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A Month Of Dinners For Less Than $100
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A Month Of Dinners For Less Than $100
A Month Of Dinners For Less Than $100
Freezer Meals on the Cheap
September 30, 2013
June 3, 2011 By Natalie
Update: One thing I wanted to point out… a lot of people seem to be under the impression that I cook all of my meat ahead of time and then thaw it so I’m losing a lot with the quality of the meat. That is not the case and I’ll go read the rest of the post to see if I led you to believe that anywhere. The only meat I do cook ahead of time, is the shredded chicken, ground beef and taco. Everything else, gets frozen uncooked. I actually mention that this way it gets to marinate while it’s thawing and THEN we put it on the grill to cook.
I’ve been doing freezer meals for a couple years now, and admit that like most things in my life, I could stand to be a little more consistent with this! I probably have a “cooking day” about 3 times a year and those meals will tide us over for a couple months.
Have you ever heard the story about the boy who woke up on a gorgeous day and his dad told him he had to go out back and chop firewood. The boy asked why he had to spend a warm, summer day chopping firewood and the dad said it was so he didn’t have to do it on a cold, winter day.
That’s how I feel about freezer meals. It’s all about sucking it up and committing to an afternoon of slaving away in the kitchen, because you know it will make life SO much easier for the next couple months. This way, when you have that warm, summer day when you’re running your kids here and there and life seems so chaotic… dinner is already made and you look like supermom for doing it all and still putting a healthy dinner on the table!
First thing I do is look for sales! When I know I’m running low on meals and I see bags of onions are buy 1 get 1 free… well, that’s all the signs I need to get going!
My onions and potatoes were both B1G1. Woot, woot!!
Before I even get to the meat, I finely chop both bags of onions and 6 green peppers and finely grate a bag of carrots. Just keep these all in separate bowls and they’re all ready to go for whatever recipe you’re working on!
Then I wash all the potatoes and pop them in a 350 degree oven for about an hour.
I hit some massive meat sales this week and am thrilled with how little I spent! Nothing gets this girl excited like a good meat sale! : )
Are you seeing these prices??? $17 worth of sirloin for $6.50! A $13 pork loin roast for $4! I split that in half and got 2 meals out of it (which will each have leftovers!)! So that’s $2/meal for a family of 4! And that 92% fat-free ground beef… oh yeah, I got 8 packs of that! I also found boneless, skinless chicken breasts for 79 cents/lb., plus chicken breast w/ bone-in for $1/lb. I seriously cleaned up in the meat aisle. Ask your butcher at your local store what day they mark the meat down. Mine marks it down on Wed. mornings and there are always deals to be found!
Anyways… while your potatoes are cooking, plop about 2 lbs. of ground beef and a bunch of onions, green peppers and carrots into a cast iron skillet and let it do it’s magic. (side note, I throw grated carrots into A LOT. The kids don’t know they’re eating it, it bulks up your meal for little cost and why not??). Once this is all cooked and cooled, divide into quart size freezer bags. You’ll be so glad to have these on hand! Pull out to add to spaghetti sauce, sloppy joes, nachos for unexpected company… the list is endless!
After that’s done, in the same pan, cook up another 2 lbs. of ground beef, 2 cups of salsa, a can of diced jalapeno peppers, 2 tsbp. chili powder, 2 tsp. garlic powder, 2 tsp. onion powder, 1.5 cups of water, cumin, some brown sugar, garlic, a bunch of diced onions and whatever else you like to add to your taco meat!
Second story, same as the first… cook, cool and divide up between quart size bags. Great to pull out for tacos, taco salads, topping for a baked potato, nachos for unexpected company! : )
While all the above is cooking, you can get lots of other meals made! When I’m mixing up a marinade for meat, I mix it right in the gallon ziploc bag. Don’t dirty all those bowls if there’s no need for it!
Take it from this clumsy girl, don’t leave a bag filled with an oily marinade just sitting on the counter. What’s my method, you ask?? I take the bottom out of my blender (please remove that blade!!) and then just put my freezer bag in and wrap the top of the bag down the sides to hold it in place. Pour in your marinade ingredients and you can mix it right up!
