• BurgerBaron
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    88 days ago

    Consider the food bank too probably.

    Bulk dry beans, bulk sack rice, canned beans for chilli when feeling lazy or on sale, meat only on steep discount usually making stew or chilli with the worse less/undesirable cuts. Stir fry when you find better ones. Frozen vegetables and fruit bags. Store brand usually. Basic frozen pizzas, pasta bags with tomato based pasta sauce. Pasta sauce cans are frequently on sale and baseline is a low price.

    Bananas, kiwis, and mandarin oranges are usually cheap in Canada anyways for fresh fruit.

    I have a meat grinder attachment on my used mixer, very useful.

    You can do a lot with apps like Paprika or Supercook. You add stuff you already have and it spits out only recipes with what you have on hand already. Helps me use up what I buy efficiently and stops you from getting bored of eating the same stuff. Less food waste and flavour bordeom is always good for mood and wallet.

    If you have space, gardening. Fruit trees alone fill a deep freezer eventually.

    • FritzApolloOP
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      48 days ago

      I’m growing potatoes, carrots, shallots, parsley and dill - and something called “mother of herbs” that I don’t really know how to cook with yet.

      I’ll check those apps out, cheers.

  • Sasha [They/Them]
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    88 days ago

    I used to fry a pan of frozen veggies with salt and thyme, but these days I’m often lucky enough to be able to get a lot of rescued food for free.

  • @[email protected]
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    8 days ago

    My ultimate struggle meal:

    In 1 pot:

    • Rice (the good one from a sack, forget about minute rice)
    • Carrots, sliced
    • Whatever is cheapest between Sweet potato, Pumpkin or Eggplant at the time, cut into cubes.
    • Thai Curry paste & Soy sauce
    • Salt
    • Cook 15 minutes
    • Put into a tortilla with mayonnaise

    Fast, really cheap, and has the important bonus that the only dish to clean is the 1 pot. When struggling, I also don’t feel like doing a lot of housework.

    Sadly, I can never remember the best ratios, so the mayonnaise is rather mandatory as it can save a rather bland filling. Sometimes, I splurge and use guacamole instead, sometimes I also put in mini-spring rolls from the same shop I buy the rice and curry.

    With my “recipe” out of the way, the important thing is to find some ingredients that have a low price for lot’s of weight, and then choose a recipe that’s like 90% cheap ingredients by weight. (Remember that some ingredients take on a lot of water, rice taking on twice it’s volume for example, so they’re cheaper than the price tag implies). I personally look for food that’s under 3€/kg. The other 10% of the meal can be way more expensive (curry paste in my recipe), but, because you only use so little of it, as a whole it’s still cheap.

    Probably the absolute cheapest meal are homemade hash browns, potatoes are ridiculously cheap, with apples being the cheapest fruit where I live. Next cheapest vegetable around here are carrots.

  • FritzApolloOP
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    218 days ago

    Seems like I need to educate myself on lentils and dry beans. Any EASY recipes welcome!

    • @[email protected]
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      68 days ago

      I cook beans and rice regardless of how its going. Nothing can beat that. And you can add anything you want, which makes beans really flexible.

      • FritzApolloOP
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        28 days ago

        I can cook rice OK, but it’s never really enjoyable to eat. Always too bland. Never tried cooking with dried beans and lentils so I’ll have to explore that. Cheers.

        • @[email protected]
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          38 days ago

          Look up recipes for seasoned rice, obviously it ups the cost a bit.

          Fry the dry rice in some type of oil until golden brown (stir regularly to prevent burning) then add some chicken stock or a bouillon cub to the water along with herbs and spices you like while the rice boils. I usually go with onion/garlic powder and some dried rosemary but fresh works good too.

