Want to customize this content for your business?

Learn More

Categories

  • Home
  • Decor
  • Real Estate
  • Life & Culture
  • Food & Recipes
  • Holiday & Entertaining

  • Printables
  • Videos


General

  • About the Magazine
  • Advertise
  • Copyright
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Careers


Editorial

  • Editorial Calendar
  • Issue Archive
  • Contact Us
  • Pitch an Idea

American Lifestyle Magazine Logo
  • Food & Recipes Categories
    • All Recipes (785)
    • Appetizers (147)
    • Breakfast (64)
    • Cooking Tips (38)
    • Desserts (239)
    • Dinner (252)
    • Drinks (59)
    • Gluten Free (9)
    • Healthy (77)
    • Lunch (18)
    • Quick & Easy (67)
    • Vegan (38)
    • Vegetarian (59)
Lemon & Blueberry Coffee Cake
All Recipes | Nov 26, 2025

Lemon & Blueberry Coffee Cake

  • Holiday & Entertaining Categories
    • Celebrate (5)
    • Christmas (110)
    • Easter (17)
    • Entertaining (57)
    • Fall (67)
    • Father’s Day (5)
    • Halloween (34)
    • Hanukkah (25)
    • July 4th (31)
    • Mother’s Day (7)
    • New Year’s (24)
    • Spring (29)
    • St. Patrick's Day (14)
    • Summer (53)
    • Thanksgiving (55)
    • Valentine’s Day (8)
    • Winter (82)
Woman setting table
Entertaining | Dec 2, 2025

Must-Haves for Effortless Entertaining

  • Decor Categories
    • Crafts & DIY Projects (288)
    • Curb Appeal (5)
    • Decorate (94)
    • Interior Design (116)
@shelbybournephoto
Interior Design | Nov 17, 2025

Crafting a Modern Sanctuary

Tree decorated
Decorate | Oct 23, 2025

Terrific Tree-Decorating Styles

Backyard
Interior Design | Jul 30, 2025

Styling a Sunny Tampa Bay Abode

  • Real Estate Categories
    • Buying & Selling (172)
    • Home Trends (16)
    • Staging (19)
    • Your First House (30)
Moving truck
Buying & Selling | Mar 25, 2025

The Proper Way to Unpack

Historic home
Buying & Selling | Aug 15, 2024

Living in History

Flower
Buying & Selling | Jul 31, 2024

Four Ways to Increase Your Home’s Value

  • Life & Culture Categories
    • Editorial (354)
    • Family & Pets (233)
    • Finances (33)
    • Health (169)
    • Travel (323)
Editorial | Dec 5, 2025

From Adversity to Artistic Success

Editorial | Nov 13, 2025

A Fruitcake Phenomenon

Griffin Museum of Science and Industry
Christmas | Oct 28, 2025

Merriment at a Midwestern Museum

  • Home Categories
    • Cleaning (45)
    • Organizing (55)
    • Home Improvement (94)
    • Outdoors & Gardening (78)
© Getty Images
Home Improvement | Aug 29, 2025

The Magic of Drive-In Theaters

Art in home
Home Improvement | Jul 17, 2025

Elevate Your Home with Art

Flower
Outdoors & Gardening | May 19, 2025

Create Your Blossom Bliss

Follow us on social media today!

Facebook Twitter LinkedIn

Vegetables You Can Buy Once and Regrow Forever!

SHARE
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn More

Ever wonder how you could make your favorite vegetables last longer? You can, just by saving your vegetable leftovers and regrowing them in water. It’s a simple, cost-saving way to get the most of your veggies, keep your fridge replenished, and reduce your grocery bill!

For many vegetables, you only need to place the scraps into a bowl of water and they’ll start growing on their own. Of course, you should make sure that the container you use is appropriate for the size of the vegetable, and that you check the vegetable every day to see if it still has enough water. We’ve listed some examples of commonly eaten vegetables below, but keep in mind that this method of regrowing can work for other vegetables as well, such as cabbage, fennel and leeks.

 

Person gardening lettuce

Lettuce
Lettuce is one of those staples that tends to get used in all kinds of meals year-round, so chances are you’re buying a head of lettuce once a week or so. Cut back on your lettuce purchases by first cutting off the bottom of the lettuce head you already have at home. Then put the section in a small bowl with shallow water, about a half-inch. Then just leave it on a well-lit window sill, and replace the water every few days. Halfway through the first week, check out the center to see if anything’s growing. You might be pleasantly surprised by what you see! After about 2 weeks, you should have a new half-head of lettuce, so when you have enough green leaves sprouting up, eat away!

 

Pile of chopped celery pieces

Celery
Celery is one of the easiest foods to grow from leftover scraps. Just cut off the bottom 2 inches of the stalk, and place the stalk in a small bowl of water. Much like with the lettuce, make sure to keep the bowl in direct sunlight for as long as possible each day. After about 3-4 days, you should notice regrowth happening in the center of the stalk. Be patient while the celery growth process happens in that center, and you’ll be rewarded.

 

Box of veggies featuring green onions

Green Onion
If you tend to top your food with green onions a lot, this is a pretty simple way to ensure you always have some around. Keep the white part of the onion with any roots that are still intact. Drop the roots in a narrow drinking glass with enough water to cover them, and move the onion around so the roots are pointing down. Put that on a window sill that gets some sunlight. Make sure you change the water out once every couple of days so the roots don’t get greasy. Within about a week, you’ll have a brand-new set of green onions!

 

Person pulling carrots out of garden bed

Carrot Greens
People love their carrots, but they don’t often make use of the entire vegetable, discarding the carrot tops. Stop the waste and grow your own greens for a salad! When you prepare your carrots for consumption, leave about an inch of carrot with the carrot tops. Then put the cut-off ends in a shallow bowl of water, leave them where they can get sun, and watch those greens grow! Within a few days, you’ll see sprouts coming out of the carrot tops.

 


It’s amazing what you can do with a few vegetable leftovers, a little loving care and water. And just think of how much fun you’ll having bringing your vegetables to life!

17848 Views

Share on Social Media

,