One of my favorite (quick!) ways to get a lot of meals done in a short amount of time, is to make a big batch of one marinade and then use it on different types of meat. It doesn’t seem like you’re having the same meal over and over then!
We love a teriyaki marinade! I use 2 cups of soy sauce, 1.5 cups of sugar (it calls for 2 cups, but I decrease it), 1 cup of Mirin (rice cooking wine), A LOT of fresh garlic, salt & pepper. Use about 1/2 cup of the marinade for every lb. of meat. So you mix up this one batch of marinade and BAM… you just got yourself about 8 meals! I use it on steaks, chicken, pork chops, tuna steaks and shrimp.
During all this, throw a bunch of chicken (I use bone-in chicken for this), in a stock pot with water, a lot of chopped carrots, celery, onions and any spices you like. I simmer it, covered for about an hour or until the chicken is cooked. Pull your chicken out, throw away the veggies and let the broth cool. Once the broth is cool, freeze it for chicken stock for other meals. Shred your chicken and you end up with a mountain o’ goodness.
Split this up between quart size baggies and freeze. Use for chicken salad, tacos, enchiladas, wraps, etc. I already promised my son we can use one bag for buffalo chicken salads- after it thaws I’ll just throw it in a frying pan with a little butter and hot wing sauce for a couple minutes until it’s heated through and I will officially be his favorite mommy for the day! You could also make BBQ chicken salads. You can never have enough shredded chicken for summer meals!
Once your potatoes are done cooking and cooled enough to handle. Just slice them right down the middle and make some double-stuffed potatoes! Scoop the insides out into a bowl and add some butter, softened cream cheese, milk, chives and whatever else you like. Sometimes we add crumpled bacon, shredded cheese, ranch dressing… whatever we’re in the mood for. Use a potato masher until it’s all mixed in and then spoon the filling into your potato shells. I wrap these individually in plastic wrap and then put in a bag. On serving day you thaw and then bake in a 350 degree oven for 20 minutes or until heated through.
Summer freezer cooking is SO much easier than doing it for the colder months! It’s basically just a bunch of marinades and then you grill everything! If you aren’t feeling up to making your own marinades, you can still buy a bulk package of meat, split it up between freezer bags and just add some pre-bottled marinades! It’s still cheaper, your meal is prepared ahead of time and letting the meat marinate as it thaws will make it much more tender and flavorful!
My all-time favorite resource for freezer meal recipes is the book “Don’t Panic, Dinner’s in the Freezer!”. I’ve been using it for about 2 years now and every recipe has been a hit! Last year I bought their 2nd book and we haven’t tested as many of those recipes yet, but it’s also fantastic! One of my favorite parts of these cookbooks is they do all the conversions for you if you want to triple, x6 or x9 your recipes. This is fantastic, if you have a favorite recipe and want to triple it for 3 different kinds of meats!
This latest session of cooking took me about 4 hours and I got 46 meals out of it!! This is only about half of what I made today!!
Some of our favorites are:
Tomato Basil Soup
Sesame Chicken
Balsamic Roasted Chicken Thighs
Parmesan Garlic Chicken
Buttermilk Herb Chicken
Pesto Chicken
Cranberry Chicken
Dijon Pork Roast
Bourbon Brown Sugar Pork Chops
Hamburgers
Teriyaki anything!
If I have leftover carrots or onions when I’m done, I just freeze them in 1/2 cup increments and pull them out whenever I need them!
I didn’t get to it today, but I often will make huge batches of 40 or so waffles and freeze them so the kids can pull them out on a weekday morning! All ends from the bread loaf get frozen for bread crumbs. And I live by Chocolate World, so if I have time, I’ll stop in and buy their bags of day old cookies cheap and then freeze them for cheesecake crusts or crumb coatings. I also try to always have some cooked sausage (w/peppers, onions and carrots) frozen that can be pulled out on the weekend for omelets or a quiche.
