pronto pasta : after eating the or into pasta. I would add milk or cream and some more cheese. Without a sauce for the cheese to spread.the results weren't creamy enough for me.
We have had the spaghetti version, amd it was very good.
We have had some get out of the kitchen weather lately. Time to use the grill or countertop appliances to keep from heating up the kitchen. I love to make salads ahead and plan dinner to be salads and a sandwich ( hambirger, hot dogs, ) or grill a piece of fish or chicken.
I picked up a cookbook at the dollar tree. Americas most wanted recipes -just deserts. By Ron Douglas. It has recipes from eating establishments across the nation. A lot of options, some healthy (for desert) and some just plain decadent,
We don't have desert at every meal. It's a treat. Cutting out desert and unhealthy snacks is good for your budget, and even better for your health.
As a child, I can't remember ever getting snacks between meals. Sometimes, popcorn and tv after dinner. We made cookies, for desert. I can remember making 7 minute frosting , so we must have had a cake for birthdays and holidays. None of us were ever obese. There were foods that we didn't get much of because of parents preferences. It wasn't until I went to a school with a lunch counter that I ever had cornbread. As the story goes, my mom had eaten too much when she was a child and it didn't agree with her. She never touched cornbread again. My mom was afraid of getting something from pork, amd my dad hard chicken so we ate mostly beef. Mom made pizza from scratch, and Mac and cheese and a wonderful puffed omelette as well as clam chowder.
Groceries on the cheap is looking at the "put the meal on the table train" from a different perspective.
The emphasis is on purchasing good shelf stable or frozen food for a RBP in quantity - enough to last you until ot goes on sale again or to keep a controlled non-perishable stock of the things you use on a weekly basis.
This means that instead of shopping daily or weekly for just the things you need to cook your meals for the week. You go to two stores and buy :
1) a protein that is a RBP - enough to make that meal for x number of days. (I.e.: if you eat it once a week, buy enough for 4 meals.)
2) produce and dairy you will need to fill in the meals for the week.
3) a stock item, if you need to and it is on a RBP - enough to fill in to your self imposed stock level.
You often are laying 1/2 price for your food. This allows you to put well-balanced meals on the table consistently on a four dollar a day per person budget. You spend more time on the locomotive ( planning and shopping ) end of the train, and less time in the caboose ( cooking) by cooking more efficiently.
Four dollars a day is the target amount for people on snap. My premise is that of you can do it on 4 dollars a day, spending more is not difficult and you still get more nutrition for your buck.
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