Tuesday, February 26, 2013

The basics revisited again !!!

About every first of the month, I go over the basics for any new people, or to refresh memories.

This blog is about grocery shopping on the cheap. It takes a three pronged approach at putting inexpensive, tasty meals on the table. It is not about eating cheap hot dogs, top ramen, or .28 a pound chicken or dumpster diving??!! LOL. There are many reasons why one would want to economize on food. Some people read this blog to see new recipes or get an idea how to get out of the kitchen fast. The idea is "If you spend more time on the front end of the 'get the food on the table train' and less time on the back end you will be better off. You essentially get paid for shopping, not for cooking.

If you can cut your food bill in half, and save 75 dollars a week on food, you save almost 4 thousand dollars a year. What can YOU buy or save for that much money. If you are like I was in my early years, I didnt have it to save. I just had to make what I had stretch.

The basics take a three pronged approach.1) Planning and organizing,2) shopping and 3) cooking from scratch

1) Planning and Organizing
Everything successful starts with a plan. First, gather main dish recipes that use inexpensive sources of protein that your family will eat. Start with seven, and go from there. Fourteen is better for variety.

Now, make a list of the staples you use frequently. In our house it would be beans, refried beans, cheese, diced tomatoes, pasta sauce, pasta, some tuna, and some salmon and instant mashed potatoes.
make a spread sheet or a small spiral notebook to track the prices. Record the item, the size, the amount you paid, when and where. Pretty soon you will discover the rock bottom price of the article. Plan your menus when you get home from the store keeping in mind what is leftover in the fridge before you went to the store. Nothing fancy, just jot down seven main dishes. Do this after you shop something that is on sale might not be as good a quality as you want, or not available.

2) Shopping.
When you find the rock bottom price, buy a) as many as the store will allow you to buy, b) as many as you can afford to buy,or c)as many as you need to replenish stock. If I use something once a week, I keep 24. If I use it once a month, I keep 6. This isn't about hoarding.

When the grocery ads come out, take a piece of computer paper , divide it in fourths. Put the name of a store at the top of each section. Go through the ads and mark down any meat and veggie buys that are a good price and any stock items that are a good price. Skip the ready made items and snack food.

When you are done,cross off any thing that is a higher price and anything you don't need. Record lowest prices of your target foods. Pick the two stores that have the lowest prices on things you need. plan your trip to save gas.

Take the ads, and your list. Get in and get out. The More time you spend in a store, the more money you will spend.

Store your fruits and veggies properly. There are storage solutions on the market that make fruits and veggies last longer.

3) Cooking from scratch
There is no room in a good food cheap budget for snacks and ready made foods. That being said, there are a few things that are cheaper to buy ready made than to make from scratch, and a few things that are best bought ready made. Refried beans, canned beans and tortillas and mayo come to mind. Sometimes instant mashed potatoes are cheaper than scratch. There are ways to make dinner as fast as you can by using a box. I did a post on a hamburger dinner box. It is a real eye opener. it is about the most expensive item in the store pound for pound. Booze excluded.

I'm out of time, hope I covered everything.

Thanks for stopping by

Please share. I'm not getting any money for this blog, I am trying to help someone that needs it.

Jane




Monday, February 25, 2013

Price comparisons

My mother was an antique dealer. She always said that every antique store had sleepers and the trick was to find them.

No one grocery store has the lowest prices on everything. If you can effectively and efficiently take advantage of
The lowest prices, you can master 1/2 price food.

We did a Costco run yesterday. We only needed a few things, but they were really necessary things. I thought I would spend some time comparing prices. I have had a lot of questions about comparing Costco prices.

Many produce prices at Costco are pretty stable year round. Bananas are 1.39 the cheapest anywhere. Grocery Outlet is 1.99, other stores .79. All bananas are organic. Berries are almost always cheaper. Blueberries are full of antioxidents and are very versitile.

Toilet paper is the cheapest I have found.

They have pizzas on sale at times. I got a extra Large pizza for 5.99 yesterday. It is so large that I havento cut it into quarters to get it in our fridge and oven!

Cheese was 3.19 a pound. I have been getting it for 2.50 a pound. They had mots for 2.19 grated. Grated cheese should not be more expensive than the bricks. We went to the Tillamock factory. Mthey make cheese in huge molds. Then put it through a cutting machine. The excess goes into a plastic bin and goes to the grater machine. Basically, it is the leftovers.

The chicken sausage that I buy for 2.99 at grocery outlet was more expensive.

I buy the brown and serve baguettes from Costco unless I can find them at the bakery outlet. The bakery doesn't always have them. I keep them in the fridge, they last a long time. Tortillasmaremcheaper. I keep them in the fridge too.

Re fried Beans were cheaper than the regular price at the other grocery stores. They were not the .50 that got them for on sale.

Pasta was a lot more expensive. Pasta has a very, very long shelf life. You can stock very comfortably.

Spices are a lot cheaper. I buy the spices that I use a lot from Costco along with better than bouillon low sodium. Some that I don't use often I get at the dollar store or Big Lots.

Stamps are less than par value at Costco.
Magazines are thirty percent off. They don't have a complete selection.
Some magazines are .50 at the goodwill.

Cottage cheese and sour cream is cheaper at Costco most of the time.

Dry beans are really cheaper. The quantity is huge! In would get together with friends , neighbors, or family and split a bag.

The trick to all this is to know the prices ofnthe things that you use all the time. If you can't remember, keep a spread sheet or spiral notebook . It gives you an overview of prices and where the rock bottom price is. Often times, you can save as much as a dollar or more on an item.

It adds up fast. 75 dollars a week is almost 4 thousand a year!

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane



Sunday, February 24, 2013

Notes on Sunday

I came across a trivia that is interesting. The grocery chain stores research their locations carefully. they are based on demographics. The dollar stores piggy back certain stores. If you notice most of the time, the dollar store be in the same strip mall as Safeways or grocery outlet! Grouping your stores saves time and gas. We have TJ MAXX , Safeways, and the dollar store and Costco just down the highway. Oe we have Joannes, Albertsoms, Safeways, and the dollar store, and big Lots in a cluster and grocery outlet nearby.

I know I sound like a broken record, but the slow cooker is my best friend in the kitchen. I have to work the late shift today. I'm going to put soup on this morning so it's ready when I get home.

Beef and vegetable soup

1 pound lean ground beef, cooked and defatted
1/2 sweet onion, chopped
1 bottle beer
1cup beef broth
1 cup water

1-1/2 cups sliced carrots
1 cup celery
1/2 cup chopped sweet pepper

Salt, pepper, bayleaf

Place all ingredients in slow cooker. Cover and cook on low for 8-10 hours. Discard bay leaf.

Note. You could use ground pork or turkey. I don't know how fake meat would hold up, but you could add it the last and heat through. You, of course, could add non alcoholic beer.You couldmusenany other rootmvegetables that sounded good to you or add some noodles or cooked rice at the end.


Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane





Friday, February 22, 2013

Shopping trip

I cleaned the fridge, and made banana blueberry bread. Decided to go shopping anyway. I got cheese for five bucks at Top and apples. We took baby to her mom so we got lost for an hour. In less than an hour including travel time, we went to Safeways and got sour cream and some lunch meat. the dollar store was next where I got French fries and hot poppers. The grocery outlet was where I got whole wheat pizza crusts two in a package for a buck. Also chicken and artichoke sausage for three bucks. Yum!



I posted the last of the receipts for February. I averaged 68 a week and more than maintained our stock.

The banana bread recipe is bisquick. It is a healthy banana bread with egg substitute, low fat bisquick and low fat milk. Add oatmeal and bananas that are to the point of anti cancer properties and blueberries with anti ocidents and we have a real winner.

Thanks for stoppimg by

Please share

Jane



Finally Friday

Today, I am not going grocery shopping! We have enough food stocked that I dont have to. I am not seeing any terrific buys that are calling me LOL. Just one more reason why stocking is beneficial. They are predictimg 30 mile an hour winds today. A good day to stay home and get caught up on paper work or do some work for the business.

A good day to use the crockpot if the power doesn't go off. We have been real lucky since the power company cut down a tree up the road.

Batch cooking sloppy Joes

3 pounds ground beef
3 cups ketchup
1/4 cup brown sugar
6 drops liquid smoke
1 Tsp dry mustard


Cook ground beef until no longer pink. Defat. Return to clean pan and add ingredients. Simmer until warm and flavors have blended-- about 10-15 minutes. Bag in meal sized portions.

In also have used a recipe from the crockpot cookbook for a croud that takes veggies and canned tomatoes.

My favorite thing to make when I am having a crowd is something in the crockpot with a couple of simple sides, it takes all the pressure off at serving time. Ome time I had sloppy joes,tater tots and coleslaw. Another time I had sirloin tips with caramelized onions, rice, and green salad.