If I’m making casseroles or meatloaf, I line the pan with plastic wrap and then fill the pan. Put the whole thing in the freezer and once it’s frozen solid, pop the plastic wrapped food out of the pan, put it in a freezer bag and now you still have your pan to use in the meantime. Just remember, when it’s time to use it, take the plastic wrap off while it’s still a frozen block and put it back in the pan to thaw!
I also found some other deals that I won’t even do anything with until it’s serving day!
Most of these things are normally $4.95/pack. I got them for 50 cents to $1/pack! What’s that you say??? AWESOME!!
Not including these “ready-to-go” meats up above, I prepared 46 meal starters for us for the summer! We have leftovers from nearly every meal, so this will actually get us much more than just the 46 meals. Add in these prepared meats above, the nights we’re away, cook-outs, etc… and I don’t really have to cook until about Sept.! And trust me, the hubster loves this too! If he gets home before me, dinner is thawing in the fridge with directions right on the bag. He plops it on the grill, throws the bag away and dinner is served with no mess to clean up afterwards!
I kept track of how much I spent on meat and veggies and just added extra money in for all the staples I used and I’m roughly guessing I spent about $95 on these 46 meals. That’s just over $2 per meal for our family of 4! I’ll take it!
Let me know if you have any questions and I’ll do my best to answer them! (and I’m by no means an expert!! Just learning by trial and error over here!)
Edited to Add: I did a follow-up post to this one where I tried to answer most of your questions! Please check out that post and this one and hopefully that helps! I’m still getting lots and lots of emails asking for all my recipes, and I’m REALLY sorry, but I’m not going to be posting them! The reason is that they aren’t my recipes! I take them from Don’t Panic- Dinner’s in the Freezer and I just don’t think it would be fair to those authors if I copied their recipes word for word here! Sorry, but the book is only $8 on Amazon! For anyone interested in buying the books I mentioned, I wouldn’t be opposed to you clicking directly on the links below! : ) Thanks!
http://www.diyhomeworld.com/a-month-of-dinners-for-less-than-100/
Freezer Meals on the Cheap
September 30, 2013
June 3, 2011 By Natalie
I’ve been doing freezer meals for a couple years now, and admit that like most things in my life, I could stand to be a little more consistent with this! I probably have a “cooking day” about 3 times a year and those meals will tide us over for a couple months.
Have you ever heard the story about the boy who woke up on a gorgeous day and his dad told him he had to go out back and chop firewood. The boy asked why he had to spend a warm, summer day chopping firewood and the dad said it was so he didn’t have to do it on a cold, winter day.
That’s how I feel about freezer meals. It’s all about sucking it up and committing to an afternoon of slaving away in the kitchen, because you know it will make life SO much easier for the next couple months. This way, when you have that warm, summer day when you’re running your kids here and there and life seems so chaotic… dinner is already made and you look like supermom for doing it all and still putting a healthy dinner on the table!
First thing I do is look for sales! When I know I’m running low on meals and I see bags of onions are buy 1 get 1 free… well, that’s all the signs I need to get going!
My onions and potatoes were both B1G1. Woot, woot!!
Before I even get to the meat, I finely chop both bags of onions and 6 green peppers and finely grate a bag of carrots. Just keep these all in separate bowls and they’re all ready to go for whatever recipe you’re working on!
Then I wash all the potatoes and pop them in a 350 degree oven for about an hour.
I hit some massive meat sales this week and am thrilled with how little I spent! Nothing gets this girl excited like a good meat sale! : )
Are you seeing these prices??? $17 worth of sirloin for $6.50! A $13 pork loin roast for $4! I split that in half and got 2 meals out of it (which will each have leftovers!)! So that’s $2/meal for a family of 4! And that 92% fat-free ground beef… oh yeah, I got 8 packs of that! I also found boneless, skinless chicken breasts for 79 cents/lb., plus chicken breast w/ bone-in for $1/lb. I seriously cleaned up in the meat aisle. Ask your butcher at your local store what day they mark the meat down. Mine marks it down on Wed. mornings and there are always deals to be found!