        • @[email protected]
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          16 days ago

          Lazy mexirice: get a cup of rice or whatever amount you like, pour it over a hot pot already coated in hot olive oil. Shake it or stir the rice continuously in high heat. Keep looking at the oil wet rice. It will go from being fully clear to an opaque white. You can stop at white or continue until they get a more toasted brown orange color. At that point pour a good amount of ketchup from a squeeze bottle. Immediately following that with a cup of hot water. Now lower the heat fill the pot with enough hot water to cover the rice,. Finally cover the pot and wait 20 minutes. Add water if it dries too much.

          You could toast a tomato and then add onions and such, buy ketchup is the lazy way. I do add some garlic powder.

    • @[email protected]
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      78 days ago

      Fry onions in coconut oil, add lentils and water, season with garam masala and/or other herbs and spices, optionally add dried fruit and nuts, eat with rice. The best thing about this is that all ingredients keep well in the cupboard so you can stock up a little when you can afford to.

    • @[email protected]
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      38 days ago

      1bag dried black beans

      1half onion

      Vegetable oil

      Bay leaf

      Red pepper flakes

      Garlic

      Salt

      Water

      Pick out any bad looking beans, then place them in water to soak over night. Next day, drain the water, put beans in a pot with 1tbsp oil, salt, bay leaf, half an onion, and enough water to cover. Cook for about an hour or until beans are soft. This can be divided into 4-5 quart bags and frozen to store. Do not throw out the water, store it with the beans.

      Add about a cup of veggie oil, 1 tsp garlic, 2 tsp red pepper flakes to a pan. Cook over medium hear until aromatic. Add about 4 cups of beans and juice or 1 bag thawed. Stir carefully until it thickens, then mash with a slotted spoon/spatula/potato masher.

      The first half makes beans that goes great with basically anything, the second is true, authentic refried beans. As a honky boy who only ever had then from a can, the refried beans were life changing and I married the woman that taught me how to make them.

    • @[email protected]
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      8 days ago

      1 cup dry beans, 1.5 cups water in instant pot. Press the “beans” button and go back to Lemmy til pot beeps at you (about 45 minutes). Can’t get much simpler.

    • @[email protected]
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      18 days ago

      Soak the dried beans over night and the lentils at least for 2 or 3 hours.
      Fry an onion and some cloves of garlic in oil. I prefer olive oil, but take whatever is available.
      Add a good amount of canned tomatoes to it - canned tomatoes are typically more affordable than fresh ones while tasting better at the same time due to typically being harvested and processed when being ripe. Also they can be bought in bulk due to the long shelf-life.
      Put some spices in: pepper, cumin, oregano, thyme, cardamom go well with it, or whatever you like. If the fancier spices are too expensive, just pepper does quite well.
      Finally add whatever vegetables are available and affordable: bell peppers, carrots, mushrooms, green squash, whatever you can get and like.
      If you can get some minced meat, put it in the pot/pan before you add the canned tomatoes. The same goes for sausages: slice the sausages and roast them gently; it improves the taste.
      More affordable than minced meat (potentially healthier than sausages) and a good source of protein (next to the pulses, which contain a nice amount of protein already) would be eggs.
      Crack one, two, three eggs into the pan, put a lid on and let it cook for around 10 minutes. The result is close to eggs Benedict ;)
      Have fun and hang in there!

      • FritzApolloOP
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        28 days ago

        I had a similar (but much more primitive) dish:

        I’d pour a can of tomatoes onto sausages as they cooked. It sort of braised them. Then I’d add basil for a European touch, or curry for something more exotic. Not sure how dried beans and lentils will go, but I’ll have to try it. Cheers.

  • @[email protected]
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    758 days ago

    i think that it helps to always have some rice cooked and waiting to bump up the calorie count to almost any meal.

    • snooggums
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      748 days ago

      Rice, potatoes, beans, and lentils are all solid low cost choices.

      • @[email protected]
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        158 days ago

        I have to admit that I do not do beans nearly as much as I should. I think it is because canned beans are not nearly the deal money-wise as dried beans are … and I am not good at letting beans soak without forgetting them and ruining them.

        • Maeve
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          118 days ago

          I’m not sure they’re quite ruined if over soaked. Cooking time will be greatly diminished. I’ve left beans soaking for 24 hours because I forgot, they turned out fine.

