In a world of elaborate recipes and endless grocery lists, it’s easy to feel overwhelmed every time you step into the kitchen. Cookbook author Lukas Volger cut through that noise by identifying eleven everyday ingredients that form the backbone of countless simple, satisfying meals. By focusing on these pantry and fridge staples, you’ll cook faster, waste less, and feel confident improvising without constantly referring to recipes.
Why an 11-Ingredient Checklist Works
• Streamlined shopping
• Less food waste
• More meal flexibility
• Fewer last-minute store runs
Mastering these eleven ingredients gives you a toolkit for smart, adaptable cooking. Here’s the checklist—and how to put each item to work.
- Dried Beans
Stock up on black beans, chickpeas, lentils or cannellini beans. Soak and simmer a batch or use the quick-cook varieties. Beans add protein to grain bowls, soups, salads and stews. - Hardy Greens
Kale, Swiss chard, collards or mustard greens hold up to sautéing, braising and soups. Wilt them into pasta sauces, layer into quesadillas or stir into curries for color and nutrition. - Silken Tofu
Not just for vegans—silken tofu purees into ultra-creamy sauces, smoothies and desserts. Gently scoop into miso soup, blend into vegan mayo or fold into scrambled eggs for extra protein. - Tortilla Stacks
Flour or corn tortillas keep for weeks. Use them for tacos and enchiladas, crisped into chips or layered into quick pizza stacks with cheese and sauce. - Winter Squash
Butternut, acorn or spaghetti squash roast beautifully and store for days. Puree into soup, cube for salads or mash with warming spices like cinnamon and nutmeg. - Summer Squash
Zucchini and yellow squash sauté quickly or spiralize into “zoodles.” Add to stir-fries, fritters, ratatouille or fold raw ribbons into chilled pasta salads. - Cabbage
Green, red or napa cabbage stays crisp in the fridge for weeks. Shred it for slaws and sauerkraut, chop into stews or roast wedges alongside potatoes and onions. - Cauliflower
Florets steam, roast or puree in place of mashed potatoes. Riced cauliflower makes low-carb rice bowls, while thick steaks of cauliflower grill or bake with bold seasonings. - Mushrooms
Button, cremini or shiitake mushrooms lend meaty umami to sauces, risottos and stir-fries. Sauté in butter or oil, season with soy or balsamic, and add depth to vegetarian dishes. - Potatoes
White, Yukon gold or sweet potatoes are endlessly versatile. Roast, mash, fry or cube into soups and hash. Potatoes absorb flavors and stretch a meal without breaking the bank. - Eggs
A kitchen MVP—boiled, scrambled, fried or poached. Eggs bind meatballs, thicken custards, lift baked goods and create effortless breakfasts, lunches or dinners.
How to Build Smarter Meals
• Mix and match one protein (beans, tofu, eggs) with one starch (tortillas, potatoes, squash) and one vegetable (greens, cabbage, cauliflower).
• Flavor boosters such as garlic, onion, citrus, soy sauce or chili paste transform simple ingredients into crave-worthy dishes.
• One-pot cooking melds flavors and cuts cleanup—think soups, stews, sheet-pan dinners and skillet bakes.
• Batch prep dried beans, roasted squash, cooked grains and chopped veggies to assemble meals in minutes.
By keeping these eleven ingredients on hand and learning how they work together, you’ll spend less time planning and more time enjoying home-cooked food. Cooking smarter—not harder—means trusting your instincts, experimenting without fear, and always having a stocked kitchen that supports your appetite and lifestyle.