Turn smashed potatoes into a naturally gluten free pie crust loaded with wonky green veggies and cheese.
READ MORELet's get creative with the versatile avocado – there is more to these green gems than just guacamole and salad toppers.
Try this colourful warm yam, beetroot, and watercress salad with honey mustard dressing. It's a delightful blend of earthy beetroot, sweet yams, peppery watercress, and tangy dressing.
Next time you're making mashed potatoes, save the skins. Potato skins are high in nutrients. Transform your potato skins into a very easy cheesy garlic flatbread. YUM!
There's something brilliant about roasting a cauliflower whole - it turns wonderfully creamy and creates an impressive dinner main. Often, cauliflower leaves are needlessly discarded, but not here!
In this low-waste recipe, we transform humble ingredients into a tasty dinner. Utilising the often-overlooked carrot tops combined with roasted carrots and butter beans.
Stuffed leeks are a fantastic way to use up the entire vegetable, including the often-discarded green tops. In this recipe, the leeks are stuffed with cottage cheese, leek, Parmesan, and walnuts.
Mashed potato is a highly versatile leftover dish with endless repurposing possibilities! It can be fried with an egg on top, used as a pie topper, or even as a base for soups.
This Middle Eastern-inspired recipe features roasted capsicum stuffed with a fragrant mixture of fluffy Israeli couscous, vegetables, feta cheese, and aromatic spices.
This recipe is a combination of sumac-roasted carrots complemented by creamy tzatziki yoghurt - these flavours are delicious together and make a tasty lunch, side dish or dinner.
Caprese salad is a simple Italian salad, traditionally made of sliced fresh mozzarella, tomatoes, and basil. This version is extra summery and as fresh as it gets.
This dish is full of flavour and extremely versatile. If you're short of a variety of produce, play around and swap for anything else you've got a surplus of.
1/3 of food globally is wasted and it’s estimated that up to 40% of produce grown doesn’t leave the farm gate.
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