Two-plate special: How to downsize your cooking when the kids leave home

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That age group is expected to control 52 percent of the $706 billion spent on groceries by 2015. And you can bet many in our trend-setting generation won’t settle for two-for-one specials on Lean Cuisine.

Learning to shop is the first step, says Linda Gassenheimer. A longtime columnist for The Miami Herald, Gassenheimer writes the Quick Fix for 2 column that runs each week in The News & Observer and many other newspapers.

Gassenheimer says she never hesitates to ask for prepackaged meats or vegetables to be cut down at the supermarket.

“If they won’t do it, I go to another market,” she declares.

While Gassenheimer went through downsizing when her sons left home, she actually came to small-serving cooking before they left, as an offshoot of a project she did on fast cooking. If you want to cook faster, she learned, it’s easier if you work with smaller amounts.

Still, cutting recipes in half doesn’t always mean just halving all the ingredients or even the cooking time.

One chicken breast cooks in the same amount of time as two, for example. Or if you cook a smaller roast, you’ll still need enough liquid to braise it.

“People have to think about cookware. The pan needs to be right for the size of the meat you’re putting in it.” She’s found that a 7-inch sauté pan or omelet pan, for instance, is perfect for two people.

Even if you cook in smaller amounts, you’re still likely to have leftovers, says Gassenheimer.

And you should: A small batch of soup tucked in the freezer is just as welcome as a big batch when you’re busy.

Creative leftovers

Her advice: “Don’t serve leftovers as leftovers — that’s boring. Create another dish.”

Use extra pasta in a gratin or macaroni and cheese. Or use extra linguine in a stir-fry, like lo mein. Leftover roasted meat can be ground up with a little mayonnaise and horseradish to make a pate to serve on toast with a salad.

Karen Barker corrected me when I called her an empty nester. She and Ben have stayed so busy and gotten so involved with friends and family that nothing feels all that empty. But cooking what they want, not what kids or customers dictate, is a new and delightful thing.

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