Many recipes that call for fresh or frozen ingredients can be adapted successfully to pantry stable ingredients. Choose a recipe and ask these questions to determine its adaptability:
- What are the fresh or frozen ingredients?
- Is there a canned, dehydrated, or freeze-dried version I can substitute?
- Will I need to add more liquid?
- Will I need to change the cooking time?
- Will I need to change when an ingredient is added in the mixing or cooking process?
- Will I need to prepare the substitute ingredients differently than the fresh?
- If there is no good substitute, can I leave out an ingredient without sacrificing flavor or texture significantly?
The following is a recipe from the Pillsbury Harvest Time Cook Book. It is followed by an analysis of its adaptability to the pantry.
HAM AND BEAN SOUP
2 cups dry Great Northern beans
2-1/2 quarts water
2 cups cubed, cooked ham
1 cup sliced carrots
1 cup sliced celery
1/2 cup chopped onion
2 teaspoons salt
1/2 teaspoon oregano
1/8 teaspoon pepper
1 can (16 ounces) whole tomatoes, cut up
Rinse beans, place in Dutch oven with water. Bring to boil over high heat; boil 2 minutes. Remove from heat; let stand 1 hour. Add remaining ingredients. Simmer, covered, 1-1/2 hours or until beans are done. 12 (1-cup) servings.
- What are the fresh or frozen ingredients?
Ham, carrots, celery, onion
- Is there a canned, dehydrated, or freeze-dried version I can substitute?
Ham – canned ham or Spam, freeze-dried
Carrots – canned, dehydrated, puff dried (similar to freeze-dried), freeze-dried
Celery – home canned, dehydrated, freeze-dried
Onions – dehydrated, freeze-dried
- Will I need to add more liquid?
Yes, if using freeze-dried ham; dehydrated, puff dried carrots, or freeze-dried carrots; and/or dehydrated or freeze-dried celery because there is so much of each.
- Will I need to change the cooking time?
No.
- Will I need to change when an ingredient is added in the mixing or cooking process?
Yes, if using canned carrots. Add them the last 30 minutes of cooking.
- Will I need to prepare the substitute ingredients differently than the fresh?
No.
- If there is no good substitute, can I leave out an ingredient without sacrificing flavor or texture significantly?
If home canned, dehydrated, or freeze-dried celery is unavailable, it can be left out.
Using the answers to the questions, the following is one of several ways the recipe can be adapted to pantry stable ingredients.
WHITE BEAN SOUP (from Pantry Cooking: Unlocking Your Pantry’s Potential, page 81)
2 cups dry Great Northern beans
2-1/2 quarts water
1 can (12 ounces) Spam, cubed
1/4 cup dried celery (optional)
2 tablespoons dried onion
1 teaspoon salt, or to taste
1/2 teaspoon ground oregano
Dash pepper
1 can (14-1/2 ounces) diced tomatoes
1 cup sliced canned carrots
Rinse beans and place in a Dutch oven with the water. Bring to a boil over high heat; boil 2 minutes. Remove from heat; let stand 1 hour. Add remaining ingredients except carrots. Simmer, covered, 1 hour. Add carrots; simmer an additional 30 minutes or until beans are done. Makes 3 quarts.
Notes on the changes:
- More water is not necessary because only 6 tablespoons of dried vegetables were added.
- There is less salt because the Spam is salty.
- Less pepper is added because of personal taste.
- Diced tomatoes are now available but were not when the original recipe was written.
Tips for making substitutions
- When substituting canned for fresh vegetables in a recipe that requires cooking for more than 30 minutes, add the canned vegetables the last 30 minutes so they don’t overcook.
- When substituting dried for fresh, use 1/3 to 1/2 of the amount originally called for. Some dried foods may need soaking before adding them to the recipe and some may just need extra water added to the recipe (twice as much volume as the dried food). To decide which, consider how long the food is to cook and whether the cooking liquid will discolor the food.
- When substituting freeze-dried for fresh, use the same volume but either reconstitute before adding or add extra water to the recipe.
- Powdered eggs and cheese will not work well in all recipes requiring fresh eggs and cheese. Learn the limitations of these foods before substituting them for fresh in recipes.