Country Kitchen Pantry - Herbs, Spices, Cooking, Recipes

I opened the journal that I keep in my country kitchen's pantry, and this is what I wrote:


Sunday, June 8, 2008

What I Keep In My Jars

Since I work at a restaurant that serves awesome deli sandwiches, I get to bring home empty pickle jars that are very helpful as far as keeping my staples goes. Each is filled with a different vegetarian delight food like hummus mix, lentils, brown rice, and falafel mix. I truly enjoy looking at the jars full of goodies. They are so colorful - and the textures are all different.

I think falafel mix is particularly good, health-wise. It is made from chick peas. I’ve had some that was too spicy, but what I buy up in Medford, Oregon is excellent quality and enjoyable. If I were hiking in the wilderness with a little stove, this is one food I’d take with me for nutrition and to provide lightweight staples. You can mix falafel mix with cooked, crushed beans to produce a thick textured burger patty. Fry that up, and eat in a hamburger bun with all the condiments, lettuce, onion, and tomato.

Recently my significant other, the magnificent Bob, decided to make beans and rice the new staple of his diet. First let me say I’m very proud of this man. He was a meat eater all his life until gout stopped him from eating 90% of the foods he loved, including red meat. Now he’s recovering thanks to some medication, but rather than going back to the bad diet, he’s adjusted to being mostly vegetarian, though he still eats fish. I don’t, so we usually don’t share meals. He cooks what he wants and I cook what I want. I’ve gone on a vegan diet. Anyhow, as I was about to say, Bob wants to eat rice and beans. So I’ve been cooking them, keeping them on hand in the fridge. I’ve been using pinto beans. The rice and beans fill several jars in my pantry. I find that when I’m cooking them constantly, I go through the beans pretty fast - so I need more than one of the gallon jars full of them.

I have granola in one jar. I’ve been using that to make the sweet treat I mentioned in my last post. More on that in another post. I’ve morphed the recipe into breakfast bars! Recipe to be announced SOON. I keep the rice flour in another gallon jar, and cinnamon I bought in bulk in another smaller jar. Cinnamon and rice flour provide the outer coating for these treats.

Anyhow, if you need jars, ask at your local restaurant or deli. If they use pickles, they probably have more jars than they want. The one gallon mayonnaise jars are plastic, but they’re handy too… I use them for pasta and beans.

Suggestion: Stock up on as many dry staples as you can.

Filed under: Vegetarianism — Linda @ 3:39 pm



4 Comments »



  1. I like saving empty jars too especially those with nice shape and good cover. I enjoy reusing them to store little stuffs (edible or not). I actually prefer using glass jars over plastic containers.

    Comment by Mike Jensen — Tuesday, June 10, 2008 @ 8:48 am




  2. I also used to recycle empty jars especially those with different shades. They look cute and of course, I could spend some. No need for me to purchase containers for other stuffs. :)

    Comment by Andrew Reynolds — Tuesday, June 10, 2008 @ 6:37 pm




  3. […] goes. Each is filled with a different vegetarian delight food like hummus mix, lentils, brown rice,http://countrykitchenpantry.com/2008/06/08/what-i-keep-in-my-jars/Alpha Consumer Challenge: Best Saving Tip US News & World ReportTo participate, share your […]

    Pingback by vegetarianism — Wednesday, June 11, 2008 @ 11:20 am




  4. @Mike - I agree, glass is best.

    @Andrew - I didn’t think of using different shades. I used to have a couple old blue mason jars - those were nice but have now disappeared.

    Comment by Linda — Wednesday, June 11, 2008 @ 4:42 pm




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Hi, my name is Linda. This is my personal home and hearth journal.

I am a self-trained herbal practitioner. I became a vegetarian when I was a teenager in the 1960s. I was a San Francisco Bay Area hippie in the 60s and early 70s. Then I became a mom - the most important job I've ever had.

Now I live in a very small mountain community. The nearest fast food restaurant is more than forty miles during summer, and more than seventy miles in winter when the pass is snowed under. I've never owned a cell phone, but I talked on one once.




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