Creating a decadent Thanksgiving feast that鈥檚 both tasty and environmentally-friendly is easier than many people may think. We spoke with ICE chefs to learn how they eliminate food waste and make the Thanksgiving table more sustainable.
Here's a look at some of the ICE chefs' favorite tips for using extra scraps, fats and bones to create a delicious meal while minimizing food waste.
Break Down Your Turkey
This arguably should be the first step in creating your Thanksgiving meal, by first removing the turkey breasts and legs from the carcass and setting them aside. Then, break down the actual carcass and roast the bones in the oven, and if the turkey neck is inside of the turkey, that can be roasted as well.
鈥淐ooking with whole foods and using the whole product is a great way to minimize waste both before and after the meal,鈥 says ICE鈥檚 Director of Nutrition . (Bonus: it鈥檚 also a in your dish.)
More from Chef Celine:
By roasting the carcass, you will bring out layers of flavor that can be used to create your own stock or demi-glace, which saves you from needing to buy one from the store.
Save Your Scraps
鈥淲hen I make Thanksgiving dinner, literally every scrap of turkey, Brussels sprouts, mashed potatoes, haricot verts with almonds 鈥 all of it 鈥 becomes the base for my turkey pot pie,鈥 says ICE Chef-Instructor .
You can also use the saut茅ed vegetable scraps and turkey offal to add flavor to your stock that can act as a base for a hearty soup or stew.
RECIPE:
Reserve the Fat
On the day of Thanksgiving, season and roast the turkey breasts and legs. While the stock and turkey are cooking, skim any residual fat from both and use this to incorporate into any other recipes that need additional flavor 鈥 the fat is particularly perfect for stuffing.
鈥淵ou can even use the turkey fat in place of butter for your pot pie crust,鈥 adds Chef Chris.
Get Creative with Leftovers
鈥淢ost nights I like to cook for just that meal but Thanksgiving is a meal worthy making enough for leftovers,鈥 says Chef Celine. 鈥淎ll the typical foods and their variations can be repurposed for days.鈥
Take cranberry sauce, for example. ICE's Director of Pastry Research & Development, , serves his over ice cream or folds it into cake or brownie batter prior to baking. He also suggests swapping it with your pantry jelly.
鈥淎s someone who isn鈥檛 married to peanut butter and grape jelly, cranberry sauce would be good,鈥 says Chef J眉rgen.
Instead of making the traditional shepherd鈥檚 pie, Chef J眉rgen adds flour, egg and cheese to his leftover mashed potatoes before throwing them into a waffle iron for a sinful, elevated potato pancake.
鈥淵ou can鈥檛 let it go too long [in the waffle iron], otherwise it sticks,鈥 he adds.
By using these methods to reduce your waste, you can get the most out of the ingredients that you鈥檙e using, save money and positively impact the environment, all while infusing more flavor into your food. Happy Thanksgiving!