T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3171.1 | my list | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Mon Aug 05 1991 10:44 | 5 |
| flour, sugar, brown sugar, eggs, butter, salt, chocolate chips, baking powder,
baking soda, vanilla, walnuts.
Nearly essential: mint chocolate chips and Reese's peanut butter chips,
milk, orange juice.
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3171.2 | Jump Start | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Mon Aug 05 1991 10:53 | 1 |
| Coffee and milk. The day wouldn't get started w/out it.
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3171.3 | for me, these... | MR4DEC::MAHONEY | | Mon Aug 05 1991 13:39 | 4 |
| Oil, vinegar, salt, sugar, flour, coffee, milk, eggs, mayo, margarine,
rice, pasta, garlic/onions/parsley, potatoes and beans...
those are my staples, I can do a lot of dishes with just the above...
|
3171.4 | | CALS::HEALEY | DTN 297-2426 (was Karen Luby) | Mon Aug 05 1991 13:43 | 6 |
|
There is a grocery lists topic somewhere in this notes file. You could
probably find what you are looking for there.
Karen
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3171.5 | Groo is no lackey... | SUBURB::YOUNGA1 | | Mon Aug 05 1991 13:58 | 7 |
| Happy shopper chocolate milk - the best
Lots of wine -
Cheers
Dust Th'ippy
|
3171.6 | must haves | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Mon Aug 05 1991 14:39 | 61 |
|
in the freezer:
real whole wheat flour
real whole kernel corn meal
real whole rye flour
in the pantry:
dried chicken soup base (no msg) that I can buy at Cosentinos - it
comes in 16 oz. canisters and is wonderful for quick broth
based soups like Italian Wedding Soup.
dried beef soup base (see above)
canned, diced tomatoes.
dried mushrooms of varied varieties
dried pastas of various shapes
full range of dried herbs and REAL vanilla; whole peppercorns, salt
super-fine and regular sugar; dark brown sugar
dried yeast packets
sweetened condensed milk
key lime juice; bottled
good quality dark chocolate (bittersweet preferred)
canned red kidney beans - light salt; canned white beans - light salt;
dried, seasoned (Italian) bread crumbs
first cold-pressed olive oil (very fruity)
light olive oil (very little flavor)
balsamic vinegar (best you can buy - from Modena)
red wine vinegar; white wine vinegar
canola oil
arrowroot and cornstarch
baking powder; baking soda
plain white flour (unbleached)
dried onions
cream of wheat; steel-cut oats (Irish oatmeal); oatmeal; wheat hearts
cereal --- these all are good in breads
canned, flaked ham; canned chicken breast meat
winter baking supply of nuts (used before spring)
|
3171.7 | One family's list | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Pixillated | Mon Aug 05 1991 15:44 | 121 |
| What you need depends entirely on your household constituency and your
tastes. My household is me, my husband, a baby, a dog (dog food not
listed below), and assorted guests. My husband drinks the skim milk,
baby drinks whole, and coffee is for guests, for example.
I do some baking, but not a lot. I do a lot of cooking from scratch,
and avoid artificial ingredients and manufactured foods, with few
exceptions. We eat home a lot and don't eat much sugar or salt. I
don't do fancy gourmet cooking; my style is good basic food.
Developing a staples list was very helpful for me; good luck to you.
By grouping it in categories its easier to think of what you'd like.
These are foods I always have in the house (thank God we can afford to
do it). I buy fruit, vegetables, meat, special cheeses, and
ingredients for certain dishes, on an as-needed basis, and depending on
what's fresh, available, and on sale.
