tatty bojangles (
apocalypsos) wrote2009-03-26 08:52 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Entry tags:
One bottle of Pepsi, one bottle of amaretto, one cheesecake. DONE. Breakfast of champions.
The article linked in this Jezebel post, in which two food critics at the Post give themselves a challenge to create dinner for under fifty bucks. That's right, fifty American dollars.
Fifty bucks buys me two weeks worth of groceries. Three if I invest in Ramen noodles.
That's not even mentioning that, as the Jezebel post points out, the entire challenge suffers from the same thing a lot of these articles suffer from -- the recipes are always so damn complicated it's hard to find someone who can pull it off.
I'm reminded of the Top Chef episode from this season when the quickfire challenge was basically to make a quick meal in under fifteen minutes (IIRC) from the basic dried and canned goods you'd find in, say, my cupboards. You would think Padma had led all of the contestants' pets out into the kitchen and set them on fire. OH NOES! WE HAVE TO COOK LIKE EVERYDAY PEONS! They moaned, they whined, you expected at any minute that they were about to throw a tantrum.
I adore the uncomplicated cheap recipes in the comments of the Jezebel post. Because when I saw "fifty bucks for one dinner," all I could think was, "A buck for a bag of frozen broccoli, a buck for a bag of frozen cauliflower, a buck for a box of elbow noodles, and a buck for a little tub of butter. And that would feed me for a WEEK, if I were desperate."
Fifty bucks buys me two weeks worth of groceries. Three if I invest in Ramen noodles.
That's not even mentioning that, as the Jezebel post points out, the entire challenge suffers from the same thing a lot of these articles suffer from -- the recipes are always so damn complicated it's hard to find someone who can pull it off.
I'm reminded of the Top Chef episode from this season when the quickfire challenge was basically to make a quick meal in under fifteen minutes (IIRC) from the basic dried and canned goods you'd find in, say, my cupboards. You would think Padma had led all of the contestants' pets out into the kitchen and set them on fire. OH NOES! WE HAVE TO COOK LIKE EVERYDAY PEONS! They moaned, they whined, you expected at any minute that they were about to throw a tantrum.
I adore the uncomplicated cheap recipes in the comments of the Jezebel post. Because when I saw "fifty bucks for one dinner," all I could think was, "A buck for a bag of frozen broccoli, a buck for a bag of frozen cauliflower, a buck for a box of elbow noodles, and a buck for a little tub of butter. And that would feed me for a WEEK, if I were desperate."
no subject
$50 for 2 people? That should be at least three days of groceries, even if you're not buying super-cheap.
Here'd be my $50:
Whole roasting bird: $8 (less if you catch a sale)
Yellow rice: $1.50
Egg noodles: $0.79 (less on sale)
Bag of whole carrots: $0.89
Three whole onions: $0.70 (whole bag is $2-3)
One clove of garlic: $0.30
Can of black beans: $0.60
Dozen eggs: $0.79
Half-gallon of milk: $3
Bag of frozen peas: $1
Bag of self-rising flour: $1.20
2 lb bag of sugar: $0.80
Bag of bread flour: $1.20
2 packs of yeast: $2
Salt: $1
Pepper: $1
Cinnamon: $2
Bag of frozen mixed veggies: $1
Sliced cheese: $2.79
Butter: $3
5 lb bag of taters: $2.50
The above ingredients are only a little more than half of $50, and I can whip you days and days of food from them.
1st night: Roast chicken with garlic, salt, pepper. Include carrots and potatoes.
Strip carcass, strain juice and reserve. Boil bones down for stock, reserve. Divide leftover meat.
2nd Day: Scrambled egg, milk.
lunch: Leftover roast chicken & veggies.
supper: Cook saffron rice, peas, & mix in shredded leftover chicken. Serve with black beans.
3rd day: breakfast: Cinnamon toast
lunch: Leftover chicken & yellow rice/black beans
supper: Last of the roast chicken leftovers
4th day: French toast with cinnamon
lunch: Leftover chicken & yellow rice
supper: Heat reserved stock, add leftover chicken, frozen veggies, onions, salt, pepper, garlic. Make loaf of crusty yeast bread.
5th day: Homemade bread & butter
lunch: leftover soup
supper: Grilled cheese & baked fries
So that's 5 days, and you haven't even used all the groceries you bought! :)
no subject
Still, if we convert it to ¥5000, I get by on less than that each week. Cereal or eggs for breakfast. Brown rice, veggies, fish and maybe a dumpling in my bento box. Make soup or stew on Sunday and eat it for dinner each day. Simple, healthy, inexpensive.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
I either haven't learned the trick to eating well when you're poor or I just am not a skilled enough buyer.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
(Caveat: I now live in Metro DC, which I came to by way of 3 years in NYC and 25 years in Boston.)
no subject
no subject
That's the disadvantage of more urbanized living. In NYC there were always good farmer's markets but that's markedly less true here in DC/NoVA, which makes me sadface. :-(
And about the only thing I used to like about Florida when I used to visit my grandparents there was Publix, hehe. Man they have a great bakery!
no subject
no subject
no subject
For more than 2, of course, you'll have to buy some additional groceries (10 lb bag of taters, 2 chickens or perhaps a pot roast, if they're on sale for a reasonable price, etc).
It's also helpful if you can stock up at sales and then freeze them (for example: buying turkeys when they go down to 29 cents/lb after Thanksgiving, butchering them and freezing them for eating over the next 3-6 months.) Whenever Publix has a sale on top sirloin ($2.99/lb one time! Cheaper than ground beef! But usually $3.99/lb) I buy one or two and put them back for future eating. If you slice them up and cook them, they're great over salad for cheap suppers (and one average-size top sirloin will feed all five of us with enough steak leftover for 2 lunchboxes.)
And making your own bread is tons cheaper than buying it - it takes a little work, but it tastes better, too.
no subject