Salisbury Steak

1 cup milk
28 saltiness, crushed
1/4 cup minced onion
4 tsp parsley flakes
2 poumds groumd meat

Mix together all ingredients. Shape into 8 patties. Spray baking pan with cooking spray. Place parties in pan and bake at 350 for 50 minutes or until temperature is 160. Make gravymaddimg w sauce.


Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane


Thursday, February 21, 2013

the ads

The ads for this week are here.

QFC

Pork loin roast 1.59
Boneless chicken breast 3.75 a pound***
milk 2.50

Broccoli .99
Strawberries 2.00
Grapes 2.49
BRYERS 2.99

TOP

Cheese 5.
Chili 1.00
Broccoli 1.00
Potatoes 1.39
Apples .89

SAFEWAYS

Round steak 2.49
Sirloin tip 2.99
Pork loin 1.69
Shrimp 5.00

5 dollar Friday
Salmon 12 oz
Lemon me range pie


Pasta sUce 1.00
Potatoes , mashed 1.00
Carrots .79

ALBERTSONS

Manufacture coupons round to a dollar
YOPLAIT .50
tuna .78 coupon

That's all.

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane







Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Wednesday notes

I am getting writers block. Please comment what kind of recipes you want to see. Do you want to see the recap of the ads every week? Meal plans? I would really appreciate your ideas!

Today I am going to survey the fridge. We were lucky enough to be able to go out. Happy hour food is much cheaper than the regular menu. I just drink ice tea. My husband loves finger foods for dinner sometimes. You can make finger foods healthy.

Tomato soup is too expensive to make from scratch. My mother-in-law used to make it from canned tomatoes. unfortunately, I never saw her do it. There was a piece on Americas Test Kitchen comparing soups. There are actually tomato soups that have no tomatoes in them. kinda like the cheeseburger macaroni that has no cheese in it. LOL. I like then tomato-roasted red-pepper soup in a box. I can't afford it unless I happen to see it at Costco for about two dollars a box.I add basil, blue cheese, and some milk.

Veggie Sandwiches

Hummus
Feta cheese
Roma tomatoes
Lettuce

Small tortillas

Serve with salad.

I got garbanzo beans for .50. feta cheese with tomatoes was cheap at grocery outlet. small tortillas were .60 at big lots. I keep them in the fridge. I'm not surenincouldnget my husband to eat this for dinner, but maybe it would be a good lunch dish.

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane









Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Quick meals

I'm getting a lot of inquiries about horseradish sauce, chicken pot pie, WinCo and split pea soup.

The only thing I haven't seen a lot of is recipes that call for horseradish sauce. It's a strong taste and goes well with beef.

PIZZA PASTA
Sausage, mushrooms, pepperoni, green pepper, pasta sauce, onion, ripe olives, Italian seasoning. serve over pasta of choice.
Note I bought big cans of sliced ripe olives for 50 at big lots. I'll post later as to the quality.

CHICKEN TACOS

Chicken pieces, cooked
Drained diced tomatoes
Taco seasoning

Corn tortillas

Toppings
Lettuce, cheese, tomato sour cream avocado

CHICKEN QUICHE

Sauté 1/2 cup chopped mild onion and 2 tsp chopped garlic in a teaspoons of olive oil,
In a large bowl, beat six eggs. Add :
3/4 cup heavy cream, 2 cups cooked chicken, 2 cups shredded cheese, and 5 bacon strips, cooked and crumbled.
add onion and garlic.

Grease a pie plate and pour mixture in it. Bake at 375 35-45 minutes.

Notes
to reduce the fat!!
You can substitute milk for the cream. Use maybe a half cup instead.you could use turkey bacon and reduce some of the cheese or mix parmesan with cheddar to total 2 cups.


Thanks for stoppimg by

Please share

Jane










Monday, February 18, 2013

Gleaming ideas from magazines

One of my machines needed parts. Had to go to joannes to get it. I picked up the family circle. Magazines are ten percent off. That pays the tax!!!

We also went to big lots. I got fruit pouches for baby for fifty cents. I also got stewed tomatoes for .50 and chicken noodle soup in a larger can...30 percent more for .95.

I thought I would dissect the Family Circle. As usual, the food is in the back. They have a months worth of meals. Woman's Day has been doing that for years.

I won't quote the recipes, but will give you their titles. kinda like you thumbing through it at the checkouts.
chicken stuffed with tomato and cheese
Turkey sausage and spinach Orecchietti
Shrimp and sweet pepper fajitas
Meatballs in creamy dill sauce
Broccoli and onion pie
Pork medallions with apple
Honey soy glazed salmon

Balsamic pot roast
Chicken and hominy chili bowl
BBQ short ribs
Smoky navy bean soup


A lot of these recipes are in their month list.
A lot of sausage, fish, vegetarian, turkey and chicken, and some beef.
Some things I have never heard of, and some my husband wouldn't touch with a ten foot pole...broccoli and onion pie comes to mind. Heck, most of them he would make funny faces about! LOL


Some of these recipes are just to expensive to make. Some you can get into my budget if I find the ingredients on sale. Salmon was on sale this week at Safeways. It was still pricy, but I can offset it withza a couple of inexpensive meals--average. Short ribs are expensive when you consider how much is bone and how much meat you actually get to eat! Chicken breasts are more expensive ,but you can get them on sale, or cut up your chickens and save the breasts up in the freezer. There is a post of things you can do with leg portions. They used to be .50 a pound. Now they are a buck...more than buying the whole chicken. I can find chicken for .88 to a buck a pound.

I don't these days de-bone a chicken very often. I'm not as proficient as I used to be. I am retired, run two businesses, belong to a service club, take care of my granddaughter 10-12 hours a day five days a week and when I don't take care of my granddaughter, I work retail on my feet two days a week. Shopping on the cheap doesn't have to take more time that just going to one store and buying anything you want. Once you are organized, it probably takes less time collectively. Remember, if you spend more time on the front end of the" get dinner on the table train" and less time on the back end, you will be better off. You get " paid" for shopping, not for cooking.

There are ways to cut kitchen time and not sacrifice good food. Box dinners are neither cheaper nor faster. There is a post on that too. LOL. My daughter and I proved that!!
Better, cheaper, faster.

Not everything is organic. Organic can have three percent pesticides and still be labeled organic. Not everything is fat free, or sugar free, or gluten free. Pay attention to what they are putting in those things. It might me penny wise and pound foolish. I think it is interestimg that when our society is turned on to a speciality diet, suddenly even the stuff that never had whatever is being toted as healthy, has a big sign on it's package as fat free or gluten free or whatever. I believe in moderation and balance. They change their mind like some people change their underwear. Remember when liver was good for you?? Drink three glasses of whole milk a day, no don't drink three glasses of milk a day. Eat pasta. No don't eat pasta, you will get diabetes. I really think moderation and balance is the key.

Enough soap box.

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane




Sunday, February 17, 2013

Sunday and one more day off!!!

I bought salmon, stew meat, and hamburger this week, all in bulk amounts. My husband cooked all the salmon Friday night and I will make a salmon noodle casserole tonight. That leaves me with the stew meat and hamburgernto cook today. I am really hungry for beef barley soup. I wish I had paid attention to how my mother cooked it. I don't remember, but maybe because she started it before I got home from school. Que the Internet!!I have a notion that it had tomato paste, beef, beef stock, carrots...umm

Beef stew
1 pound beef cubes
4 carrots cut into chunks
1/2 pound red potatoes cut in half ormquarters to equalize size.
Red peppers, cut onto chunks
1can diced tomatoes

1/4 cup flour
6 ounces tomato paste
3/4 cup beef broth

1/3 cup additional liquid, water, stock, wine?

Salt, pepper, garlic, thyme

Brown beef. Place beef, vegetables in slowncooker. Add tomatoes over top.
Mix in a bowl, flour tomato paste and broth until smooth. Add the additional liquid, salt and pepper, garlic and thyme. Stir into contents of slow cooker.
Cook on low 6-8 hours or until meat is tender.

My mother cooked stew meat the way her mother did. She dredged it in flour. She then browned it with some oil and added water and braised it.

Thank you for stopping by

Please share.

Jane



Saturday, February 16, 2013

soups..easy, cheap and satisfying

One of the most requested recipes I have is for soups. We all want spring to come, but reality is that http://www.pinterest.com/pin/157907530660665317/ still winter. A hearty bowl of soup fills you up and usually it is healthy.

I bought LARGE bag of split peas at Costco. It was fractions of the price it is at even the grocery outlet. I split them with my husband's siblings.

Split Pea Soup #2

1/2 cup celery, sliced
1/2 cup onion, chopped
16 ounces of split peas
9 cups water
1 cup carrots, diced
2 potatoes, peeled and cubed
Parsley, basil, salt and pepper

Your choice of meat, ham , kielbasa,or turkey kielbasa, fake sausage???

