Recipes for Cooking More and Wasting Less Food in 2025


If you’ve decided to get great at meal prep, waste less food or just eat breakfast, here are tips and dishes to set you up for success.

In 2025, there’s room for improvement. That room is the kitchen. Second only to our places of work, it hosts a good chunk of our waking hours — making it a natural focal point of annual resolution-making. Maybe last year you aspired to more baking, more meatless cooking, or simply more cooking, period. If you need ideas for the new year, below are a handful of goals, shared among members of the New York Times Cooking and Food staff, along with recipes to keep you on track for success.

Before you throw out vegetable and meat scraps from other meals, consider throwing them into an end-of-week soup.Karsten Moran for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Chris Barsch.

Samin Nosrat’s Whatever You Want Soup provides a foolproof template for using leftover bits and bobs of meat and vegetables accumulated during the week, particularly in the winter when all you want is a big bowl of something warm. “My aunt made it every Sunday night,” wrote one reader in the recipe comments. “She called it Weekly Review.”

A crunchy pajeon also makes for an exceptional final resting place for the vegetable knobs and trimmings left behind from other meals. Ready for dipping in a gingery soy sauce, Sohui Kim’s forgiving Korean scallion pancakes bind chopped or grated carrots, zucchini, bell peppers, kale — truly whatever you’ve got — with a bit of egg, starch and chopped kimchi.

Most likely to wilt and end up in the trash, though, are the fresh herbs (cilantro, parsley, dill, mint) bought for garnishing a single dish. So incorporate recipes into your cooking routine that use them in high volume, like pesto, salsa verde or another all-purpose green sauce. For those tougher-stemmed herbs (rosemary, thyme, sage) that you’re less likely to blend into sauces, steep them in heavy cream for flavoring Ali Slagle’s pasta with creamy herb sauce.

Breakfast needn’t be made in the morning. Set-them-and-forget-them slow-cooker oats can be ready for you before you’ve even had your coffee.Julia Gartland for The New York Times (Photography and Styling)

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