![]() |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by Jsmth321
(Post 11846192)
Any idea of the weight for the ham?
|
Re: Groceries
The biggest money saver as far as food is concerned for us has turned out to be my daughters Vitamix. Any leftover food ends up being dumped into it to make great soups which we now eat 4-5 times a week with nothing wasted. If we get any fruit that is going off it can be dumped into to vitamix to make a smoothie or into the breadmaker to make jam!
|
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by paw339
(Post 11846451)
The biggest money saver as far as food is concerned for us has turned out to be my daughters Vitamix. Any leftover food ends up being dumped into it to make great soups which we now eat 4-5 times a week with nothing wasted. If we get any fruit that is going off it can be dumped into to vitamix to make a smoothie or into the breadmaker to make jam!
never ever discard food away, ever. We always do some of the above as well as make two or more meals at the time of cooking for meals within the same week. Since we three people eating, we cook for six, then save the extra for the next meal. It saves /work/effort, money, utilities etc |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by caretaker
(Post 11846233)
Really heavy (I'm not going into the garbage for this). They usually cost this much at Wholesale Club but it's what they cost at No Frills when they have a sale because of close due dates - this is good until late March. I think No Frills normally wants $10 more for the fresh stock. Ham and beans, goes together like hard liquor and handguns.
|
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by paw339
(Post 11846451)
The biggest money saver as far as food is concerned for us has turned out to be my daughters Vitamix. Any leftover food ends up being dumped into it to make great soups which we now eat 4-5 times a week with nothing wasted. If we get any fruit that is going off it can be dumped into to vitamix to make a smoothie or into the breadmaker to make jam!
My attempts at homemade soups have been hit and miss. So much so that I have stopped attempting. Fresh soups are only £1.50 on sale and are pretty good IMO. Even Baxters canned soups are pretty good. |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by Shard
(Post 11846618)
Would a normal blender do? I just looked up Vitamix and they seem fairly expensive units.
My attempts at homemade soups have been hit and miss. So much so that I have stopped attempting. Fresh soups are only £1.50 on sale and are pretty good IMO. Even Baxters canned soups are pretty good. We paid $80 for it, but it doesn't do all the fancy stuff, just basic stuff so not a direct competitor or comparison. We very rarely have left over food from meals, I only make enough for each meal, usually a protein source (chicken usually) and 2 cups of vegetables for a dinner, 1 cup of veggies for each of us. For 2 people and limited freezer space, just not feasible to cook multiple meals at once, and I only make enough to eat for each meal, so never any left overs to fuss with. |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by Shard
(Post 11846618)
Would a normal blender do? I just looked up Vitamix and they seem fairly expensive units.
My attempts at homemade soups have been hit and miss. So much so that I have stopped attempting. Fresh soups are only £1.50 on sale and are pretty good IMO. Even Baxters canned soups are pretty good. As a base soup, with one can condensed vegetable soup (with equal amount of water) + one chicken leg in a pot (add herbs, spices or other ingredients), simmer for two hours, feast of the table. Remove chicken leg, take off the bone, cut up the chicken, back into the pot. Serve in two bowls with a slice a bread each. Repeat the recipe with the other soups... chicken & mushroom, or with the chicken noodle by adding extra chicken pieces |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by not2old
(Post 11846692)
...simmer for two hours...Remove chicken leg, take off the bone, cut up the chicken, back into the pot....
Why not keep back some already cooked chicken and then just add it to the soup and heat, saving two hours? I doubt not cooking a chicken leg in the soup and herbs etc will make a huge difference to such a small part of it - the herbs and stuff will still be in the soup. But the chicken that you keep back could be herbed etc anyway from when it was cooked first. |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by not2old
(Post 11846692)
As a base soup, with one can condensed vegetable soup (with equal amount of water) + one chicken leg in a pot (add herbs, spices or other ingredients), simmer for two hours, feast of the table.
Originally Posted by BristolUK
(Post 11846705)
Two hours?