Anyways… while your potatoes are cooking, plop about 2 lbs. of ground beef and a bunch of onions, green peppers and carrots into a cast iron skillet and let it do it’s magic. (side note, I throw grated carrots into A LOT. The kids don’t know they’re eating it, it bulks up your meal for little cost and why not??). Once this is all cooked and cooled, divide into quart size freezer bags. You’ll be so glad to have these on hand! Pull out to add to spaghetti sauce, sloppy joes, nachos for unexpected company… the list is endless!
After that’s done, in the same pan, cook up another 2 lbs. of ground beef, 2 cups of salsa, a can of diced jalapeno peppers, 2 tsbp. chili powder, 2 tsp. garlic powder, 2 tsp. onion powder, 1.5 cups of water, cumin, some brown sugar, garlic, a bunch of diced onions and whatever else you like to add to your taco meat!
Second story, same as the first… cook, cool and divide up between quart size bags. Great to pull out for tacos, taco salads, topping for a baked potato, nachos for unexpected company! : )
While all the above is cooking, you can get lots of other meals made! When I’m mixing up a marinade for meat, I mix it right in the gallon ziploc bag. Don’t dirty all those bowls if there’s no need for it!
Take it from this clumsy girl, don’t leave a bag filled with an oily marinade just sitting on the counter. What’s my method, you ask?? I take the bottom out of my blender (please remove that blade!!) and then just put my freezer bag in and wrap the top of the bag down the sides to hold it in place. Pour in your marinade ingredients and you can mix it right up!
One of my favorite (quick!) ways to get a lot of meals done in a short amount of time, is to make a big batch of one marinade and then use it on different types of meat. It doesn’t seem like you’re having the same meal over and over then!
We love a teriyaki marinade! I use 2 cups of soy sauce, 1.5 cups of sugar (it calls for 2 cups, but I decrease it), 1 cup of Mirin (rice cooking wine), A LOT of fresh garlic, salt & pepper. Use about 1/2 cup of the marinade for every lb. of meat. So you mix up this one batch of marinade and BAM… you just got yourself about 8 meals! I use it on steaks, chicken, pork chops, tuna steaks and shrimp.
During all this, throw a bunch of chicken (I use bone-in chicken for this), in a stock pot with water, a lot of chopped carrots, celery, onions and any spices you like. I simmer it, covered for about an hour or until the chicken is cooked. Pull your chicken out, throw away the veggies and let the broth cool. Once the broth is cool, freeze it for chicken stock for other meals. Shred your chicken and you end up with a mountain o’ goodness.
Split this up between quart size baggies and freeze. Use for chicken salad, tacos, enchiladas, wraps, etc. I already promised my son we can use one bag for buffalo chicken salads- after it thaws I’ll just throw it in a frying pan with a little butter and hot wing sauce for a couple minutes until it’s heated through and I will officially be his favorite mommy for the day! You could also make BBQ chicken salads. You can never have enough shredded chicken for summer meals!
Once your potatoes are done cooking and cooled enough to handle. Just slice them right down the middle and make some double-stuffed potatoes! Scoop the insides out into a bowl and add some butter, softened cream cheese, milk, chives and whatever else you like. Sometimes we add crumpled bacon, shredded cheese, ranch dressing… whatever we’re in the mood for. Use a potato masher until it’s all mixed in and then spoon the filling into your potato shells. I wrap these individually in plastic wrap and then put in a bag. On serving day you thaw and then bake in a 350 degree oven for 20 minutes or until heated through.
Summer freezer cooking is SO much easier than doing it for the colder months! It’s basically just a bunch of marinades and then you grill everything! If you aren’t feeling up to making your own marinades, you can still buy a bulk package of meat, split it up between freezer bags and just add some pre-bottled marinades! It’s still cheaper, your meal is prepared ahead of time and letting the meat marinate as it thaws will make it much more tender and flavorful!
