Spring favors asparagus, peas, radishes, and tender herbs; summer bursts with tomatoes, peaches, berries, and cucumbers; autumn celebrates pumpkins, pears, beets, and kale; winter leans on citrus, cabbage, squash, and sweet potatoes. Rotate proteins and grains to fit each season’s produce. This rhythm keeps costs reasonable, flavors exciting, and micronutrient coverage wonderfully natural. Use markets, CSA boxes, newsletters, or store flyers to inspire your next week’s palette and prep timeline.
Collect onion skins, carrot peels, herb stems, and mushroom trimmings in freezer bags sorted by color families, then simmer into fragrant broths that echo your palette. Add parmesan rinds or ginger ends for character. Strain, cool, and freeze in jars or cubes. These stocks simplify soups and grains, reduce waste, and pull extra minerals from parts you already paid for, turning yesterday’s scraps into tomorrow’s comforting, colorful, consistently nourishing foundation.
Design purposeful overflow. Roast extra vegetables to fold into frittatas, blend red trays into quick romesco, or toss orange cubes with quinoa, chickpeas, and citrus for a refreshing bowl. Purple berries rescue plain yogurt, green herbs become chimichurri, and white beans puree into silky dips. Keep a flexible template that invites creativity on Friday nights, preventing boredom and bins of forgotten containers while still honoring your color balance and ambitious micronutrient focus.
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