Sauté onion and celery in olive oil in a soup pot. Stir in 6 cups of water and the peas.
Bring to a boil. Reduce to a simmer andncook 25 minutes. Add remaining ingredients and cook an additional 25 minutes. Don't forget the remaining 3 cups of water.

I think you could sauté the veggies and dump everything in a slow cooker for 8-10 hours. You could also substitute veggie stock for the water, or chicken stock. Also, you could sneak in some cauliflower. I usually blend all or part of the soup to make it thicker. If I wanted to sneak in the cauliflower, I would the food processor on it first so it blended in better.

Very technical chicken noodle soup

Sauté vegetables - carrot, celery,and onion
Add chicken broth,diced cooked chicken,and poultry seasoning.
Cook til warm. Add a couple of handfuls of noodles and cook until done.

We like anpiece of hard crusty bread with ours.

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane

Friday, February 15, 2013

Post grocery shopping

We gone shopping. First we went to the closing sale atmPetosas. They had everything is 1/2 price. I got rice, cream soups, and some sugar free jam. Then off Safeways. Again, there was no 7 percent hamburger. I did get salmon and stew meat. I am hungry for beef barley soup. Mashed potatoes were .90 cents.

I found frozen potatoes and mixed veggies at the dollar store.


Thanks for stopping by

Jane

Finally Friday.

The internet is a wealth of recipes so you don't get stuck in a rut. Betty Crocker has a web site that you can type in what you have and it will give you recipes. Just be mindful that you can substitute a box of ??? For real food.

There are only a few " rules" that will make a real difference on your food bill. It's rather funny to me that my mother a half a decade ago did most of them. There was not then deluge of ready made products back then, or the
Variety of vegetables we have now. The alternative food eaters didn't exist either to complicate things.

I have managed to work around vegetarian. Some of our meals can be adapted, sometimes, she has to make her own.
I have a husband that won't eat vegetables, a daughter that won't eat meat, and I am diabetic, so I can't eat a lot of starch. We all have to co exist! LOL

I digress.

1) never pay full price for anything. Sometimes I get stuck, but it is usually somethimg that never goes on sale. I still try to find the lowest price.

2) Never ( never say never) buy ready made foods. there are a few things that are cheaper ready made andna few that are too time consuming to make yourself.

3)Always shop at more than one store. Stores price some things low, planning on you buying what goes with them at a jacked up price. beat them at their game.

4) Plan your trip, research, make a list. Plan your route,get in and get out.

5) Try to use up everything. Cut the waste. How clever of our great grandmothers to make banana bread!

Thanks for stopping by

Please share.

Jane

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Meals from the ads

Today is usually meals from the ads. Even though I usually wait until after I shop to plan my meals. Sometimes I get to the store and Shay is on sale is in way too large a package or is not good enough or they are out of it.
A couple of weeks ago, QFC had pork loi . Most of it was dark meat and it had large gristle stuff running through it. The strawberries were growing gray hair prettier than mine!

My formula is

2 beef
2 chicken or pork
2 vegetarian
1 fish

Your spread may be different. these are my strategies than have worked for me. Use the things that make sense for
Your world now.

It seems as if the same cuts of meat are on sale . Trying to mix it up is a challenge. my mother seat one mealmplan and we coldntell what day of the week it was by what we were having for dinner. Pizza.. It must be Thursday. Roast, it must be Sunday. Hamburgers was Saturday!

1- steak, baked potatoes, horseradish sauce mixed greens with strawberries.
2- tacos

3- chicken noodle soup - scratch.
4- pork loin sandwiches with lettuce, tomato, cheese, broiled.

5- Mac and cheese
6- pizza

7- salmon, oven roasted root veggies, salad


Thanks for stoppimg by

Please share. There is a comment section. What do you like to see?

Jane







Tuesday, February 12, 2013

The ads

It's that Timel of the week.

The ads

Safeways

7 percent hamburger 2.99
Chicken .99

Apples -99
Salmon 5.99
Milk 2.59
Nathans b1G1
Blues,blacks 3.99


QFC

grapes 1.99
Chicken .88
Breyers ice cream 2.99
Klondike bars 2.99
80 percent beef 2.66***

TOP

Sirloin tip B1G1. 2.75 net


ALBERTSONS

Klondike bars 2.60
Chicken .88
Apples .88
Oranges .88
7 percent beef 3.49***

Note the spread between the hamburger prices and the chicken prices.

thanks for stoppimg by

Please share

Jane

Tuesday

It's time to take a quick look at the fridge and incorporate anything hanging around too long. We mare goimg tp have breakfast for dinner to use the berries I bought Friday. Maybe blueberry waffles.

Hreycvv. (Baby Dear is helping! )

A thrifty kitchen always has ground beef or turkey or textured vegetable protein. It's usually inexpensive and versatile.

Beef Stuffed French Bread

1 poumd ground beef
1/2 cup onion, chopped
1 large baked potato, cubed
1 can cream of mushroom soup
Mushrooms
1tsp parsley
1/4 tsp dried onion powder
Pepper
Dash of red pepper sauce

Hard rolls

1cup cheddar cheese, grated

Cook beef and onion until no longer pink. Drain.
Add potato, soup, mushrooms and rest of ingredients except bread and cheese.

Cut a slice off the top of the bread and hollow out center, leaving a shell. Make bread crumbs out of the pieces. Add one cup of the crumbs to the beef mixture. Stir on cheese.

Fill bread shells replace tops. Wrap in foil. Bake at 350 for 20 minutes. Let stand 5 minutes before serving

From Taste of Home booklet.

Notes. I would use already cooked and defatted beef. Instead of a can of mushrooms, I would use fresh so I could control the amount. A good recipe to use that leftover baked potato. Safeways has hard rolls in a bag. 8 for three dollars. Our TOP has them in bulk bread bin.
Can be made ahead of time and frozen. Thaw in fridge and bake for 20-25 minutes. I like things that I can
Put in the oven and finish dinner while it cooks. Maybe a green salad or veggie sticks.


Thanks for stopping by.

Please share

Jane








Monday, February 11, 2013

Shopping Trip and $5.00 Dinners

Good Morning. After I get home from any shopping trip where I buy groceries, I post to a spread sheet. Recording my grocery purchase totals keeps me on track.
If I see that I have spent more than my 75 dollar limit, I know I can back off the next week. I typically spend less on some weeks, and spend more the weeks that I find a good price on my stock items or a bulk meat.

Last night we had Pork Loin Roast, Mashed sweetpotatoes, green beans and salad. It would be a five dollar dinner --actually 4.50.

I got Ragu sauce for 1.00 and pasta for a buck. Add some meat and a salad and you have well under five dollars.

Sausage was buy one get one. Sausage and eggs and fruit and toast would be less than five dollars.

Split Pea soup and toasted cheese sandwiches would be less than 5.00.

Chicken Pizza would be less than 5.00 with a salad.

Tacos come in at less that 5.oo.

Pork sandwiches and coleslaw. The trick here is to find buns for a good price. Sometimes, the bread store or Grocery Outlet.

One of the tricks for keeping your food bill low is to group your meals in such a manner that you use all of what you purchased. If you buy spinach for a spinach salad, then you can use some spinach on a pizza. If you have cottage cheese left, make lasagna or stuffed shells. Leftover bread can beoome dressing for chicken or pork , or breadcrumbs for meatloaf or a thickening agent for soup. Cooked to much pasta...make pasta salad for lunch or to go with a sandwich for dinner. Fridge management cut down on the amount you have to throw away. The average family throws out a lot of food--like thirteen pounds a week by one account.

Pot Roast was on sale at Safeways. I am pretty well stocked, so I didn't opt for 18.00 worth of pot roast. If I hadn't been well stocked, I would have divided it into four pot roasts and frozen three of them.


My very technical recipe for pot roast in the slow cooker. Dump the pot roast in the slow cooker. Slice an onion and spread over the top. Salt and Pepper.
Pour a 12 ounce beer over the top. Add enough beef stock to almost cover the roast. Cook on Low for 8 to 10 hours.

Thanks for stopping my

Please Share

Jane








Sunday, February 10, 2013

Is anybody out there?

Is anybody out there? Yesterday I posted recipes for pizza that were different than the hum drum pepperoni...most of them a bit more healthy. I don't know are looking for because I am not gettimg any comments from anyone. There is an anonymous button on the comments section.

It's Sunday and I have to go to work today. That's six days this week, ugh! Soup is a good go to for days like this.

