T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
3140.1 | | CALS::HEALEY | DTN 297-2426 (was Karen Luby) | Tue Jul 16 1991 14:53 | 20 |
|
Well, meat, fish and poultry are the most expensive items on most
peoples grocery lists so use less of them! I was depressed to
see flounder at almost $5/lb last week! I've decided that meat,
fish, and poultry are going to be served less often in my household.
The next trick is shopping... if the boneless chicken is on sale,
buy a load of it. If you are near the Hilltop butcher, you can
usually beat most supermarket prices, even their sales. Another
thing you might consider is getting yourself a membership at
PACE (in NH and RI) or BJ's (in MA and NH) to buy food in bulk
at wholesale prices.
I would recommend means with pasta or rice as a filler. Stir
fry's are great because you can stretch 1 lb of meat a long
way. Soups are another good way to stretch the meat. Jane
Brody's Good Food Cookbook has alot of recipes that use less
meat and more carbohydrates.
Karen
|
3140.2 | --->>> | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Tue Jul 16 1991 16:57 | 1 |
| please also see note 2860, budget conscious recipes...
|
3140.3 | Pasta Carbonara | FSOA::LCHESTER | | Wed Jul 17 1991 12:06 | 21 |
| One of our favorite recipes is Pasta Carbonara. We had been
making spaghetti with ground beef or ground turkey, but that
was just too much meat for my husband's diet. I tried several
versions of this and we love it:
Saute an onion with some garlic in very little oil.
Cut up several very thin slices of ham into little
squares or strips. Chop up a ripe tomato and add,
along with whatever seasoning you prefer (I add
fresh basil and ground pepper). Let the mixture
simmer a few minutes until the tomato is softer and
has released its juice (you now have a very light
"sauce").
Serve over cooked pasta. Somehow the flavor of the
ham permeates the whole dish and you get the same degree
of flavor as if you had cooked a lot more meat with it.
We think this is just great for a quick meal along with
a green salad.
Laura
|
3140.4 | Wrong recepie | ROMCSA::FIASCHI | | Thu Jul 18 1991 09:41 | 24 |
|
I couldn't help, but this is the right recepie for Spaghetti alla
Carbonara
Saute an onion with ham (like you said) or bacon (much better) in some
olive oil. When the onion gets brown add some white wine (a little) to
the mixture.
In the meantime in a bowl (where you will put spaghetti later on) put
two eggs (for 3 people) together with parmesan cheese (I put alot).
When spaghetti are ready, strain them and put them in the bowl together
with the mixture of onion and bacon. The eggs will cook with the hot
pasta.
Absolutely there is no tomato in the original recepie.
Your recepie Laura makes me think of Amatriciana which is made almost
in the way you mentionned.
Just try top make things clear....
Marinella
|
3140.5 | | BOOVX1::MANDILE | Lynne - a.k.a. Her Royal Highness | Thu Jul 18 1991 09:56 | 4 |
| Or, get together with a few neighbors and go to the
farmers markets and buy bulk veggies and split the
produce among you. Most veggies can be processed
and frozen easily and with no major problems.....
|
3140.6 | light, quick, inexpensive, yummy | ISLNDS::AREANO | Never a dull moment | Thu Jul 18 1991 17:41 | 27 |
| I thought the"original" Pasta Carbonara calls for Italian bacon, and there
should be two cheeses - Pecorino Romano as well as Parmesan....
But back to the subject - inexpensive recipes:
"Light" Pasta and Seafood Sauce
Cook 4 cloves garic and 1 tbs onion in olive oil. When done, add clam juice
reserve from 3 cans of minced clams. Add oregano, lemon juice, white wine,
fresh ground pepper. Cook 3-4 minutes on medium flame. Then add the minced
clams. I like to add in some of Louis Kemp's Imitation Lobster.
Cook 4-5 minutes longer until seafood is tender.
Pour over 1 lb thick spaghetti. Cover generously with Romano cheese.
Cost:
3 cans clams @.79/each
1 lb spaghetti @.50
1 pk crabmeat @2.00
alll other ingrediants combined - 75 cents?
all together $5.00 for a tasty main course that serves 3-4 adults. Serve with
homemade garlic bread.....
Paul
|
3140.7 | Zucchini saute | PERFCT::CORMIER | | Fri Jul 19 1991 10:18 | 13 |
| Just wait about 2 more weeks, leave your car windows open, and you will
have all the free zucchini you can use from people who planted too much
and can't get rid of it. Can't get any more budget-conscious than
"free"! I sautee garlic and onions in olive oil, toss in a whole
sliced zucchini, then add left-over pasta at the last minute. Add a
splash of chicken broth to the pan to deglaze, and there you are!
Quick, cheap, and delicious. To avoid boredom, add mushrooms one day,
green peppers another, chicken-beef-pork, whatever you can get on sale,
a couple of tomatoes, anything. I buy cans of chicken broth on sale,
then pour them into ice-cube trays to freeze in small amounts. Much
more economical than only using a few ounces from a can and tossing it
out.
|
3140.8 | GO WILD! | SALEM::RUSSO | | Fri Jul 19 1991 10:45 | 11 |
|
Plant a garden and harvest the results (although sometimes it cost
more to plant and care for a garden then to buy the produce). If you
really want to get away cheap.. go wild. Go into the wild and collect
food such as dandelion greens, cato'ninetail roots, wild onion, nuts
and berries etc. Even mushrooms are available if you know what your
doing; but only pick them if your 200% sure. It's amazing how much
food is available in the wild. Think about it, there are a lot of birds
and animals eating every day and they don't rely on grocery stores.
robin
|
3140.9 | Cheap without meat | EMDS::KENNEDY | | Tue Jul 23 1991 12:45 | 3 |
| You can also derive protein from other things, they have pasta
(Superoni) that has a lot of protein and is inexpensive. You could
also try beans, different kinds, different ways.
|
3140.10 | | SCAACT::DONNELLY | Lawn Furniture Demolition Team | Thu Jul 25 1991 18:35 | 11 |
|
RE: .5
>>> Or, get together with a few neighbors and go to the farmers markets
>>> and buy bulk veggies and split the produce among you.
I do this every weekend with a bunch of friends representing 4
households. It's a good idea, since usually the portions are very
large and go bad before one person can use them up.
Jack
|