        • @[email protected]
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          108 days ago

          You don’t actually need to soak them before you cook them.

          I’ve made plenty of bean dishes, starting with completely dry beans. It takes a little longer to cook because they are rehydrating while they cook, but they still come out great.

          • @[email protected]
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            108 days ago

            Adding to this. A pressure cooker brings the cook time down dramatically and I think it produces a superior result.

            • @[email protected]
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              28 days ago

              I second this.

              Also works for things like cheap pieces of beef which normally require long cooking times before you can comfortably eat them.

          • @[email protected]
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            78 days ago

            Part of the reason to soak is for them to release sone long proteins that are hard to digest. You can achieve the same result by carefully removing the foam they produce at the beginning of the cooking (or replace the water completely after 10-15 minutes of boiling)

            • @[email protected]
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              38 days ago

              Oh, cool. Thanks for sharing that, I wasn’t aware.

              That’s one of the reasons I love cooking. No matter how much I know, there’s always so much more to learn.

        • HubertManne
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          68 days ago

          dry lentils can be cooked with rice in a rice cooker right with them because they are so small.

        • Øπ3ŕ
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          58 days ago

          Fun fact FTW! Check out epazote for not only doing away with the pre-soak, but most of the renowned GI effects, too. 🖖🏼 A little goes a long way, (IIRC, ~ ½T for a 4-5gal pot) and it’s essentially dried grass. Get it from your local mercado/bodega for dirt cheap, change your life. 🥳

            • Øπ3ŕ
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              24 days ago

              In general, when looking for ingenuous “hacks” in food, start with the originating culture. Thousands of years of poor people making the process more efficient, reliable, and just plain better? Sign me up.

        • @[email protected]
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          17 days ago

          I started vaguely planning my meals by the week sort of by accident. A friend made me a “weekly planner” whiteboard that had a “menu” section I thought would be totally useless.

          But I started jotting down some ideas there, just on a whim, and I’ll be damned but I love it!

          I don’t always follow my own plan, and I often just write the main/protein part and wing it a bit, but it’s great having at least an idea what’s coming down the pipe for the week, so I can actually plan prep and shopping, and use up what I have. It looks something like:

          MON lentils
          TUE beans
          WED tofu
          .... 
          

          Etc, so like now I know to soak beans overnight on Monday, and go buy tofu before Wednesday.

      • @[email protected]
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        338 days ago

        A friend had a recipie for a dinner he ate almost every night in college. One can of beans. One can of diced tomatoes. Put in microwave. Spice to taste. He called it “beans and tomatos”.

      • memfree
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        208 days ago

        Yup. Buy dry beans and dry rice – none of that precooked stuff. Buy fresh potatoes tho. If you can afford it, I’d also get a bag of onions, maybe carrots, and some spices that do NOT contain salt. You can also buy salt, but it is way cheaper per-gram to get salt and other spices on their own. Note that brown rice has more vitamin content than white rice (thiamine deficiency), but most white rice is enriched to compensate.

  • @[email protected]
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    148 days ago

    I started eating a lot of chickpeas recently. Buy them dried, boil them for a couple minutes them let them soak in the water for a few hours. Then either roast them in the oven or if I’m lazy, toss them in the microwave for like 5 minutes, then add some seasoning. I snack on them between meals, or also toss them into things like soup or curry.

    Also if you want a different take on ramen, boil them until they are al dente, drain the water and then stir fry with some cheap veggies or whatever.

    • ComradeSharkfucker
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      8 days ago

      There is this curry spice blend that comes in a small green carboard box (fits in your hand) that I find at a local indian groacery store. Its specifically made for chickpea curry. Anyway dump a bunch of this shit and a little salt on your chickpeas before roasting. Its genuinely so goddamn good I eat it every other day atleast. I’ll see if I can’t find the name

      Found it

  • @[email protected]
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    248 days ago

    Rice and beans is the staple pretty much everywhere else.