Burger Beef Soup

12 ounces cooked, defatted ground beef

1/4 cup chopped onion
1/2 cup frozen peas
1/4 cup carrots, diced
1/4 cup celery, diced

1 can diced tomatoes
1 can cream of mushroom soup
Salt, pepper
1 tsp Italian seasoning

1 cup uncooked noodles


Brown onions, carrots and celery in a little EVOO.
Stir in remaining ingredients except noodles.
Heat to boiling. Stir in noodles. Simmer 10-15 minutes until noodles are cooked.
Serve with hard crusty bread or croutons.

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane





Saturday, February 9, 2013

Suddenly Saturday

It's Saturday finally a day and a half off. Yeah! Saturday is a pizza kind of day.

Pizza crust is recipe is on a previous post. It's really easy.
Sauce
1 can tomato paste
1 scant teaspoon EACH of grated onion and minced garlic
Pinch of Italian seasoning
Salt,pepper

Toppings
1.5 cups mozzarella, grated
2 ounces diced ham
1 small red or green pepper, diced
1/2 can sliced black olives, drained **
onion
Parmesan
Basil

bake crust at 375 for 15 minutes. Spread withnsauce and toppimgs and bake an additional 15-20 minutes.

chicken pizza toppings
Chicken chunks
Onion
Garlic
White cheese
Diced peppers
Smoked Gouda

Note : smoked Gouda isnat grocery outlet, chicken strips are buy 1 get 1 Safeways thisnweek. I have not calculated the end cost of those. peppers are cheap at grocery outlet as well.

Mexican pizza toppings

Black beans
Onion, chopped or grated
Peppers, chopped
Tomatoes, chopped and seeded
Garlic, jalapeño, chili powder, cumin
Spinach, cilantro
White cheese

Pizza crusts like bomboli are 2.18 at WinCo. Or pre bake the crust recipe.


Thanks for stopping by

Please share. I am trying to help people eat better for less and save time in the kitchen.
There are still people that are under employed, unemployed or just want to get ahead.

Jane

Bake accordimg to your crust instructions.









Friday, February 8, 2013

Comfort Food

Comfort Food seems to be a topic I see lots. I also see inquiries about chicken pot pie, split pea soup,Tex Mex WinCo vs Costco.

Before I start talking about comfort foods, my daughter told me somethimg worth repeating. Costco green beans have 300 less grams of sodium than some of the other green beans. Their price is comparable except for the .33 ones I purchased from WinCo.

ORZO stuffed Tomatoes--6 servings

2/3 cup uncooked ORZO
6 medium tomatoes
1T butter
1/2 cup shredded swiss cheese, reduced fat
1tsp basil
2tsp parsley
Salt, pepper

Cook pasta. Drain
Cut a thin slice off the top of the tomato.
Scoop out the pulp leaving a shell. Invert tomatoes on a paper towel.
Cook butter in a saucepan. Add ORZO, the tomato pulp without seeds,drained and the remaining ingredients.
Spoon into tomatoes. Bake at 350 for 15 - 20 minutes.


3 T butter
3 T flour
1 tsp salt
1/4 tsp pepper
1-1/2 cup milk

4 ounces shredded cheese
3 cups grated potatoes.
1 cup grated carrots
2 T onion.

Make white sauce with the butter, flour and milk. Remove from heat and add HALF of the cheese.
Add the vegetables. Transfer to an 8 inch square baking dish. Cover and bake at 350 for 1 hour. Uncover, add remaining cheese and bake an additional 15 minutes until cheese is melted and potatoes are tender.

NOTE

I think you you could use less cheese. You could also grate all of the veggies in the food processor and drain them. Good with roast chicken.


Thanks for stoppimg by

Please share

Jane



Thursday, February 7, 2013

Notes on Wednesday

Today is the day that I usually make a list of meals from the ads. I'll do that, but I found a recipe booklet at the dollar store that is well worth the buck. it is called America's Cookbook. It has shopping tips, recipes and the history of some foods. it is a great educational tool for children.

They have tips for shopping most of them I have already posted and knew. A couple of them I forgot about.

Never go to the store hungry. Everything looks good and it's to easy to impulse buy. Watch the scanner for errors. I was charged twice for the same thing the other day. Finding it after you leave the store is a hastle to rectify.

Beer Bread

3 cups flour
1T baking powder
1tsp salt
2T sugar
1- 12 ounce can of beer
1/4 cup butter, melted

Preheat the oven to 375

Mix together dry ingredients. Add the butter and beer. Fold together just until well combined. Batter will be sticky. Pour into greased pan. Bake for 45 minutes or until bread tests done. Cool and turn out onto a wire baking rack.

This booklet is a wealth of information. History of foods, nutrition facts, measurement table, a lot of good basic recipes.


Meal Plans

I usually use a template to plan meals.

2 beef
2 chicken or pork
2 vegetarian
1 fish

I try to stick to this plan so that we are balanced. Beef has some nutrients that no other meat has. If you pick your cuts and cook it properly, it can have less fat than a boneless, skinless chicken breast. Even Dr Oz says twice a week is OK. The two days are balanced by chicken, pork, and vegetarian and fish. When a family member only ate chicken and pork. They had to go to the hospital for an operation and he was so anemic he had to have blood transfusions before they could do surgery. I think the trick is moderation.

Tacos, refried beans
Pot Roast, red potatoes, carrots, salad

chicken pot pie
chicken soup

Potato Soup
quiche

salmon

Thanks for stopping by
Please share

Jane








Wednesday, February 6, 2013

The ads. Again

I hit the wrong key and the entire blog erased. Basically, there are not many good buys this week.
QFC has good buys on dairy and Safeways has round steak and petite sirloin for 2.69.

QFC
18 coumt eggs 1.99
Butter 2.49
Cottage cheese 1.67
Strawberries 2.00

TOP

Oranges organic .89
Strawberries 2.00
Eggs1.50
Apples .99
Blues 18 oz 5.98
Salmon 7.00

Safeways
Round steak 2.69
Petite sirloin 2.69

Blue and blackberries B1G1
oranges .88
Buy 6: brownies or cake mix .99
Sausage B1G1. JOHNSONVILLE or chicken strips.
Ragu pasta sauce 2/3 plus get 1 pasta for free.

Albertsoms is just a bust. White breadnis .88, but I don't buy white bread.

Note.
Good ground beef is 3.99 a pound. Your best bet is to get round steak and grind your own. You can control the fat. If you don't have a grinder on your mixer, get the manual kind at a garage sale or a antique store or raid your grandmothers kitchen.


Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Tuesday

I am researching my old personal cookbook. One of the ways to bust the budget is to buy seasoning mixes. Spices are a buck all over. For spices that you only need a little of, the bulk isle is your best bet. Basil is really cheap at Costco in a Large container...share!! We eat a lot of Tex Mex. I can make it and still accommodate the vegetarians without cooking separate entres.

Chili seasoning

4T chili powder
2 -1/2 tsp ground coriander
2-1/2 tsp ground cumin
1-1/2 tsp garlic powder
1 tsp oregano
1/2 tsp cayenne pepper

Store on airtight container is a dry place

3 tsp for 2-1/2 quarts of chili.

Taco Seasoning
4 T chili powder
3T + 1 tsp paprika
3T cumin
2 T onion powder
1T + 2 tsp cayenne pepper

Makes 1 cup

Use 2 rounded Tablespoons per pound a meat. in cook the meat until no longer pink. Drain in a colander. Pour boilimg water over the meat. Return to pan with a little water and add seasoning. Bring up to temperature. Cool slightly and bag.


Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane

Monday, February 4, 2013

Monday madness

I ran on to meal plans that I did In 2002..some ten years ago. You can tell the adjustments made for the rising cost of food and the more health conscious climate. This was for the month of May and assumed you would add the appropriate veggie and starch.

Pizza, salad
Meat balls
Ham quiche
Hamburgers
Meatloaf
Dagwood Sandwiches
Tuna Cassarole
Beef Briskit
BBQ Beef Sandwiches left from yesterday)
Pizza, ham, pineapple, peppers
Hot Dogs
Roast Chicken
sloppy joes
Chicken pot pie
Tacos
Shrimp muffins, potato soup
Pizza, chicken, olives, onion
BBq spareribs
roast Pork loin
Shrimp fettichini
Pork stir fry
Bacon quiche
Tuna casserole
Pasta bake
Top round steak
Roast chicken
Hamburgers
London broil
Pizza
Chicken casserole
Spareribs

I'm not seeing much difference, except the large beef meals are a thong of the past most of the time. Steak is ten dollars a pound!

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Suddenly Sunday

Good Morning.

I just realized that I hadn't done meal plans for this week. I pretty much didn't buy much this week because most of the specials were all about expensive snack food and booze. it's just another good reason to stock. I still have enough food with the exception of fresh food to cook all week. I am using up the perishablesmthat are in the fridge so my split isn't as diversified as it usually is.

