsifying the sauce (i.e. toss pasta with sauce + pasta cooking water = glossy sauce with less cream required).
Tip: To make this with vegetables, start with onion and garlic sautéed in butter then add other vegetables. Think – sliced mushrooms, grated zucchini, small broccoli or cauliflower florets, asparagus finely sliced on the diagonal, even diced pumpkin! Stir through delicate greens like spinach at the very end.
ONE POT RISONI / ORZO WITH WHATEVER YOU HAVE
One Pot + Risoni/Orzo + Broth + Parmesan + Fridge Forage = dinner. Try a tomato base: One Pot Italian Chicken and Risoni or Greek, a creamy parmesan base: Creamy Salmon Risoni or Chicken and Vegetable Risoni. Click here for all my risoni/orzo recipes – I’m a big fan of risoni!
Tip: Don’t forget canned salmon and even tuna! Great for stirring through!
ONE POT MAC & CHEESE WITH BITS AND BOBS
One Pot + Mac and Cheese + Fridge Forage = Complete meal. Yessss! Us this One Pot Baked Chicken Broccoli Mac and Cheese as a base.
PANTRY PASTAS (REAL ITALIAN!)
I’m willing to bet you can make at least one of these 8 Classic Italian Pastas with what you’ve got in your pantry RIGHT NOW! Pictured above is my Spicy Prawn/Shrimp Pasta which is essentially Arrabbiata with prawn added. YUM.
Tip: Use your leftover pasta to make pasta fritters!!
4 INGREDIENT HONEY GARLIC SAUCE FOR ANYTHING
Honey Garlic Sauce for Anything – just 4 ingredients, 1 minute, and you can pour it over anything. Sear a chicken, pork chop, piece of fish, steam some veggies and dinner is done! Get the recipe.
SAN CHOY BOW / CHINESE LETTUCE CUPS
San Choy Bow – Make this entirely with chopped veggies. Seriously, this may be one of the best “can’t believe there’s no meat in this!” meals in the whole world. See recipe notes for quantities. Get the recipe.
Tipe: Don’t have lettuce? Use rice paper wraps or just spoon onto rice. SO GOOD!
VEGETABLE MEXICAN LASAGNA
Vegetarian Mexican Lsagna – OMG. The Fridge Forage just got real exciting! Tastes like an Enchilada, layered like a lasagna, this recipe was almost made for emptying out your fridge and digging through your pantry for canned vegetables. Get the recipe.
ANYTHING GOES GARLIC BREAD POT PIE
Garlic Bread Topped Anything-Pot-Pie – Got bread, milk, cheese, garlic, flour and butter? Some frozen veggies or scraps in the fridge, some leftover meat? Good! Make this! Get the recipe.
Tip: Brilliant to throw in loads of frozen diced veggies.
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See? No trip to the grocery store required to make an amazing meal! Enjoy! Nagi xx
Click here for a PDF version of this post.
LIFE OF DOZER
His whole life is about foraging. 🙄
PS That’s a raspberry and yes he ate it.
I’ve just discovered fridge foraging and love the concept – use it or lose it. Thanks for a bunch of great ideas!
Hi Nagi,
I love your website sooooo much, and I now follow your Mum’s too.
Thank you so much for inspiring me to enjoy making food for my family again.
Please give Dozer a big hug from me he is adorable and love that he is a regular feature in your blog.
Well, of course he ate the raspberry – we used to take our springer spaniels camping and they’d forage for and eat wild raspberries (this is in Canada). Not to mention I’d find half-eaten sugar snap peas hanging off the plants in my garden and one day discovered my little female very gently biting one in half while it was still on the plant. Gotta love those kids!!!
Must have recipe list. Thanks Nagi. I just discovered this site and I am already loving it.
Thanks so much Vibra! N x
Hello Nagi,
What is it that when your post arrives I look how Dozer is travelling? Your love for your companion is heartwarming.
I can identify with your feelings for I had dogs and they will always be with me.
It is an emotional rollercoaster.
There is no greater love than what a dog will give you.
Sorry not talking about your very fine food blog. Am using it a lot and with great success. Compliments all round.
Nagi you have a very rich refrigerator, I look in mine for left overs and they have always mysteriously disappeared yet no one ever say’s they ate them heck I made a huge roast enough for 8-10 people and when I reached to get some to make a pasta dish the next night GONE POOF!! and according to my husband and son neither ate it! Of course they wouldn’t look at me when they denied it. As to Cream sauces in leftovers I generally just warm a bit of cream or butter stir it in to the pasta before heating then add as needed to get it nice and hot (They don’t like cream sauces that much but I do)
Ba ha ha!! TOO FUNNY!!!!
Thank you Nagi for making life easy for busy people. I have a quick question. Would I still get a great taste after reheating any of these recipes? Wanted to know in case of doing more than one person’s portion…thanks
Hi! If a dish is fine to be reheated then I (usually!) add storage notes in the recipe 🙂 In all honesty, a good general rule is to assume that almost everything on my site can be reheated UNLESS it says that it is no good reheated. And I can’t think of many other than Alfredo or other creamy pastas that have a tendency to go a bit gluggy overnight. 🙂
Hi Nagi!
Awesome list. I love your photographs, recipes, and explanations. I will definitely be visiting your website very often.