BEVERAGES:
Instant coffee Seltzer
Ground coffee for perking Diet soda
(in freezer) Nestle Quick chocolate mix
Several herbal teas Whole milk for baby
Packets of artificial sweetener Skim milk
Honey Apple juice
Tomato juice
BAKING:
Unbleached flour Baking powder
Whole wheat flour (in freezer) Baking soda
White sugar Corn meal
Dark brown sugar Hydrogenated vegetable shortening
Raisins Margarine (keep in freezer)
Dry yeast Pam spray (a necessity)
SPICES and SEASONINGS:
Cinnamon Parsley
Nutmeg Other herbal spices you like
Vanilla extract McIllhenny Tabasco sauce
Black pepper (whole, in grinder) Paprika
Sea salt Capers (in jar, for schnitzel)
Soy sauce
GRAINS AND STARCH:
Buckwheat groats Italian spaghetti
Brown rice Other Italian pasta, eg elbows
Oatmeal Egg noodles
Breakfast cereal
NUTS (all unsalted, not roasted, stored in freezer):
Walnuts Shredded coconut
Pecans Whole sesame seeds (not frozen)
Cashews from health food store
Slivered almonds
CANNED AND BOTTLED GOODS:
Tomatoes in puree Canned chicken broth (low salt)
Tomato paste Canned beef broth
Apple sauce (unsugared) Cream of mushroom soup
Pureed baby vegs in little jars Low-salt cream of tomato soup
Ketchup Tuna in water, no salt added
Low-fat mayonnaise Italian-style tomato sauce
Mustard Spicy salsa
Pineapple chunks Bread crumbs
Peanut butter (unsalted)
Smucker's all-fruit jam
SNACKS AND CRACKERS:
Whole grain crackers Rice cakes (good for baby)
Bread sticks Graham Crackers (sometimes)
Apple sauce in single-serving
containers
OIL AND VINEGAR:
Olive oil Apple cider vinegar
Plain oil - eg. soy, safflower, etc. White vinegar
Sesame oil Red wine vinegar
Balsamic vinegar
OTHER DAIRY:
Whipped butter in tub Parmesan cheese (grate in food
Plain yogurt (sometimes) processor at home)
Cream cheese (sometimes) Cheddar cheese
PRODUCE:
Onions Bananas
Chopped garlic in little jar Potatoes
Fresh fruit in season Salad vegetables
Fresh vegetables in season Frozen vegetables, fruit to fill in
MEAT and FISH:
Low-fat ground beef
Skinless, boneless chicken breasts (Get on sale and freeze them)
Lamb, beef, veal, fresh fish, or whatever's good and reasonable
BREAD:
Wholewhat bread
Rye bread
French bread (sometimes)
NON-FOODS for KITCHEN:
Paper towels Plastic wrap
Everyday paper napkins Sandwich bags
"Company" paper napkins Aluminum foil
Culinary string for trussing birds Wax paper
Culinary gauze Dish detergent (to use in sink)
Spray bottle of all-purpose cleaner Dishwasher detergent
Sponges Softscrub (brand) cleanser
Laura
|
3171.8 | don't sweat the eggs and milk | ENABLE::GLANTZ | Mike 227-4299 DECtp TAY Littleton MA | Mon Aug 05 1991 17:47 | 6 |
| I kind of agree with the sort of stuff in the list in .6. The
easy-to-get stuff I don't worry about, because I know I can get it any
day at any supermarket or convenience store. It's the hard-to-find
stuff that I make sure not to run out of. Try getting saffron (or
balsamic vinegar) on Tuesday when Idylwilde's closed. If you run out
of that on a Monday night, you could be in BIG trouble.
|
3171.9 | a truly strange list | SMUG::BRUNO | Father Gregory | Tue Aug 06 1991 10:39 | 13 |
| In my kitchen, I have to keep these stocked:
Crushed Red Pepper
Cumin
Cardamom
Worcestershire Sauce
Cayenne Pepper
Whole Peppercorns
Some variety of pasta
Tomato Sauce
Garlic
Onions
Broccoli
|
3171.10 | tish tosh | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Tue Aug 06 1991 11:14 | 10 |
|
>> It's the hard-to-find
>> stuff that I make sure not to run out of. Try getting saffron (or
>> balsamic vinegar) on Tuesday when Idylwilde's closed. If you run out
>> of that on a Monday night, you could be in BIG trouble.
Not that BIG. Go to the Elegant Farmer in Chelmsford instead.
8-)
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3171.11 | keep one container ahead of demand | CADSYS::HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Tue Aug 06 1991 13:25 | 12 |
| Keep an extra container of 'rare' ingredients, and train everyone in
the household who cooks to write things on the grocery list as they use
them up. That way, you don't suddenly find that you are out of
something in the middle of a recipe.
It even works for un-rare things like laundry detergent - but you have
to maintain discipline, or laziness takes over and the item doesn't end
up on the grocery list anyhow, necessitating a "quick" grocery run at
some inconvenient time...
/Charlotte (whose household is out of milk...shopping day was supposed
to be Thursday!)
|
3171.12 | Ooops. . . | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Pixillated | Wed Aug 07 1991 13:27 | 11 |
| RE: .7
I forgot to put eggs on the staples list. I put it on my shopping list
under "dairy" because that's where the stores keep it.
Also add tofu under produce.
Good point in the previous reply - we also stock Worcestershire sauce,
and A-1 Sauce as well.
Laura
|
3171.13 | Another ooops. . . | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Pixillated | Thu Aug 08 1991 16:28 | 6 |
| I also forgot to put plain gelatin on my list. I use it for making
desserts (instead of raw, whipped egg whites), and for making homemade
"jello" mold, using fruit juices. For kids, you can mix gelatin with
Juicy Juice or other highly sweet natural fruit juices.
Laura
|
3171.14 | Keep it simple! | SQM::WARRINER | Municipal court jester | Sat Aug 31 1991 16:17 | 2 |
| Chocolate
Beer
|