1) ribs, oven roasted red potatoes,green salad
2) Mac and cheese. ( uses up the odds and ends of the cheese) and green beans
3) quiche with ham cubes, strawberries
4) pizza, green salad
5) chicken stir fry
6) sausage and bean soup, brown and serve sourdough from Costco
7) Tacos, refried beans


Notes
Ribs were on sale at Safeways Friday. I buy lots of variety of cheeses because we like it. Cheese was 5 dollars for 2 pounds Safeways again. Ham cubes need to be used up. They work I'm pizza and quiche.
Chicken Stirfry is from chicken in the freezer pirchased at a dollar a pound. Sausage and bean soup and tacos use cans that I purchased for .50 last week. Total cost, rounding is 33.75 dollars divided by 7 is 4.82 a meal.

I could have substituted chicken for the ham on the pizza, but I want to use the ham up so it doesn't go to waste and it doesn't freeze well.

Thanks stopping by

Please share

Jane






Saturday, February 2, 2013

Dinners

I spent 40.00 at the grocery store this week. There just wasn't much there. I spent considerably more last week because it was a good stocking week. This week most of the ads were about the big game party food and booze.

I mostly bought fresh veggies. My husband went ton the grocery outlet and bought green peppers and sliced cheese.

When it is cold or when I know that it's going to be along day, I like to putna pot of soup on or put it in the slow cooker.

Sausage and Bean soup

1 quart of water
1 medium potato, sliced and cubed
1/2 pound sausage, cooked
2cans kidney beans, rinsed and drained
2cans diced tomatoes
1/2 a small onion, chopped
1 medium green pepper, chopped
1 tsp minced garlic
Salt and pepper

Bring water to boil in stock pot. Add potato and cook for 10 minutes until potato is tender. Add remaining ingredients. Reduce heat to simmer and cook another 10 minutes or so until veggies are tender.


Creamy Chicken Soup

sauté in oil in a stockpot until soft

1 rib celery chopped
1 medium carrot, chopped
1/2small onion chopped
1/2 tsp minced garlic

Add 3 cups chicken broth
2/3 cup of left over rice
Salt, pepper

Cook om low until heated through

Add 1cup cream or milk
And 1 cup diced chicken

Mix 2T flour with 2T butter to form a paste.

Add to soup stirring until soup has thickened and soup in appropriate temperature. Do not boil.
Over storing will make the chicken tough or stringy.

For stopping by

Please share

Jane



Friday, February 1, 2013

Outsmarting the retailers

As I have said before, the retailers have spent considerable money to research our habits and find ways to get us to spend more money.

Advertising multiples, when you can only by one item is one trick they use. Because something is 3/1.00 doesn't mean that you have to buy three.

The longer you spend in a store, the more money you will spend. That's why some retailers change things aroumd frequently. Costco is notorious for it. If you have the mind set that you are on the clock and want to get the most bang for your buck, you'll spend less time. It's a game. I want to save as much as I can in the least amount of time.

Impulse buying is the retailers profit. They figure that 70 percent of what we buy is impulse. Often it is the most expensive things in the store that you don't really need. We want the retailers to prosper but they can do it on someone else's dime who can afford it.

Create your own path through the store, if you don't need anything in an isle, don't go there. The true necessities are on the outside perimeter of the store.

Sometimes, what is truly on sale isn't the featured items up front.

Exercise the hands off rule. Studies say that if you touch it, you are most likely going to buy it.

It's a well known trick that if prices have to increase, the manufacturers will reduce the size of the package instead of outwardly increasing the price.

Know your prices, the bulk isle isn t always the cheapest price.

Keep in mind that foods are sold other places other than grocery stores. Many time you can find overstocks at the dollar store, big lots, Bartells and almost anywhere. Keep your eye open, and know your prices.

Pick your grocery store based on the prices, not how friendly the clerks are or how fancy the store is, or how uncrowded it is. think about it, there is a reason why the store is crowded. Either they have just forecasted that dreaded S word, or it's because they have the best prices. You go to the grocery store to purchase your food.

Stores charge manufacturers slotting fees. Basically they charge rent for the eye level shelves. You can just bet they are going to pass on the cost. Look UP and DOWN for the best buys.

Thanks for stopping by

please share

Jane



















Thursday, January 31, 2013

The basics

Good morning. If you are just looking at this blog for the first time, this blog is about eating on the cheap.
Almost everyone has times in their lives when they need to economize. People loose their jobs, decide to save for a vacation or the down payment on a home, or just don't want to waste money. This blog is designed to save 1/2 on your grocery bill.

1/2 price groceries takes a three pronged approach :

Plan and organize
Shop wisely
Cook from scratch

1) plan and organize
Any endeavor starts better with a plan. Start with comimg up with at least 7 main dish recipes that use inexpensive protein sources that your family will eat. Try to eventually get tp 14 so that you have variety.

Plan your meals after you get home from the shopping trip. Use what you have in the refer that you need to use up and the new things that you bought. It doesn't have to be fancy, just jot down om a piece of paper the main dishes. One of the best way to derail your budget is to not have a plan. Having to answer the question " what's for dinner" after a long hard day makes it too easy to say. "take out".

Make a list of the staples that you use often. In our house it would be cheese, beans, refried beans, diced tomatoes, pasta sauce, some tuna and canned corn and green beans. Make a spread sheet or a small spiral notebook that has the name of the food, the size of the container, the date you bought it, the store, and the price. Pretty soon you will get a consensus of what the cheapest price for that food. This is harder with rising costs right now, but it still helps. When something is the rock bottom price, buy

A) as much as your money will allow
B) as many as the store will allow you yo buy
Or C) as many as you need to replenish your stock.
If I use the item once a week, I want to have 24. If I use it once a month I keep 6.
This isn't about hording.
Havimg a stock gives you a sense of security, you have enough to make a meal no matter what happens and makes you prepared for a natural disaster.


2) shop wisely
When the grocery ads come out. Take a piece of computer paper, divide it into fourths. Put the name of the store on the top of each quarter. Now go over the ads and write down everything you are out of, the meat and veggie ads Ttat are cheapest, and anything that you stock. Now cross off anything that is higher priced than somewhere else, cross off anything you don't need. Skip the snack and ready made foods. For the most part, they are a lot more expensive than scratch. There are a few things that are cheaper than scratch or are just too labor intensive to make scratch. Tortillas, mashed potatoes, refried beans pasta sauce are all cheaper at least some times of the year.

Now, pick the two stores that have the cheapest prices. Go there with your list and the grocery ads, get in and get out. The more time you spend in the store, the more money you will spend. The grocers have researched our spending habits and know what to do to get us to spemd more. The bigger the grocery cart the more you will spend. The fancier the store, the higher the prices. Someone has to pay for that fish tank. LOL And they have many more tricks too.

If you can, invest in storage solutions that keep your veggies fresh longer.
I keep a cooler bag in my car to store frozen and perishable foods between stores. I try to keep my shopping trip at a minimal time, and a route that takes the least gas.

3)cook from scratch

his isn't as daunting a task as it sounds. There are ways to make the task as fast or nearly as fast as the ready made.

If you spend more time on the front end of the "get the dinner on the table" train and less time on the back end, you will be better off. You gent"paid" for shopping-- not for cooking. If you save 75.00 a week on shopping and spend an additional 1/2 hour shopping, you are making 150.00 an hour. And if you work for a living, you would have to earn an additional 15 percent at least to spend that 150.00.

Back to strategies. Buying meat in bulk and batch cooking and storing with portion control saves time, dishwashing and money. your slow cooker and pressure cooker can be your best friends in the kitchen. Anything that you can prep quickly and put in the oven to cook while you make more things or do other chores is also a time saver.

Making a double batch of things like rice and pasta to use the other half another dayy is a great help. I call that stair stepping. I try to post ideas on the blog frequently.

next time-- what your grocer doesn't want you to know!

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane









Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Suppers

in ran on to a booklet that I had bought years ago. we all like easy recipes in this day and age of busy lives.

EASY CHICKEN

2/3 cup of flour
1 tsp EACH of salt, pepper, and poultry seasoning

1 cut up chicken or chicken parts to your liking

Butter, or butter and olive oil

2 cups chicken broth


Dredge chicken parts in seasoned flour.

brown chicken parts in skillet with butter and or olive oil

remove chicken from skillet to the slow cooker

Make a sauce using the remaining flour for a roux and the cynicism broth.

Pour sauce over chicken .

Cover and cook on high for 2-2-1/2 hours or untilmchicken is do e and the juices run clear.


GERMAN STYLE SPINACH

1 package frozen chopped spinach
1/4 cup chopped onion
1 teaspoon chopped garlic
1T butter
3strips bacon, crumbled
Nutmeg
Salt

Cook spinach according to package directions
Drain well
in skillet, cook onion on butter. Stir in remaining ingredients. Heat through.