Thanks!
Thank you Freesia! It’s always nice to hear when my efforts are appreciated!❤️
I’ve been really enjoying trying your recipes – the notes give me confidence. Last night I’d forgotten to get groceries so dinner was a throw together of beef, hoiken noodles, foraged veg from the fridge and some Charlie sauce I already had made up. Husband declares dinner was delicious and to definitely make it again. Thank god for Charlie ?
He’s my life saver too!!! I have so many other tips for how to use him – like try adding him into chicken stock with a dash of chinese wine or dry sherry, then add noodles and veggies. Dinner, done! 🙂 N xx
Nagi,
You are awesome!
Aww! What a message to receive on a Saturday morning, thanks Karen! N x
Loved your recipes today using what ever you have in the house. I try to keep some staples
here, but most of the time I find myself driving home, thinking what do I have frozen, etc. that
I can make for dinner. By the way, your Brussel Sprout Salad has become a hit with my colleagues
after I made it for Thanksgiving Lunch at work.
Thanks Karen! Glad you enjoyed the list! And SUPER glad you enjoy the Brussel Sprout Salad – I love it! 🙂 N x
Just eat the raspberry, Dozer. It’s good, trust me. And it’s good for you. My Abby loves ’em now. In fact, during the summer I have to lock up the garden or else Abby will strip ALL the berry plants, including the entire raspberry patch.
OMG are you SERIOUS?? That is just the cutest vision ever!!! If I lived on a farm, I would have to do the same with anything that grows on trees that he could reach. 🙂 Too funny!
Thank you for 29 other awesome options instead of just fried rice with all of the bits and bob in the refrigerator. Tomorrow is definitely use up the bits and bobs day as we are long overdue for a grocery run. Dozer seems a little puzzled by the fruit that has dropped within his reach… LOL
Oh no, he definitely foraged that…. 😉
Wow, this is just perfect. The benefits you have given in this particular blog are awesome. Not only are you saving people money, time and stress about what to feed the family when they can’t get to the shops, the environment, and climate also win by making use of what may otherwise be destined for the landfill. ( Not everyone has time. knowledge, space or energy left to compost.) Well done! A win for everyone and everything.
Thanks Maggie! I personally don’t have a compost so that’s why I have so many recipes that are quite versatile for leftover bits and bobs! And I use all my veggie scraps to make stock 🙂 I usually make a big pot once a week, I love it!
Bravo Nagi! That’s My kind of Food, clean up Fridge, pantry, soups Are My favoured. My Mom was that Type of Cook, bit of this and that and another meal from left overs. Wast NOT WANT NOT. THANK YOU! Not Happy Dozer, show him meat…!Love YOU and leave YOU!
Yes! I totally agree!!!! PS Dozer loves berries as much as he loves STEAK!!
Nagi I am so disappointed in how “American” your recipes have become. I used to love reading and using the recipes. What I liked the most about them was the all Australian recipes as I was sick of trying to follow all other blogs that were American. Yours was the only one I used having deleted all the others because I like to follow the “Aussie” recipes. Sadly now you seem to be joining the Americanised way and terminology for ingredients. Now I have to find a true Aussie blog again.
Pauline.
Hi Pauline – I’m sorry you are no longer enjoying my recipes. I only share recipes that I truly enjoy and they do include recipes from all over the world. In the list above, I only consider the Homemade Hamburger Helper as an “American” recipe, and I did that one for a friend to celebrate the launch of her cookbook. I’d consider the Satay Chicken Stir Fry I posted on Monday as Aussie as they come (you can’t get that in the US, to my knowledge), the Mango Ice Cream on Friday is celebrating the Aussie summer. As for terminology, I make a very big effort to use both Australia, US AND European terminology where relevant, so it’s inevitable that I will slip up every now and then. This is, after all, a personal food blog and I don’t have the benefit of a team of editors and proof readers. Also, my computer sometimes autocorrects words to American spelling e.g.: favourite vs favorite, and I may miss them. It is unfortunate that you no longer enjoy my recipes, and I am sure you will find many wonderful true Aussie food blogs to follow. Have a wonderful week! N xx
I like to cook but I work. Instead of eating out, having quick delicious recipes like this mean so much!! I love the recipes and all you do!! Keep it coming pls!!!!!!!
Fantastic recipes and ideas! It’s only the two of us and I always have bits and bobs.
Bits and bobs are the story of my LIFE! 🙂
This list will be a my lifesaver in the coming months when things get hectic. I find myself daily shopping and have a freezer full of food ready to find a good home. Any chance you could pin an alphabetical recipe list somewhere on the front page as well? I know they are pretty easy to find but I’m lazy haha.
Ahh, that’s a good point Justine! I will have a think about how to do that and will let everyone know in an upcoming post! 🙂
I’ve always wanted to know how to make the stirfry sauce, so thanks for that. I also tried the crispy chicken previously and it turned out exactly as it should. The baking powder is the key. Thanks. My next froray will be the sweet and sour chicken stir fry and the Chinese fried rice.
Oooh, I hope you try and enjoy it Henry! 🙂
Everything looks just gorgeous Nagi! Now we are left with another dilemma, which dish to try first 🙂
Story of my life! ?