My all-time favorite resource for freezer meal recipes is the book “Don’t Panic, Dinner’s in the Freezer!”. I’ve been using it for about 2 years now and every recipe has been a hit! Last year I bought their 2nd book and we haven’t tested as many of those recipes yet, but it’s also fantastic! One of my favorite parts of these cookbooks is they do all the conversions for you if you want to triple, x6 or x9 your recipes. This is fantastic, if you have a favorite recipe and want to triple it for 3 different kinds of meats!
This latest session of cooking took me about 4 hours and I got 46 meals out of it!! This is only about half of what I made today!!
Some of our favorites are:
Tomato Basil Soup
Sesame Chicken
Balsamic Roasted Chicken Thighs
Parmesan Garlic Chicken
Buttermilk Herb Chicken
Pesto Chicken
Cranberry Chicken
Dijon Pork Roast
Bourbon Brown Sugar Pork Chops
Hamburgers
Teriyaki anything!
If I have leftover carrots or onions when I’m done, I just freeze them in 1/2 cup increments and pull them out whenever I need them!
I didn’t get to it today, but I often will make huge batches of 40 or so waffles and freeze them so the kids can pull them out on a weekday morning! All ends from the bread loaf get frozen for bread crumbs. And I live by Chocolate World, so if I have time, I’ll stop in and buy their bags of day old cookies cheap and then freeze them for cheesecake crusts or crumb coatings. I also try to always have some cooked sausage (w/peppers, onions and carrots) frozen that can be pulled out on the weekend for omelets or a quiche.
If I’m making casseroles or meatloaf, I line the pan with plastic wrap and then fill the pan. Put the whole thing in the freezer and once it’s frozen solid, pop the plastic wrapped food out of the pan, put it in a freezer bag and now you still have your pan to use in the meantime. Just remember, when it’s time to use it, take the plastic wrap off while it’s still a frozen block and put it back in the pan to thaw!
I also found some other deals that I won’t even do anything with until it’s serving day!
Most of these things are normally $4.95/pack. I got them for 50 cents to $1/pack! What’s that you say??? AWESOME!!
Not including these “ready-to-go” meats up above, I prepared 46 meal starters for us for the summer! We have leftovers from nearly every meal, so this will actually get us much more than just the 46 meals. Add in these prepared meats above, the nights we’re away, cook-outs, etc… and I don’t really have to cook until about Sept.! And trust me, the hubster loves this too! If he gets home before me, dinner is thawing in the fridge with directions right on the bag. He plops it on the grill, throws the bag away and dinner is served with no mess to clean up afterwards!
I kept track of how much I spent on meat and veggies and just added extra money in for all the staples I used and I’m roughly guessing I spent about $95 on these 46 meals. That’s just over $2 per meal for our family of 4! I’ll take it!
Let me know if you have any questions and I’ll do my best to answer them! (and I’m by no means an expert!! Just learning by trial and error over here!)
Edited to Add: I did a follow-up post to this one where I tried to answer most of your questions! Please check out that post and this one and hopefully that helps! I’m still getting lots and lots of emails asking for all my recipes, and I’m REALLY sorry, but I’m not going to be posting them! The reason is that they aren’t my recipes! I take them from Don’t Panic- Dinner’s in the Freezer and I just don’t think it would be fair to those authors if I copied their recipes word for word here! Sorry, but the book is only $8 on Amazon! For anyone interested in buying the books I mentioned, I wouldn’t be opposed to you clicking directly on the links below! : ) Thanks!
http://www.diyhomeworld.com/a-month-of-dinners-for-less-than-100/
Ponee- Admin
- Posts : 38267
Join date : 2011-08-09
Re: A Month Of Dinners For Less Than $100
Wow, seems like she spends all her time either shopping or cooking. I don't have time for that.
Besides, we don't have those kinds of prices in Canada for our meat. Our cost is very expensive. I do try and make up a batch of something I am making so that I don't have to cook so often but having a freezer with this many things would just get lost unless I date them which I don't. I think they would get lost even if I did date them.