NoteS

Bacon was a buck at grocery outlet . I might use fresh spina h instead.
minced garlic is really cheap at Costco--cheaper than buying the heads of garlic and chopping them yourself.
If you don't think you can use that much, co sider sharing with a family member or neighbor.
I found split peas in bulk at Costco a lot cheaper than even grocery outlet. I just split them between my husbands siblings.


Thanks for stopping by

please share

Jane


Tuesday, January 29, 2013

The ads

Here are the ads for this week.

SAFEWAYS

Beef Top Sirloin 3.99
20 percent beef 2.49
Milk 2.59
Shrimp 5.00...Friday thru Sunday
Strawberries 5.00
Salsa 5.00
Shredded cheese 5.00--24-32 ounces. Get 32
Chili .99

TOP

PORK RIBS 1.57
dryers ice cream 2.99
Buy 10
Chili .75
Sour cream 1.49
Sirloin 3.49


QFC

chicken breast 1.49
Dryers ice cream 2.79
Sour cream 1.49
Frozen potatoes 2.49

Buy 5
Hebrew national. 2.99
Johnsonville brats. 3.49
Yoplait .50
Pasta 1.00

ALBERTSONS

blues 1.99
Apples .88
Dryers ice cream 2.88 coupon 1/31-2/3
Buy 10

Best foods 2.99
Coffee 7.99
Sour cream 1.49
Refried beans .49

Hot dog and hamburger buns 1.00


That's all. Not much this week. It is a "holiday " weekend. LOL

Thanks for stoppimg by

Jane



And you spend WHAT on groceries?

And you spend what on groceries? There was a piece on the network newscast night about a family of four . They were talking about what they were spending on food and not throwing so much food in the garbage. They spent three hundred dollars a week on food. That's Four months on my budget. It did not sound like they were eating any different than we do for about 65.00. The difference is paying our utility bills and real estate taxes.

Beef Soft Tacos

3/4 pound cooked and defatted groumd beef
1 tsp minced garlic
1/2 of a green pepper, chopped
1/2 cup green olives, sliced
1/2 tsp cumin
1can diced tomatoes
6 inch corn tortillas
Romaine lettuce,torn

Cook beef,garlic and green pepper in skillet for three minutes. Add remaining ingredients except lettuce. Cook 5 minutes more.

Heat tortillas accordimg to package directions.
Add torn lettuce to top of taco.

Notes. I would serve with rice cooked with salsa.
Romaine is the least expensive of the lettuces because it lasts so long there is usually no waste. The darker the green, the more food value it has.

Quick Crazy Tamale Dish

Combine 3/4 pound of cooked ground beef, 1-1/2 cups salsa and a can of kidney beans in a microwave safe square dish.
Heat on microwave until warm--about 8 minutes. ( cover to reduce splattering.)

Place a tube of polenta on a 9 inch square casserole. (microwave safe) Cut in slices to cover bottom of pan.
Place meat mixture on top of polenta.
Cover dish with plastic wrap and cook for 6 minutes or until thoroally heated. Sprinkle with cheese and heat until
cheese is melted. Serve with salsa, as spicy as your family likes.

Note
You could substitute small pieces of cubed cooked chicken foe the beef and make polenta and spread it in the pan.

Thanks for stopping by

Please share on Facebook.

Jane











Monday, January 28, 2013

Monday madness

It's Monday. We went to world market yesterday because I got a coupon for 49 percent off. My husband likes their fancy olives. We had to go for some supplies at Michaels too. I try to group my trips so that we use less gas. We stopped by Grocery outlet on the way home. I got feta cheese with roasted red peppers and basil, pepperoni with cheese, and my husband got bacon for a buck a pound. He came home and cooked it on the George Foreman. I like to use a little bacon in some things for flavor. One slice of bacon in a dish cam make a real difference. They have a wide variety of cheeses for a reasonable price. They had 32 ounce jars of mayo too, but their pull date was Jan 11---too far out of date to make it safe in my book. Wen can freeze the cooked bacon and pull it out when we need it. You never know what you are going to find-- not everything is full of sodium.LOL. they have good prices on other things too.

I think my point is that I am cognizant of prices where ever we go.Good prices on food can be everywhere. Often times good buys can be in stores who's main focus is not food. I watch pull dates and brands.

I had always gone grocery shopping by myself. Since we have been retired, my husband goes with me. He also went with me when we were both out of work. I didn't think he was paying attention to anything as he wheeled the cart around. One day we were at a store and there was and end cap with 8 ounce cans of tomato sauce for .25. He said, that's not on sale, we paid .10 last week for them. Boy, was I surprised!

A bit of a splurge, but sometimes Bartells has artichokes on sale. The price of tuna balances it.

Tuna melt on English Muffins

1/2 cup artichokes, drained and rinsed
1/4 sliced green onions
1-T lemon juice
1tsp olive oil
1/2 tsp oregano
1/4 tsp ground red pepper
1can tuna, drained and flaked

2 English muffins, split and toasted
1-1/2 ounces of grated provolone or sharp cheddar.

Preheat broiler5
Combine first 7 ingredients and a dash of pepper.
Divide evenly among English muffin halves
Sprinkle with cheese.
Place on baking sheet. Boil 4 minutes until golden.

Serves 2

Notes

This calls for canned artichokes. Artichokes in a jar are cheaper.
Just. Don't use the oil. If I didn't have green onion, I would use some onion powder and parsley. English muffins are at the bread store often.Sometimes they are on sale 2 for at the regular chains.

I also read Panini with chickpea spread and sautéed spinach. itncaught my eye because I got garbanzo beans for .50 last week.

Process 3/4 cup garbanzo beans
2T lemon juice
2tsp capers
1 T water

Combine in a food processor until blended.

Sauté spinach on 2tsp olive oil. Add dash of pepper and 1tsp garlic minced.
slice sub rolls lengthwise. Fill sandwich with a layer of bean mixture and a layer of spinach. Top.

This would also taste good with thinly sliced chicken or pork and maybe a little white cheese.

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane






Sunday, January 27, 2013

Suddenly Sunday

It's already Sunday. The weekend goes to fast!




Twenty years ago, I was published in the Woman's Day magazine for a recipe for economical pizza. Since then I foumd an easy recipe for pizza crust in the food processor. The kids always liked watching the sponge develop. --great science experiment. ( see earlier post). They insisted on substituting sausage in casing for bulk sausage. Sausage is cheap at Costco and sometimes Grocery Outlet.


Breakfast Pizza
Cooking Light All Time Favorites

1-8 oz can low fat crescent dinner rolls

Cooking spray

12ounces turkey breakfast sausage
1cup shredded hash browns, thawed
1cup shredded cheddar no fat cheese
1/4 cup fat free milk
1/4 tsp pepper
1-8 oz carton egg substitute
2 T parmesan

Preheat oven to 375

press dough together to form a 12 inch circle. Make a rim and place on a pizza pan that has been coated with cooking spray.

Cook and drain sausage.

Top dough with
Sausage
Potatoes
Cheese

Combine milk, salt, pepper and egg substitute. Whisk.
Carefully pour into crust. Sprinkle parmesan.
Bake at 375 for 25 minutes until crust is browned.

8 pieces. Cal 203, carbs 20

Note. Cost over the top! Eggs are a dollarmandozen at QFC. If you are worried about whole eggs, use one egg and supplement the eight ounces with egg whites. I would bet that somewhere on the Internet there is a recipe for egg beaters.
The other thing that is expensive is the dough.


Thanks for stopping by

Please share. I got a comment yesterday--it made my day!!!

Jane
















Friday, January 25, 2013

Notes on Fridays shopping

I was surprised to find out that I could have vegetarian refried beans and low sodium beans as well. All of the canned goods were at least a buck a can off. That ads up fast. I got ten refried beans, 10 diced tomatoes and 10 beans. They had garbanzo beans too so five of them were garbanzo beans. My daughter likes humus. I spent 15.00. I saved over thirty dollars from the regular price-- I paid 33 percent on the dollar.

Another way to look at it is that no bank is ever in this day and age going to give you 67 percent interest on your money.

The more meat skyrockets in price, the more recipes we will see for token meat dishes and rice and beans. I so far, am seeing meat on sale for a reasonable amount. Certainly, it is not as cheap as this summer, but it isn't too outrageous yet.

Meals from the ads


2 beef
2 chicken or pork
2 vegetarian
1 fish


1) meat ball subs, vegetable chips
2) tacos, refried beans, rice
3) chicken ( oven fried) mashed potatoes
4) sausage and saurkraut
5) quiche
6) pizza
7) salmon

Notes. Spinach artichoke chips were 2.00 at big lots. Refried beans were .50 at albertsoms. We got groumd beef for 2.50 a pound at Safeways a few weeks ago. Chicken is a buck a pound at albertsoms. Sausage is 5.00 for 10 large ones Safeways Five dollar Fridays that have been extended with just 4U. Eggs are a buck at QFC.
Carrots were .79 a poumd at Albertsons. sauerkraut is cheap at big lots.


