The hidden pantry manager

Users ask me sometime to add a pantry manager to Shop’NCook software. So here is the news flash:

Shop’NCook has had a hidden pantry manager for years.

OK, now I see you become a little sceptic. I mean, why would I hide such a useful feature in my software?

The truth is, when I wrote this feature, I didn’t realize it was a pantry! For lack of a better term, I called it: “The list of items that are automatically deselected” – which is an apt description of what it does but that doesn’t help understanding what it’s useful for. That is, until a customer pointed out to me that it is actually a pantry.

The pantry manager is a very useful feature and I warmly encourage you to use it, if you aren’t already. It lets you keep track of the ingredients you have at home so that they don’t get added to the shopping list. Without it, you get a lot of things you don’t need to buy on your shopping list – like water, salt, pepper, etc. – and have to remove them manually each time. The pantry manager is still rudimentary: if you would like it to do more, let me know!

I tell you below how to set it up, what it does and the best way to use it.


Accessing the pantry manager

You find the pantry manager in the Shopping List tab of the preferences. To enable it, select the checkbox next to “Enable the list of items that are automatically deselected” and click on the “Edit List” button.

Enabling the hidden pantry

This is what you will see at the beginning:

Hidden Pantry Editor

Adding ingredients to the pantry

You need to add to the pantry the ingredients you have usually on hand. For example, I have always a few packs of flour at home, enough for any single recipe, so that usually I don’t need to add it to my grocery list. Here is how you add an ingredient to the pantry manager:

Adding an ingredient to the hidden pantry

Click first on the Add button (1). It will create an empty line at the bottom of the list. Type the name of the ingredient (flour) you want to add in the white field (2). Click then on the arrow at the end of the field (3) and select the appropriate item of the database (4).

The color of the ingredient has now turned black, showing it has been correctly added to the pantry list:

Adding an ingredient to the pantry (2)

There are also ingredients you keep on hand but not in sufficient quantity for every recipe. For example, I keep always a few eggs on hand, but they may not be sufficient for some cake recipes that require a lot of eggs. In this case, you can specify a threshold quantity from which it will be added anyway to the grocery list, as follows:

Adding a threshold quantity

After adding the ingredient to the list, type the quantity in the Quantity field, display the pull down menu of the Unit field and select the appropriate unit.

Here is what is looks like now:

Adding an ingredient with a threshold

When you are done adding ingredients to your pantry, save the list by clicking on the OK button and close the preference panel.

Shop’NCook will make sure you don’t add ingredients to your shopping list that you keep in your pantry. After setting up your pantry, the ingredients of a recipe may look like this:

Hidden pantry: effect on the shopping list

Note the ingredients that are deselected. They are not added to the shopping list by default: without the pantry feature, you would have to uncheck them manually.

Next, I explain below how you can keep your pantry stocked. But first, before reading the remaining, go ahead: take a piece of paper, go through your pantry and jot down the things you keep and the maximum quantities you are confident you always have on hand. Good candidates are:

  • staples (rice, pasta, sugar, flour, etc.)
  • seasoning you use in small quantities at a time and that keeps long (salt, spices, oil, sauces, etc.)
  • canned food
  • frozen food
  • perishables that you keep stocked (milk, butter, eggs, etc.)

To help get you started, here is my own list (it’s quite long, click here to jump to the end):

Staples:

  • flour (all-purpose, whole-wheat, bread)
  • rye flour
  • rice flour
  • glutinous rice flour
  • tapioca flour
  • cornmeal
  • cornstarch
  • pearl barley
  • millet
  • bulgur
  • dried beans (chickpeas, azuki, borlotti)
  • dried lentils
  • instant oatmeal
  • rice (Japanese, basmati, risotto, whole)
  • sugar (white, brown, fruit, confectioners’)
  • cocoa powder
  • baking chocolate
  • pasta (spaghetti, penne, macaroni, fusilli, bow-ties, lasagna)
  • rice noodles
  • crackers
  • coconut flakes
  • pineseeds
  • walnuts
  • ground almonds
  • ground hazelnuts
  • raisins
  • dried mango
  • nori
  • dried wakame seaweed
  • dried hijiki seaweed
  • dried kobu seaweed
  • dried shiitake mushrooms
  • dried cèpe mushrooms
  • dried morille mushrooms
  • water

Spice and condiments:

