For that reason, I am a big fan of what I call the “two-for-one side dish” – a recipe made in one pan that does double duty as a grain and a vegetable.

This lovely, lemony pilaf is a prime example. In it, rice-shaped whole-grain orzo pasta is simmered in a skillet with a bounty of garden vegetables and herbs for a sumptuous side that takes less than 30 minutes to get on the table.

Rather than boiling and draining the orzo, as you would typically cook pasta, here you first toast it in a bit of olive oil, then cook it in broth in the same skillet until it is al dente. As a result, the pasta is enveloped in a sauce thickened with its own starch, which gives it a luxurious, risotto-like texture.

Adding zucchini and shredding it means it cooks in two minutes, integrates seamlessly with the grain and lends pretty flecks of green to the dish. Cherry tomatoes and tender herbs contribute more fresh taste and vegetable nutrition, and a squeeze of lemon juice adds a sunny acidity. Serve it alongside grilled chicken or fish for a flavorful and fulfilling meal.

Krieger’s most recent cookbook is Weeknight Wonders: Delicious, Healthy Dinners in 30 Minutes or Less (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2013). She blogs and offers a weekly newsletter at www.elliekrieger.com.