Fusilli with creamy panchetta pea sauce

About 1 ounce of panchetta or bacon
1tsp olive oil
1cup diced onion
1tsp minced garlic
2T flour
2cups low fat milk
1/4 cup low fat cream cheese
2-1/2 cups frozen peas, thawed
1-1/4 cups grated parmesan cheese
Basil
Salt, pepper

5 cups cooked fusilli

cook panchetta or bacon, remove from skillet.
Add oil to skillet. Add onion and garlic
Add onion mixture to meat.
Add flour to pan. Make a roux with milk.
Add cream cheese. Stir until cheese melts and sauce is smoot.
Stir in basil, salt, pepper, and 1cup parmesean. Add cheese sauce and parmesean to the
meat mixture. Toss with pasta.

From cooking light

Notes. I got low fat cream cheese at QFC last week for .50.
I think almost any small pasta would work for this.


Thanks for visiting
Please share

Jane















Friday

I would like to stop for a few sentences and talk about learning how to cook from scratch. I dont know the age group of my readers, so I'll address this issue anyway.
It is well worth your while to get a basic knowledge of cooking. It's not hard. I went to cooking school when I had a chance, but I have also learned a lot from Tv cooking shows. PBS has a lot of them. Martha Stewart has a series going on about basic cooking and there are more. Kids need to know that food doesn't always come out of a box or the deli! LOL

Chicken strips are on SALE for 7.49 for 2 pounds or less. Chicken has been on sale for a buck a pound lots. one week I got it for .88. crispy chicken strips is breaded chicken that has been baked. It takes as long to cook the frozen pieces as it does doing it from scratch. I got bread free at the bread store. It took a few minutes to dry it in the oven, put it in the food processor, and dry it . I did it while banana bread baked and put them back in the oven when the banana bread was done and I turned the oven .

This is a good week to stock up. refried beans, beans and diced tomatoes are all .50. That is the lowest price that I have seen. A lot of times, they are close to a dollar.
There are a lot of dishes that you can make from them, and they are good for you. beans are good for your cholesterol. Just rinse them well to reduce the sodium.

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane

Thursday, January 24, 2013

FINALLY, THE ADS

I finally got the ads.

QFC

Sirloin Roast B1G1 nets 3.25
Strawberries 2/5.00
Eggs 1.00
Tomatoes and beans .50
Brats 3.49
Raspberries, blackberries 2.99

SAFEWAYS
Pot roast 2.69
Loin chops
Top round, London broil

Grapes 1.99


5 buck Fridays
Blues -18 oz
Cream pie
Diced tomatoes .75 ***
Donuts 4.00. Just for u

TOP

10 for 10 sale

Romas
Carrots, baby
English cucumbers
10-16 ounce frozen veggies

Chuck roast 3.00

ALBERTSONS

APPLES .88
chuck roast 2.99
Chicken, whole, drums, thighs
Green peppers .50
Carrots .79
Refried beans .49. (10)
Chili .99


Notes

Note spread on canned tomatoes, pot Roast.
.50 on beans and refried beans is the lowest price they have been in a long time.
Fresh veggies are an additional 20 percent On just4 U.


Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

The OTHER white meat



The ads on TV and the print ads a few years ago Refered to pork as the other white meat. They have made pork lean and more healthy. It is also less expensive than beet generally. I had not cooked pork until I got married. My husband cooked pork chops and I learned to cook more. I found pork tenderloin and loin roasts. I can still fimd pork chops and roast for 2.00 a pound or so. Basically, you can cook pork the same as chicken.

Pork loin roast can become chops before it is cooked, or sliced as roast and thinly sliced to make a bbqnpork sandwich.

Years ago, I made up a recipe for a pork hero sandwich that was published in Taste of Home.

Note, there was a typo in the recipe.

1 loaf French bread
3T olive oil
2 pounds pork tenderloin cubed
1 julienne green pepper
1 julienne red pepper
1/2 cup celery, sliced
1small onion, chopped
2tsp garlic powder
1 tsp onion powder
1tsp pepper

1/2 cup chicken broth
2 cups sliced plum tomatoes
1cup shredded mozzeralla cheese.

THIS FILLING MAKES TWO BATCHES. YOU CAN EAT HALF, AND FREEZE HALF.

Cut the top fourth of the bread off, reserve.
Hollow out the bread leaving a 1 inch shell. Save the extra bread for breadcrumbs.
Set aside.

In large skillet, heat oil. Add pork cubes and brown. Add vegetables, except tomatoes, and cook until pork done and vegetables are tender. Add chicken stock and simmer until mixture is reduced.

Set aside 1/2 of the filling and freeze.

spoon 1/2 of filling into bread shell. Mixture should not be soupy. Top with tomatoes and cheese. Replace bread top.


Wrap in foil. Seal tightly. Bake at 400 degrees for 10-15 minutes or until heated through and cheese is melted.

NOTES

I would use pork cubes that have already been cooked and might use pork loin instead of tenderloin. I would use Roma tomatoes that have been seeded.


Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane



Monday, January 21, 2013

Sunday notes

Yesterday my daughter and grandaughter and I went shopping. I found a blank weekly calendar with big squares for writing. It was 2.00 less 70 percent. Itnwould have been less if I had the 25 percent coupon from the Internet. We went on the spur of the moment and I didn't prepare. I am going to use it for meal plans.

My husband is not particulary fond of chicken and pork. He wants us to go back to the good old days when pork hadnfat on it. LOL. Because of trying to eat a bit more healthy, we are eating a variety of meats. His main beef about chicken is that it has no taste. I am trying to find chicken recipes that are more tasty.

Jerk Rub for chicken

1T allspice
2tsp cinnamon
1tsp nutmeg
2tsp minced garlic
Salt and pepper

Combine ingredients. Rub on chicken or pork. Grill or broil.

Balsamic vinegar glaze
Thyme, berry preserves, and a touch of balsamic vinegar.


chicken and pasta.

1/2 package of a long pasta....spaghetti, linguine, fettichini
1/2 pound cooked chicken cubes
Olive oil
1small chopped onion
1tsp minced garlic
1cup chicken broth
8 cups spinach
4 ounces swiss cheese

Sauté cooked chicken in olive oil. Add chicken broth,onion, garlic,salt, pepper. Combine pasta, spinach, and cheese in large bowl. Add chicken mixture and toss.

Thanks for stopping by
PLEASE share

Jane










Sunday, January 20, 2013

Sunday Dinner

We don't always have Sunday Dinner.That is, we have dinner, it just isn't always a special dinner. It depends on what is going on that day.

Rosemary Potatoes

1T butter
1tsp minced garlic
1tsp dried rosemary
1/2tsp salt
1-1/2 pounds red potatoes, quartered

Melt butter and garlic in a 8 inch square baking dish in the microwave. microwave on medium high for 45 seconds.
Add rosemary, salt, pepper and potatoes. Toss.
cover, and microwave on high for 15 minutes


SPINACH AND MANDARIN ORANGE SALAD

1-10 ounce bag of spinach, torn
8 ounces of mushrooms, sliced
2-11 ounce cans of mandarin orange, drained well
1ounce crumbled blue cheese
2T chopped pecans
1/2 cup raspberry vinaigrette

Toss all ingredients

NOTE.. To make this low-cost, I would use a regular orange or a tangerine. you use walnuts if pecans are more expensive or dependimg on what you have after Christmas.


PORK CHOPS IN HONEY MUSTARD SAUCE

4 pork chops
2tsp olive oil
1-1/2 cups white wine
1/2 cup honey
1/4 cup Dijon mustard

salt and pepper pork. Brown on both sides in oil about 5 minutes each side.
Add honey, mustard, and wine and bring to a boil for three minutes.
Add the pork to the pan. Simmer for 6 minutes A SIDE or until pork is done.

Adapted from Cooking light
NOTES. Honey is the one food that never goes bad. If it crystalizes, heat it in the microwave or in it's glass jar , uncovered in boiling water.

chicken broth would be a substitute for white wine.



Thanks stopping by

Please share.

Jane







Saturday, January 19, 2013

Suddenly Saturday

It's Saturday and I have three days off.Yeah! I have a sinus infection but I am going to enjoy them anyway.

New Menus from the WinCo shopping trip. Not having an ad for WinCo, I went with my ten dollar coupon just looking for bargains and knowing what I was short of. I bought just the amount of particular product that I knew I had used up lately.

Almost everything that I purchased was either the same as a sale price ( Roma tomatoes )or cheaper than my current lowest price--about twenty to twenty five percent for the same or comparable brands. Add another twenty percent and I averaged 40 percent off of SALE prices or about sixty percent. Our car uses little gas, but the savings was well worth the trip. you have to know your prices, some things were more.



