Feta cheese
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Those are hummus shovels in this house.
Essential ingredient in almost every Soup Stock.
Honestly I hate it on its own but it goes well in every soup I've ever made.
Mirepoix is in a lot of stuff besides soup as well. Onions, carrots, and Celery base.
We used to have a prep bucket that we would fill with all our ends of onion, celery, carrots, sometimes tomatoes and garlic in. It would get put in a bag, dated and frozen. Then we would make stock from it when we had enough. Reduced to a quarter 4 times if I remember right.
We also used to save all our fish and meat trimmings separately so we could use it in the stock making depending on what kind of soup were going to make.
I still make turkey stalk with the thanksgiving caucus. Then make turkey soup. My favorite part of thanksgiving/christmas turkey! There is almost no waste when I cook for the holidays.
In Louisiana we have the holy Trinity: onion, celery, and green bell pepper add the basis for most of our foods.
If you want something easy, maybe mix that with some scrambled eggs and rice. Otherwise, peanut butter? Haha
Peanut butter and peanuts?
Add a small amount of chopped celery to a large amount of ground beef, eggs, and breadcrumbs for meatloaf. Use the remaining celery to feed rabbits, then make rabbit stew!
Celery, onion, and carrots are the base to any soup
Also known as mirepoix.
Not any soup, but many European-style soups. I don't like celery on its own, so that's what I would do with it: chop it up and freeze it. Use it for soup as needed.
It's good in soups and roasts. I've seen people dip it in ranch too.
Use your celery as an ingredient to make other things amazing. Mirepoix would be my first suggestion.
Tangentially related: It's also great to add to a stock, and if you ever get a grocery store rotisserie chicken, you should consider making stock with it after you've cleaned off all the meat you want. Skin, bones (broken bones are even better), celery, onions, carrots... Even onion skins and those celery leaves I mentioned, it can all go in, you just strain everything out after you're done cooking.
Pretty much any time you cook meat, consider incorporating celery into the ingredient list. It's a friendly companion.
We always use celery when we make stock for our dogs, as we make their food using fish stock or beef stock. We get super cheap bags of salmon meat (like 5 pounds for $5) at the local farmers market and then use all of that to make stock. We get enough stock to last about 6 months per batch.
I too use stock for making food for my dogs. I'll also make jello treats, it's cheap, they love it, it's really good for them.
This is the correct answer. Celery is an ingredient, not something you eat on its own. You CAN eat raw onion chunks, but most don't. Better as an ingredient.
has anyone said "just salt" yet?
Unpopular opinion... Celery is delicious plain
(Not the super green stuff, that's only good for cooking
Peanut butter and raisins.
Ants on a log!
Peanut butter ~~and raisins~~.
So close!
I’m with you. Raisins aren’t bad but totally overboard in this context.
How tf you gonna make bumps on a log without the bumps?!
If the bumps tasted like peanut butter I’d be fine with it!
So just peanuts?
crunchy peanut butter
Any of the "salads": Tuna salad, chicken salad, egg salad, potato salad benefit from a little added celery, both as an added flavor component as well as for a little texture and crunch.
While I use celery in a lot of cooking, I tend not to be able to use an entire bunch of it before it goes bad. So, whenever I buy it, I use what I can, and then I chop the rest up and freeze it. Then I can pull out what I need for cooking purposes at my leisure, and I don't end up wasting much celery.
All the options you mentioned for eating the celery raw are great. I'd also add cream cheese to that list.
If you don't like celery uncooked, this is a great way to ruin a salad. It sounds like that probably doesn't apply to OP, though.
Any french/ Italian that calls for the three veg onion, carrot, celery (they have a name for it). I use it in my spaghetti sauce.
Mirepoix! You can also swap the carrot for bell pepper to get the Cajun equivalent
That’s the holy trinity.
Cream cheese. Hot sauce. Even just salt
Blue cheese or ranch dressing.
Cheez wiz, as the name implies its a cheese spread that comes in a jar.
I use a good amount along with carrots when I make split pea soup.
It's also good in chicken salad alongside grapes and chopped almonds.
They are an excellent addition to any compost bin.
I kid (not a huge fan when celery is out with other things but don’t mind it on its own). Definitely gotta have it in a Bloody Mary / Bloody Caesar though.
Frankly you can get more or less the same flavor in mirepoix using celery seed. The flavor of the plant, on its own, is that of satans taint sweat.
A light bit of salt. Buffalo sauce mixed with Bleu cheese or ranch. Put some food dye in a cup and watch it grow up the stalk.
Tunafish.
Tuna Salad for sure.
My wife says cream cheese and fruit jams/preserves.
ranch
I love it with hummus.