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14 Ways to Use Free Jars

I can’t believe that in all these years of writing my blog, I haven’t written this post on jars.

For the most part, my jars consist of de-labeled peanut butter and jam jars (love the sizes!), pickle jars and large, 6- to 8-cup jars my daughter MK brought home from various kitchens she has worked in.

Jars are my favorite tool. They solve so many problems in the kitchen (and elsewhere).

1. Store food in jars

Store food in glass jars and not only does the food look more appetizing, but you can also see at a glance what and how much food you have on hand. If you can see the food, you’re more likely to eat it and the food in the jar won’t go to waste. Uneaten food accounts for from 8 to 10 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions. To put that into context, the airline industry accounts for about 2.5 percent.

2. Freeze food in jars

I freeze all kinds of food in jars. Right now, as seen below, my freezer contains (among other foods):

I do take some precautions with glass:

Several people have told me they keep the lids off until the food has frozen. Go here for more on freezing food without plastic.

3. Make zero-waste ice packs

It’s camping season! Save money on bags of ice and bring ice jars instead. Always be sure to leave lots of headspace in your jars or the water will expand and break the jar! (See more precautions above.) You’ll have water to drink or cook with after the water thaws. And the water will have fewer microplastic particles in it than bottled water. Tap water also contains microplastic—it is everywhere—but it contains much less than bottled water. Sign a petition here to end the sale of single-use plastics in our national parks.

4. Fill jars at bulk bins

Be sure to have the jar tared—in other words, weighed—before you fill it up. At some stores, you place your jar on a scale, weigh it and mark the weight on the jar. The cashier then deducts this tare from the overall weight, meaning you pay only for the food in the jar and not the weight of the jar. This is very important when you buy tea at $40 a pound!

5. Order to-go food in BYO jars

Someone on Instagram recently asked me the best way to order takeout pho in their own container. I’ve found a large jar works well. The pho (or other very wet food) doesn’t leak from a partially filled large jar. Containers with snap-on lids can leak.

6. Bring home leftovers

When you eat out at a restaurant, bring a few jars for taking home leftovers. Refuse the restaurant’s takeaway containers and bring home food in your jars to reduce packaging waste, avoid potential toxins in that packaging and reduce food waste. Globally, a third of the food we produce goes uneaten.

7. Pack lunches in jars

If you’ve brought home those leftovers in jars, you’ve packed your lunch. And if not, raid your refrigerator for leftovers. You’ll save money on takeout and reduce packaging.

8. Eat from jars

If you’ve packed your lunch in a jar—depending on what you’ve packed—you may want to skip dirtying an additional dish and eat straight from the jar.

9. Drink from jars

If you have jars, you have glasses. You may even want to get rid of the glasses and free up shelf space in your kitchen for more jars!

Get a headstart on cleaning and pour tea into an empty honey jar to get every last smidgeon of the sticky stuff out. If you use a jar other than a heatproof mason jar, let the tea cool a bit first so the jar doesn’t crack.

10. Roll out dough

No room for a rolling pin in your kitchen cabinets? A smooth jar—or bottle—does the trick. Chill it in the refrigerator first for rolling pastry (you want everything cold).

A jar (or bottle) works well to roll out dough

11. Ferment food in jars

I do prefer my (limited number of) Le Parfait swing-top jars for fermenting food. Unlike metal mason jar rings, the lids don’t rust (fermented food is very acidic). But any jar will do! I’ve made lots of sauerkraut in old pickle jars, with the bonus of not having to de-smellify the pickle lids! De-smelling is easy enough to do though. Just put the lids out in the sun, smelly side up.

Beet kvass fermenting in an old pickle jar

12. Protect seedlings

Earlier this year, something mowed down a few of my kale seedlings. So I put jars over what remained, for an inexpensive cloche. The kale recovered. Jars can also help protect seedlings from frost in the winter.

13. Sprout seeds in jars

Almost all sprouts come packaged in a single-use plastic clamshell but you can grow them very easily at home—and without fancy equipment!

Soak seeds overnight in a mason jar. Using the metal band of the jar, secure a piece of very thin cloth to the top. Drain the water through the cloth. Rinse and drain daily through the cloth. Save the water for plants! Depending on the seeds and your kitchen, the sprouts will be ready to eat withing 7 to 10 days. Store them in the refrigerator for up to a week or so. I love them in salads and grain bowls. Go here for more on sprouting beans, grains and seeds.

Broccoli seeds sprouting (left) and mustard seeds soaking for homemade mustard (right)

14. Prepare other foods in jars

When a jar contains just a bit of mustard, I make salad dressing directly in the jar. (But first, I make the mustard in the jar… see the pic above.) Have a bit of nut butter residue in a jar? Make overnight oats in it. Can’t bear to wash away that molasses in the bottom of the jar? Make a bit of brown sugar. Eat every morsel of food while washing fewer dishes. Win-win!


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