advertisement

Giving gifts from your pantry, not stores

A tight budget is a good excuse to look to your pantry for gift-giving inspiration.

Gifts from the kitchen, such as a box of homemade holiday cookies or jars of jazzed up hot cocoa mix, not only are easy and inexpensive to prepare, they also add a personal touch in this gift card era.

Making a great food gift is a balance between culinary creativity and clever packaging ideas.

Lucinda Scala Quinn, executive director of food and entertaining for Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, suggests using colored parchment or plastic to wrap bite-size pieces of homemade fudge. Twist the ends to look like old-fashioned candy and package them up in a cellophane bag tied with a ribbon. Or use the candies individually as stocking stuffers.

Quinn says that flavored nuts also make lovely holiday gifts, especially when portioned in decorative cupcake liners, placed inside cellophane bags and tied with colored twine or ribbon.

Or use a recipe for easy-to-make homemade cocktail mixers in flavors such as cranberry and apricot-ginger fizz. To package, decant them into decorative bottles (found at many home good stores) and add a label with drink recipes and storage instructions.

If you want to avoid bottling, Quinn suggests making sachets of spices for mulling wine or cider. Just fill squares of cheesecloth with a 1/2-inch cinnamon stick, 1 star anise, 2 cardamom pods, 4 black peppercorns and 1/4 teaspoon of whole cloves. Tie each sachet with twine and package in a tin tied with a bow and holly sprig.

The best food gifts often are the simplest, says Tanya Steel, editor-in-chief of Epicurious.com. Not only are they easy to appreciate, they also save you time. Steel gravitates toward pretty jars with screw-on tops and airtight plastic containers - it's important that containers are airtight so that food gifts remain fresh and sturdy, especially for cookies, which crush easily. And if the containers will come into contact with the food, make sure they are labeled food-safe.

To be even thriftier, Steel suggests repurposing containers that may be sitting around your home. Jars and old tins are great, she says, but you also can package foods in an airtight cellophane bag set in a pretty bowl that you no longer use.

These gifts also are a good way to involve children in the gift process.

And don't forget, there also is the gift of time. Especially for an elderly relative or neighbor, a "gift certificate" good for an afternoon of help in the kitchen can be more valuable than any material item.

Give a gift with international flair like this dry chimichurri rub. The combination of herbs and spices are a regular fixture in Argentine cooking. Associated Press
Cocktail mixers apricot-ginger fizz mixer, foreground and cranberry cocktail mixer, left, are inexpensive gifts that have style. Associated Press

<div class="infoBox"> <h1>Recipes</h1> <div class="infoBoxContent"> <div class="infoArea"> </div> <div class="recipeLink"> <ul class="moreLinks"> <li><a href="/story/?id=344245" class="mediaItem">Dry Chimichurri Rub </a></li> <li><a href="/story/?id=344244" class="mediaItem">Cranberry Cocktail Mixer </a></li> <li><a href="/story/?id=344243" class="mediaItem">Apricot-Ginger Fizz Mixer </a></li> </ul> </div> </div> </div>

Article Comments
Guidelines: Keep it civil and on topic; no profanity, vulgarity, slurs or personal attacks. People who harass others or joke about tragedies will be blocked. If a comment violates these standards or our terms of service, click the "flag" link in the lower-right corner of the comment box. To find our more, read our FAQ.