    Don’t buy ultra processed Mac and cheese or frozen pizza. It’s nutritionally bad for you, and won’t keep you full for long.

    Start with rice and beans and canned sauce. Cheap, easy, and good for you.

    You can obviously add chicken/tofu/protein, or try to start making sauces yourself. But always keep the rice and beans as a base. Every meal you eat, rice and beans. They’re cheap as hell and close to what we evolved to eat.

    • @[email protected]
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      68 days ago

      the answer is always either rice and beans or potato.

      I’m a fan of Cuban rice and beans. I can’t make it all that well but it’s good enough and my version is palatable. Dirt in the hole!

  • snooggums
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    158 days ago

    Back in my early 20s there were a few things.

    • Making beanie weenies were pretty inexpensive
    • Ramen is the old standby
    • Totino’s party pizzas were also cheap calories
    • Canned soups, stretched out with cheap crackers
    • Peanut butter on celery or toast

    No idea if those are still cost effective, but two or three of those could be stretched out over a week for under $10 at the time. I still eat all of those things at least every few years for some hits of nostalgia, even the cheap ass pizza.

    • @[email protected]
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      8 days ago

      This is all processed food that’s not only more expensive than just cooking something but also horribly unhealthy. Loaded with sodium.

      • @[email protected]
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        108 days ago

        Assuming someone asking how to eat when poor has access to fresh ingredients and the time/means to prepare them

        • @[email protected]
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          8 days ago

          I agree that how healthy something is should be put on the back burner (hah!), true, but when cost is the most important factor, produce is unbeatable. While not created equal, the means to prepare for most are 1 pot, 1 board and 1 knife, and there sure are recipes that don’t take up too much time.

          Someone asking for recipes can be expected to have some time to cook them, while working 2 jobs is way too common nowadays, there are still more people struggling for money with some time on their hands. If you have no money, no time and no energy for cooking, you’re beyond asking for advice and should instead be asking for help.

            • @[email protected]
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              18 days ago

              Every supermarket I ever went to had a vegetable aisle and potato sacks for a few €. Variety in produce may be low, but that’s what a Turkish supermarket is for.

              Granted, I never lived in an American BestBuy town, so this might be a cultural thing. But produce being unavailable or even just being out of one’s way seems insane to me. You sure that normal where you live?

                • @[email protected]
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                  18 days ago

                  Well, same back to you. I never doubted you having that experience, but I asked if it’s normal.

                  Your own source says it’s only 12.8% of the US living in such areas. So it’s safe to assume that OP would also be interested in the cheaper recipes that involve mostly produce. Your life experience isn’t universal either.

        • @[email protected]
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          68 days ago

          Rice and beans are available pretty much everywhere. Granted it might be farther than a corner store but it keeps so it is worth it even in a food desert.

      • snooggums
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        8 days ago

        When I was really low on money I had one small saucepan, one pan, a spatula, and a few dishes and silverware. No soup pot, no mixing bowels, or any other prep stuff. No spices or other ways to make flavorful food.

        Cheap processed food is more affordable in the short term than spending money on stuff that will make cooking cheaper in the long run. I’m not saying it was the best choice, just answering the question of what I did make.

        • @[email protected]
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          58 days ago

          Crock pots are relatively cheap and often available second hand, so are larger pots. I have been poor and know exactly how hard it is to feed myself with little to no money left after bills. Buying junk is not cheaper, it doesn’t actually sustain you.

          • snooggums
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            8 days ago

            I’m really enjoying you second guessing all the decisions I made when I was poor! Not only was I struggling, but apparently did it completely wrong!

            • @[email protected]
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              28 days ago

              No, I’m second guessing the advice you’re passing on now. Just because you were young and didn’t know better doesn’t mean you should teach other people to do the same things. Get over yourself.

                • @[email protected]
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                  28 days ago

                  Now you’re just being disingenuous, not only about the obvious nature of this thread but the obvious nature of your answer.