Why not keep back some already cooked chicken and then just add it to the soup and heat, saving two hours? I doubt not cooking a chicken leg in the soup and herbs etc will make a huge difference to such a small part of it - the herbs and stuff will still be in the soup. But the chicken that you keep back could be herbed etc anyway from when it was cooked first. Starting from scratch, no leftovers, its a simple peasant meal, not your average expensive prime rib roast beef,lamb, chicken breast, that most seem to have all kinds of money to buy - excluding the alcohol booze & spirits. The two hours on simmer with a raw chicken leg is essential Try it. Add in lumps of potato, or some other veg going soft in your fridge, even a zucchini from the seconds produce shelf $0.35 tops worth of added ingredients. Then there's the cabbage soup, with mixed beans, veggies from the marked down produce shelf etc - throw in $1.00 worth of meat scrap ends from the deli, even the chicken carcasses or meat bones from the ethnic store (if there is one of them around) - lots of meat on them This may end up as three meals for two people . |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by Shard
(Post 11846618)
Would a normal blender do? I just looked up Vitamix and they seem fairly expensive units.
My attempts at homemade soups have been hit and miss. So much so that I have stopped attempting. Fresh soups are only £1.50 on sale and are pretty good IMO. Even Baxters canned soups are pretty good. |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by not2old
(Post 11846718)
Are you winding me up when I'm trying to be serious about frugal
The two hours on simmer with a raw chicken leg is essential What's wrong with, for example, buying a chicken when they're $1.99 a lb or buying some other chicken portion when on 'special' or something approaching its date and then cooking that for one or two meals but keeping back a bit of it for the soup later? A two hour cook time seems excessive for a chicken leg that could be "made ready" during the process of other meals. Sorry. :unsure: . |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by BristolUK
(Post 11846734)
I'm just questioning the need for it to be raw.
What's wrong with, for example, buying a chicken when they're $1.99 a lb or buying some other chicken portion when on 'special' or something approaching its date and then cooking that for one or two meals but keeping back a bit of it for the soup later? A two hour cook time seems excessive for a chicken leg that could be "made ready" during the process of other meals. Sorry. :unsure:. No different than making batches of preserves or multiple meals. Then, as discussed on BE previously, that folks buy [quick & easy] dried pasta instead of making it from scratch with one egg & a cup or so of flour. Or buying packs of dried beans & soaking them overnight instead of beans out of a can. This past week I bought 10 lbs of chicken legs on special at the local ethnic store for $0.79/lb. Will go a very long way into several different dishes. To each their own way of grocery living & meals. Then there are folks that will buy all kinds of junk, prepared foods, ranging from soda pop, snacks, chips, cookies & all kinds of unhealthy crap & whinge they don't have enough money for proper food |
Re: Groceries
My Prussian heritage dictates that I put sausage in with the vegetables in my cabbage soup. When I made cabbage rolls I only wanted to make a half dozen or so large ones so I parboiled the cabbage and when I was done froze the bulk of it. Now even though it's frozen I can take it out and slice off as much as I need easily.
|
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by caretaker
(Post 11846738)
My Prussian heritage dictates that I put sausage in with the vegetables in my cabbage soup. When I made cabbage rolls I only wanted to make a half dozen or so large ones so I parboiled the cabbage and when I was done froze the bulk of it. Now even though it's frozen I can take it out and slice off as much as I need easily.
Could it be the British way being brought up to eat prepared foods, foods out of packets or cans, crap snacks, down to it must be 'roast beef, sausage, pork anything with spuds & peas' or fish & chips or a pork pie - anything else or other methods of cooking doesn't look right. Do most British folks not indulge in fresh anything natural foods? |
Re: Groceries
Originally Posted by not2old
(Post 11846737)
Or buying packs of dried beans & soaking them overnight instead of beans out of a can.
This past week I bought 10 lbs of chicken legs on special at the local ethnic store for $0.79/lb. Will go a very long way into several different dishes. |
| All times are GMT -12. The time now is 8:36 am. |
Powered by vBulletin: ©2000 - 2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.