A lot of the things she lists I don't eat. Things like sausage, pork, bacon, etc. I'm very lean on my beef and only eat the best cuts for steaks and my chilli is made (don't make a face) with ground turkey not beef. I don't care for ground chicken. There is something odd about the taste. Ground beef is cheap but you have to ask yourself why. I do buy it for my dog.
A couple of tricks I have learned I will share:
1. I use a boxed beef or chicken stock (less sodium) for some recipes and there is some left over as the recipe doesn't call for all of it. You can lightly grease (I use pam) your muffin tins and fill with the broth. Then when they are frozen take them out, sit the tin on the counter and wait a few minutes. You can usually get them out with a sharp knife. Freeze them in a freezer bag until needed. I think 2 muffin tins were 1/4 cup.
2. I read (and have seen this) do not put your potatoes and onions together. They both give off gases and will rot one another quickly. Keep them separate and if you can in paper bags where they are stored.
3. Herbs you buy in the store at grow yourself can just be put in a freezer bag and tossed in the freezer. Just like new when cooking. Some look a bit willty when used in salads but the ones for cooking taste good.
3. I have found that if you buy Kale (love kale) and wash it and put it in freezer bags in the fridge it lasts a long time. Not sure about other veggies or lettuce but Kale does.
I'm not sure what the rave about twice baked potatoes is. It seems to be more an American thing that Canadian and her recipe is high fat with cream cheese, shredded cheese and ranch dressing....OMG Potatoes is something I try and cut back on unless it's a special occasion. They don't have a whole lot of nutritional value and they are high carb. Besides, who do you know can eat a baked potato naked?
I make my own dressings. I don't think I have bought a dressing in years.
I don't always eat healthy but I try.
Besides, we don't have those kinds of prices in Canada for our meat. Our cost is very expensive. I do try and make up a batch of something I am making so that I don't have to cook so often but having a freezer with this many things would just get lost unless I date them which I don't. I think they would get lost even if I did date them.
A lot of the things she lists I don't eat. Things like sausage, pork, bacon, etc. I'm very lean on my beef and only eat the best cuts for steaks and my chilli is made (don't make a face) with ground turkey not beef. I don't care for ground chicken. There is something odd about the taste. Ground beef is cheap but you have to ask yourself why. I do buy it for my dog.
A couple of tricks I have learned I will share:
1. I use a boxed beef or chicken stock (less sodium) for some recipes and there is some left over as the recipe doesn't call for all of it. You can lightly grease (I use pam) your muffin tins and fill with the broth. Then when they are frozen take them out, sit the tin on the counter and wait a few minutes. You can usually get them out with a sharp knife. Freeze them in a freezer bag until needed. I think 2 muffin tins were 1/4 cup.
2. I read (and have seen this) do not put your potatoes and onions together. They both give off gases and will rot one another quickly. Keep them separate and if you can in paper bags where they are stored.
3. Herbs you buy in the store at grow yourself can just be put in a freezer bag and tossed in the freezer. Just like new when cooking. Some look a bit willty when used in salads but the ones for cooking taste good.
3. I have found that if you buy Kale (love kale) and wash it and put it in freezer bags in the fridge it lasts a long time. Not sure about other veggies or lettuce but Kale does.
I'm not sure what the rave about twice baked potatoes is. It seems to be more an American thing that Canadian and her recipe is high fat with cream cheese, shredded cheese and ranch dressing....OMG Potatoes is something I try and cut back on unless it's a special occasion. They don't have a whole lot of nutritional value and they are high carb. Besides, who do you know can eat a baked potato naked?
I make my own dressings. I don't think I have bought a dressing in years.
I don't always eat healthy but I try.
Goldiegirl- Elite Member
- Posts : 1457
Join date : 2014-03-12
Location : Hiding in a snow covered mountain
Re: A Month Of Dinners For Less Than $100
Yummy. :juggle: :juggle:
Saint- VIP Member
- Posts : 896
Join date : 2014-03-12
Location : Rocky Mountains
Re: A Month Of Dinners For Less Than $100
I have never seen prices like that either... even on sale. And I am not much for running around to a lot of stores looking for deals because time is also of the essence.