            • FritzApolloOP
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              58 days ago

              There are always people like that in these threads. Lemmy, Reddit, same thing. “Dirt broke and need to eat? Buy some kitchenware! It’s quite cheap if you have the money for it!” Don’t let them get to you!

              • snooggums
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                78 days ago

                Lol, in the long run it is totally worth having even the basics and being able to make food from scratch but when I was poor I was also working two jobs so didn’t have a lot of extra time for making food that took more than a few minutes.

                Being poor is really expensive!

                • @[email protected]
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                  38 days ago

                  “Anyone who has ever struggled with poverty knows how extremely expensive it is to be poor.” James Baldwin

              • @[email protected]
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                8 days ago

                Well considering I’m speaking from the experience of my own poverty, I might actually know what I’m talking about. I’m not saying go out and buy a $200 pot set. But you can get a $5 pot from a second hand store or garage sale, or these days something like Facebook marketplace that didn’t even exist when I was going through this, and you’ll make that up by not buying the garbage that the other person suggested. Your money will stretch a hell of a lot farther that way. Or you know, just dismiss me and other people because that person is insecure.

            • @[email protected]
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              28 days ago

              Third party here!

              That other guy needs to fuck right off. You’re contributing reasonable stuff, they are not. Fuck em.

  • @[email protected]
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    108 days ago

    Falafel: dried chickpeas with garlic & parsley fried in oil. Very high calorie/cost, because the chickpeas are basically oil sponges, and it’s hard to beat vegetable oil on calories/cost. $1.50 for 1000 calories.

    Kimchi fried rice: Kimchi, rice, couple of fried eggs for protein. $2.10 for 1000 calories. Make your own kimchi even cheaper.

    Chili noodles: cheap, store-brand spaghetti with chili oil-soy sauce dressing. Don’t sub ramen for pasta - that stuff’s expensive. $2.50/1000 cal. Make your own chili oil for extra savings.

    • @[email protected]
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      78 days ago

      To add to this, buying from specific ethnicity markets tends to be cheaper. If you have nearby Chinese/Eastern, any middle eastern, Mexican/Latin American stores, you can find a lot of really cheap staples to make.

      • @[email protected]
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        28 days ago

        I moved recently and the overall lack of ethnic stores is driving me up the walls! They are usually both cheaper and better quality than anything you find at the supermarket… I guess I moved to white-as-butter-land :/

        • @[email protected]
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          18 days ago

          Same here, Mexican food is my favorite, but new location has no decent Mexican restaurants or stores.

  • @[email protected]
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    138 days ago

    Basically pasta.

    I don’t know where you are, but a 500g pack can be had for significantly under 1€ and is sufficient for multiple meals. Add a similar priced can of tomatoes, onions (optional) and some spices (I assume you have those).

    Obviously there are other options for the sauce, many are cheap enough to consider when money is tight.

    • FritzApolloOP
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      38 days ago

      Yeah I’ll have to get creative with pasta. I can’t just eat rice, dried beans and lentils forever haha. Cheers.

    • @[email protected]
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      28 days ago

      While pasta might contain calories and some protein, there’s a lack of other nutrients.
      I advice going for pulses instead of pasta.
      Dried pulses have a long shelf-life so they can be bought in bulk to reduce the price per meal.

      • @[email protected]
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        18 days ago

        You can get nutrients from the sauce. IMO tomato sauce is very tasty and can be pretty cheap as well. Probably the cheapest would be tomato paste and water as a base. Or canned tomatoes. Depending on how cheap you want to go you can add vegetables to your liking. Onions are always great but also carrots or peas.

      • @[email protected]
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        28 days ago

        If you’re doing anything with pasta that involves butter you’re doing it wrong, but you do you.

          • @[email protected]
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            18 days ago

            I actually have. A can of tomatoes is (or at least was back then) cheaper than a pack of pasta, and can also last for more than 1 or even 2 servings. If I add (just) butter to the pasta, I’m making it worse because I’m one of the seemingly 5 people on earth who don’t like butter.

