Turn smashed potatoes into a naturally gluten free pie crust loaded with wonky green veggies and cheese.
READ MOREThere'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!
These muffins are the perfect recipe for your leftover veggies from a Sunday roast. You can add anything from turnips, pumpkin and carrots to spinach, onions and greens in.
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.
Fried rice is the best dish to use up any leftovers you have lying around or the odd bit of veg at the back of the fridge. This is our fried rice guide!
Delicious flakey pastry shells encase a flavourful filling. This recipe is for cheesy corn and broccoli empanadas, but really, you can fill the pastry with your favourite pie filling combinations.
Turn discarded feijoa skins into delicious, coconut infused citrus muffins with this simple baking recipe.
Filled with a seasonal mixture of leeks, mushrooms, and aromatics, these vegetarian dumplings are fun to make and even more satisfying to slurp from your soup.
Creamy, comforting and colourful - these kiwifruit topped dessert cups are a sure crowd pleaser during kiwi season.
Make the most of lingering leftover chocolate in this Autumnal sweet treat recipe, packed with caramel, pretzels and apple chunks.
Make broccoli stems the star of the show with this Broccoli Stem Bhaji! These crispy fritters are a flavorful twist on Indian cuisine.
A simple Easter baking recipe the whole family will love, using wonky apples and peacherines. Hop in!
Baked jacket potatoes topped with a comforting cheesey sauce and a tasty hit of green broccoli goodness.
If you like the sound of crunchy yet melt in your mouth eggplant coated in gooey melted mozzarella, then you have to try these Eggplant Schnitzels.
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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