Ponee- Admin
- Posts : 38267
Join date : 2011-08-09
Re: A Month Of Dinners For Less Than $100
Sometimes if the date is running out they put out specials at my local grocery store. Usually it's not meat or food I eat anyway.
I have never been a fan of sausage or premade meats like sausage that contain things I have no idea what's in them.
I think making things ahead can save time, but I'm more of a European shopper. I go to the store 3 times a week because I don't know what I want to eat in advance.
I do buy large items on sale...Like all those turkeys are on sale now. LOL I used to do Christmas in July.
I have never been a fan of sausage or premade meats like sausage that contain things I have no idea what's in them.
I think making things ahead can save time, but I'm more of a European shopper. I go to the store 3 times a week because I don't know what I want to eat in advance.
I do buy large items on sale...Like all those turkeys are on sale now. LOL I used to do Christmas in July.
Goldiegirl- Elite Member
- Posts : 1457
Join date : 2014-03-12
Location : Hiding in a snow covered mountain
Re: A Month Of Dinners For Less Than $100
I don't have much land, but enough to feed out a couple of longhorn steers (I split the meat w/a friend), have a large garden and some chickens. Also did some trading for a deer last fall.
Veggies get frozen or canned. Make salsa, sauerkraut and several types of pickles. I boil turkey carcass and save juice for cooking stock. I've gotten into "living off the land" as much as I can. Town isn't far away, but things are just so expensive and I'm not a shopper. Bake my own bread. Buy bulk dried beads in the fall. Things I grow taste so much better and I know what gets put on or in them. I don't go totally organic, but close. I had a wonderful meal the other night - grilled deer tenderloin w/grilled asparagus. I haven't tried kale, but did grow some collard greens. So yummy!
Bottom line......saves money, I don't have to get cleaned up and go to town and the quality is better.
Veggies get frozen or canned. Make salsa, sauerkraut and several types of pickles. I boil turkey carcass and save juice for cooking stock. I've gotten into "living off the land" as much as I can. Town isn't far away, but things are just so expensive and I'm not a shopper. Bake my own bread. Buy bulk dried beads in the fall. Things I grow taste so much better and I know what gets put on or in them. I don't go totally organic, but close. I had a wonderful meal the other night - grilled deer tenderloin w/grilled asparagus. I haven't tried kale, but did grow some collard greens. So yummy!
Bottom line......saves money, I don't have to get cleaned up and go to town and the quality is better.
Ssmith- GURU HUNTER
- Posts : 20495
Join date : 2012-04-10
Re: A Month Of Dinners For Less Than $100
gee I couldnt get a month of dinners for $100! Meat is really expensive and so are fresh veges. I have just planted out my vege garden and am looking forward to fresh food!
alleyrose- Super Moderator
- Posts : 2851
Join date : 2011-08-24
Location : Australia
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Mon Jun 10, 2024 1:04 pm by RamblerNash
» The Fundamentals of Finance and Pimpy Live
Fri Jun 07, 2024 5:02 pm by Dorotnas
» Carnival Rides
Fri May 10, 2024 5:03 pm by kenlej
» Go Russia
Sun May 05, 2024 10:51 am by kenlej
» Textbook Tony
Mon Apr 29, 2024 4:13 pm by Mission1st
» The Rockefellers and the controllers are freaking out right about now
Fri Apr 26, 2024 11:16 am by kenlej
» Phony Tony sez: Full Steam Ahead!
Sat Apr 13, 2024 11:51 am by Mission1st
» Dave Schmidt - Zim Notes for Purchase (NOT PHYSICAL NOTES)
Sat Apr 13, 2024 11:45 am by Mission1st
» Russia aren't taking any prisoners
Fri Apr 05, 2024 6:48 pm by kenlej
» Deadly stampede could affect Iraq’s World Cup hopes 1/19/23
Wed Mar 27, 2024 6:02 am by Ditartyn