            But my comment was meant for pasta with (any) sauce, see my other reply.

        • @[email protected]
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          18 days ago

          An Italian home cooking staple is pasta with butter and sage. Just melt the butter with the sage and gently fry while boiling the pasta

          • @[email protected]
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            18 days ago

            Yes my statement was probably a bit too broad. I meant any pasta with a sauce you generally don’t want butter (or oil) on, as it causes the sauce to stick less to the pasta. Which is the whole point of having the sauce in the first place.

  • @[email protected]
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    148 days ago

    Really depends on the situation.

    If I’m just feeding myself, I have no issue with going outside and foraging for food. I don’t hunt, but I’m not the type that needs an animal based protein main entree in my meals, so it works/worked for me to collect wild vegetables, fruits, and fungi.

    And from there, I eat whatever is cheapest. Grocery store mark-downs and deep-discount sales would guide my decisions. If an acquaintance was giving away food, I’d take it. When the food bank is doing a giveaway and it was close enough for me to visit, I’d go there and take what they had to offer.

    At my poorest, when I had no access to a kitchen, peanut butter sandwiches were a mainstay. Tuna sandwiches were next best, but more expensive. At the time, powdered milk was a bit of a luxury, but it definitely helped wash down the peanut butter and was way cheaper by volume than fresh milk.

    A lot of stores and restaurants, at least where I live, will have condiment packages out in the open. Don’t go hog wild, but my experience is nobody cares/notices if you grab a few packs of whatever items are out: ketchup, mustard, mayo, honey, hot sauce, soy sauce, salt, and pepper – in moderation – so those can be free to you to use for meal prep.

    When I’ve just been broke and/or saving money, my main protein was usually chicken. I’d just buy whatever was cheapest on sale, and try to stock up a bit or get rain checks. Then I could cook that in a crock pot and literally have meals for days. Around Thanksgiving and Christmas, turkey usually goes on deep discount and there are almost always a myriad of programs that just give them away. If you have room in your freezer and a crock pot, then you can be set just from that.

    Add in some rice and/or beans/legumes to soak up the flavor when cooking meats.

    Eggs were also always a solid choice, pretty versatile because they could be hard boiled, scrambled, fried, mixed into other things like noodles, or used to cook/bake other dishes.

    Potatoes were another cheap source of carbohydrates, something that goes on sale often enough that I could usually find a deal, and if properly stored (cool, dark, dry) they can last a long time. Plus, they can go into the slow cooker with some chicken thighs and both ingredients benefit flavor-wise.

    So, meals would be whatever combination of those things you can physically obtain. Your meal items don’t have to have a name. If you have potatoes and mix those with scrambled eggs and mix in some wild dandelions, that’s still a meal even if that’s not going to show up in a recipe book. If you boil some noodles and add in some mayo and a pinch of rosemary from a bush you saw down the road, that’s still a meal. Basically, just get creative with what you’ve got.

  • @[email protected]
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    108 days ago

    Rice bowls, rice with chickpeas, rice with beans, throw some furikake and kimchi in there and some sriracha mayonaise.

    • @[email protected]
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      26 days ago

      I love ban chili, it’s relatively cheap, vegetarian and incredibly versatile. Meaning that with one big pot of chili you can have 3-4 different meals without having the feeling of eating the same thing over and over.

      I usually make a big pot and then the first day we can make burritos with tortilla shells, the next day nachos, you can eat it with rice, a baked potato use it as a base for soup or make vegetarian burger patties with it.

  • @[email protected]
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    118 days ago

    I eat cheap all the time, but rice and beans is the classic. If you can afford a can of tomatoes and some spices, then you can upgrade this to rajma masala. That’s one of my fav post workout meals. Throw in some alliums, and other vegetables as you can (frozen is often p cheap).

    Actually just look up vegan Indian recipes and source ingredients as cheaply as you can. Like dried beans, lentils, chickpeas, and spices — ideally purchased from bulk store — and you’ll be healthy and satisfied for less money than you would believe.