  • salt (table, sea, garlic, herbs, fleurs de sel, cardamon)
  • pepper (whole black, ground white, raclette mix)
  • paprika
  • dried bay leaves
  • dried oregano (whole, ground)
  • dried rosemary (whole, ground)
  • dried thyme (whole, ground)
  • dried tarragon
  • cloves (whole, ground)
  • paprika
  • red pepper (flaked, ground)
  • cinnamon (ground, stick)
  • ground coriander
  • onion powder
  • saffron
  • cumin seeds (whole, ground)
  • ground curcuma
  • powdered ginger
  • anise seeds
  • sesame seeds
  • shichimi togarashi
  • advieh-ye spice mix
  • herbes de provence
  • fajitas spice mix
  • curry powder (mild, madras, hot)
  • dried nasi goreng spice mix
  • dried rose petals
  • vanilla beans
  • nutritional yeast
  • aromat
  • bouillon cubes (vegetable, chicken)
  • dashi
  • gara-soup no moto
  • katsuo boshi
  • oil (extra-virgin olive, sunflower, sesame, chili)
  • butter ghee
  • vinegar (rice, wine, balsamic)
  • wine (red, white)
  • sake
  • mirin
  • whisky
  • balsamico cream
  • French salad dressing
  • Ketchup
  • tonkatsu sauce
  • oyster sauce
  • worcestershire sauce
  • soy sauce
  • ponsu
  • curry paste (hot, madras, vindaloo, korma, Japanese)
  • pickles
  • pickled onions
  • hot lime pickle
  • mango chutney
  • tsukemono
  • umeboshi
  • toubanjan
  • sambal oelek
  • mustard (mild, whole-grain)
  • capers
  • mayonnaise
  • wasabi
  • karashi
  • miso
  • horseradish cream
  • marzipan
  • pear concentrate
  • instant chocolate powder
  • maple syrup
  • jam (apricot, cherry)
  • honey
  • candied lemon
  • candied orange
  • lemon zest
  • tea (black, green)
  • instant coffee
  • black currant syrup
  • baking powder
  • baking soda
  • instant yeast
  • potash
  • cream of tartar
  • agar-agar
  • gelatin
  • vanilla sugar
  • vanilla extract
  • almond extract
  • lemon extract
  • rum extract
  • cake decoration

Canned food:

  • canned sardine
  • canned anchovy
  • canned tuna
  • canned tomato
  • canned sweet corn
  • canned tomatoes
  • canned tomato paste

Frozen food:

  • frozen shrimp
  • frozen prawns
  • frozen squid
  • frozen nato
  • frozen spinach
  • frozen green peas
  • frozen vegetable mix
  • frozen broccoli
  • frozen chestnut
  • frozen chestnut paste
  • frozen cherry

Perishables:

  • milk (limited quantity)
  • butter (limited quantity)
  • half & half (limited quantity)
  • heavy cream (limited quantity)
  • cream cheese (limited quantity)
  • parmesan (limited quantity)
  • eggs (limited quantity)
  • plain yogurt (limited quantity)
  • cherry tomatoes (limited quantity)
  • apples (limited quantity)
  • carrots (limited quantity)
  • parsley (limited quantity)
  • onions
  • red onions
  • shallots
  • garlic
  • fresh ginger root
  • apple juice
  • orange juice

The list only includes the ingredients likely to be used in recipes. I haven’t included ready-made food like breakfast cereals, cookies and baby food for example that are not used to cook.

You are bound to keep very different ingredients on hand, so make sure you go through your own pantry, then add all the ingredients to the pantry manager.

What other ingredient do you keep in your pantry?

Keeping the pantry stocked

A good way to keep the pantry stocked is to create a sublist with all your pantry ingredients in it. You can also add to it other non-ingredient items, like cleaning supplies for example.

Pantry sublist

To keep track of the pantry items that need replenishing, a post-it on the fridge does fine. If you would like a more high-tech solution, a note on your iPhone works too. The day you create your grocery list, select on the sublist the pantry items you wrote down and add them to the shopping list.

What is your favorite way of managing your pantry?

9 Comments

  1. Peter Gordon says:

    The Hidden Pantry is brilliant!!

    What I would like to see included is a use by and best before date reminder alert.

    For eg. the product turns red and alerts the user that the product may not be suitable for consumption.

    This will allow the date to be inserted in a field when entering a product.

    Regards

    Peter

  2. K Quinn says:

    Can I print either of these lists? That would be great to just post them on the inside of the door. Also the sublist is a new feature for me. Can I create that easily or do I need to manually enter items here. I need to make a freezer one.

  3. Mathilde says:

    K Quinn,

    You cannot directly print a sublist, but you can create a new shopping list, add to it the ingredients of the sublist and then print the shopping list.

    Also, the most convenient way to create a sublist is by making a shopping list with all the ingredients you want to include and then save it as sublist (File menu).

  4. Patricia says:

    I posted this question somewhere else, but now can’t find it.

    It appears there is a way to barcode scan items in (and out?) of the pantry, according to the users manual. But the instructions aren’t helping.

    Am I misunderstanding.

    Also I agree with Peter about the suggestions for “best by” dates.

    Thanks.

  5. Mathilde says:

    Patricia,

    At the time being, you can only use the barcode scanning to input data into a supermarket. Scanning items in and out of the pantry is in the plan, but not yet available.

  6. Robert Carroll says:

    Thanks for the notes on the hidden pantry manager. They will be most useful as I am just starting to seriously use the programme.

  7. […] you have prepared a sublist with your pantry ingredients as recommended in an earlier post, have a glance at it and make sure you have enough of them for […]

  8. Bill Adkins says:

    I’m new to shopncook software (I was using MacGourmet) but one feature that I’ve been looking for is the ability to USE UP stuff in my pantry or freezer. If we inventoried what was in the pantry and freezer perhaps some rudimentary background scan of our ingredients vs “you’re most of the way there to this recipe” prompts would be helpful?