Not knowing what you are going to find, or NOT find, is why it is prudent to do your meal plans after you shop. Case on point-- QFC had pork loin on for 2.00 but when I got there, they looked terrible. The strawberries had gray hair prettier than mine!!

Two beef, two pork or chicken, two vegetarian and a fish.

1)sloppy joes, oven baked fries
2)spaghetti and meatballs
3)roast chicken
4) chicken pot pie
5) quiche
6) pizza
7) tuna melt

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane


Friday, January 18, 2013

Winco buys

I got a ten dollar coupon on 50 dollars worth of food at WinCo. it is not spend 50 at the grocery store. If you combine the coupon with specials,the net cost is really low.

I had to spend 50. at winco. I spent 51.28! Less Sunflower seeds 2.41 equals 38.87
I got almost everything for 20 plus percent off the regular lowest price on my list.

a few things were more expensive, so I didnt buy them. Cheese was 2.79 per pound.

Parmesean cheese was about 1/2 what I paid last week. Ground Pork was 2.18 a pound.

Pepperoni was 1.88
Pizza shells (like Bomboli) were 2.18 each.
hamburger buns 1.98
JWhite Bread .88
Roma Tomatoes 1.
Fuji apples .87
American Cheese (Kraft) 8.78
Nallys chili .98
olives .95
Mayo 2.98
Taco Chips .98
Mashed Potatoes .88 usually 1.00 on sale
Green Beans, corn .33
Pasta Sauce .79
red pepper.68
Tuna .68
canned chilis ..79

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane

Thursday, January 17, 2013

I'm watching the chew

Today I am watching the chew. they are talking about leftovers. Their stays say that we throw out half of our food. They are advocating 3 trips a week to the store. That is a way to spend twice what you need to spend. That's probably why they think a meal costs 25.00 Lol. The trick is to stay on top of your perishables and find ways to use then up or pit them up.

Roast chicken is becoming chicken salad and chicken crepes.


Chicken crepes are white sauce, leftover veggies, parm and chicken. Sounds good with spaghetti or noodles.

Just a note



Please share


Jane

Meals from the ads

Traditionally, groumd beef is one of the cheapest ways to buy beef. It os also one of the most versital. by buying in bulk you can portion control and avoid waste. Sometimes I have been finding low fat for 2.50. When a roast is cheaper, I grind my own. You can de fat hamburger and make it have less fat than a boneless, skinless chicken breast. Beef has some nutrients that you can't get in any other meat. Moderation is the key. It seems like what is good for you today, isn't good for you tomorrow. Remember liver on the 60's?

On to meals... I'm talking my mindset so you can do it yourself using you families tastes. I am just doing the main dish, fill on with what's appropriate and inexpensive.

I'm still with

2 beef
2 chicken or pork
2 vegetarian
1fish

Using last weeks ground beef at 2.50 a pound

Taco soup
Spaghetti and meatballs

Chicken is .88 at QFC. That is about 1/2 of the price of a deli chicken. Buy a 4 or five pound one.

Roast chicken.
Chicken pot pie. If you make your own white sauce and portion control the bisquit, you can control the fat and calories.

Quiche
Mac and cheese

Tuna is .80 at Top.
Tuna melts

That's all.

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane


Wednesday, January 16, 2013

The ads

I finally got the ads .

QFC

CHICKEN .88
flour tortillas 10 ct for 1.00
Pork loin 1.97
1/2gal milk 1.00
QFC pan bread 3/4.00
Strawberries 2/5
Yoplait 10/5.00
Chili 1.00
Chuck roast B1G1. Nets 3.50....this summer 2.00


TOP

Ground sirloin 3.77 ***
hagan tomatoes 15/10.00. .67 each
Apples .89
Pork chops 1.99
Boneless bottom roast or steak 2.74 net B1G1. ****
rice 4lbs 2.99

Tuna 10/8.00
Blues 3.00


ALBERTSOMS

ground beef 3.99***

Tomato or chicken noodle soup 4/3.00. .75

Blues 2.99
Lettuce .99
tuna 1.25***


SAFEWAYS

pot roast 2.49
Sirloin tip 2.99
Bottom roumd 2.99

Boneless pork loin 1.99
Chicken parts, thighs, drums, split breast 1.25
Apples 1.00

5 dollar Fridays

Sub sandwich
Clementines 5 lbs
Canola oil
Shrimp per pound

Milk 2.59
Coffee 7.99

Chili 1.00

Blues , blacks. 3.00
Oranges 8 lbs 5.99
Grapes 2.99


Just 4 you. Nathans2.99
Pudding ring. 2.88


Notes

Note the variance of prices of ground beef. That is why we bought it for 2.50 last week.

At the difference between 4.00 and 2.50. (1.50). Times 8 poumds is 12.00 .

Boned chicken breasts 1.25. Boneless 3.99. (2.75) and you get the start of chicken stock to boot.

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane




Wednesday

it's Wednesday,mid week for most people. We used to have Pizza establish,nets that had all you can eat pizza on Wednesday night. Kinda like the all you can eat tacos Tuesday now. But, you could bring the kids.

It was a great inexpensive way to have a night out mid week.

I thought I would talk about different pizzas. The recipe for crust is on a older post.

Spinach mushroom | Very well Ed and squeezed spinach, feta, mushrooms, garlic, diced tomatoes, garlic and Italian seasoning.

Bacon and clam pizza

olive pizza

Pepperoni

Mushroom and black olive

Chicken and olive

Ham and pineapple


Thanks for watching.

Ads later

Jane

Please share

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Terrific Tuesday

I watched the chew yesterday.They are advocating meatless Monday. Their stats say that if you eat vegetarian one day a week, you reduce your chance of heart disease by 19 percent. They also say you reduce your chance of diabetes by 15 percent and you reduce your food bill by 100.00 a month. The 100 dollars a month is had for me to believe. if don't spend 25.00 a meal, you can't save 25.00 a meal. LOL

They made two vegetarian burgers. The lentil one doesn't appeal to me, but the mushroom one sounded ok.

The news yesterday was about beef takimg a LARGER HIKE. It already is almost double.
My plan is to watch for sales and hang on until it is never cheap enough and rework my menu spread to eat more chicken and pork if they don't skyrocket too. This is hard, because my husband only likes beef.

My plan will still reduce food costs, but maybe not to 75.00 a week. With the drought and the freeze in California, I suspect the average grocery shopping bill will increase significantly. We can, adjust as our grandmothers did in WWII and the great depression. Not to mention the Nixon years. Stocking now , without overstocking, will hedge it.

On to a more positive subject.
Ground beef was 2.50 a pound for 10 percent .
One of the ways to reduce your protein costs is to stretch it and use less. Another point they made on the chew.

BEEF AND MUSHROOM ROLL.

Filling:
1 pound ground beef
1 small onion, chopped
4 ounces mushrooms, chopped
1/4 cup dill pickle relish?
1tsp salt
1/4 tsp EACH mustard and pepper

2 T flour
1/3 cup water

Cook everything in a skillet until the meat is no longer pink.
Make a slurry of the flour and water and add and cook until it thickens.

CRUST
2cups flour
2 tsp baking powder
1tsp salt
1/2 tsp poultry seasoning
1/4 cup shortening
3/4 cup plus 2 T milk, divided

Combine dry ingredients . Cut in shortening. Stir in 3/4 cup milk. Stir into ball. Roll or pat into a 12X 9 rectangle.

Set aside 1/4 cup meat mixture. Spread remaining beef mixture on dough within 1 inch of edges. Roll up starting with the large side. Pinch edges ton seal. Place seam side down on baking sheet that has been greased. Bake at 425 for 15-20 minutes until golden brown.

For gravy, melt 2 T butter, stir in 3 T flour, salt and pepper. make a roux. Gradually add remaining milk. Heat, storing, until gravy is smooth. Nstir in reserved meR.

Slice roll, serve with gravy.

From Taste of Home.

Thanks for stopping by

Please shRe

Jane










Monday, January 14, 2013

Monday madness

It's Monday again...funny how that works. Back to the old grind. I thought I would talk about the Family Circle magazine that I got at Joann's for 1.80.

I think that it is interesting that they always have a really good desert on the cover right when everyone is trying to diet. It is next to the 35 ways to be healthier.

I bought it because the cover talks about cooker recipes. They are in the very back of the magazine. There are also ideas for organizing-- that dreaded kitchen counter catch all!

Chocolate caramel brownie stacks....
Sharp cheddar shells and cheese
grilled cheese and tomato
Chicken and dumplings
pomegranate chicken
Meatball and barley soup
Apple, sausage and walnut pasta
Salmon tacos

White chocolate peppermint yum!

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane


Sunday, January 13, 2013

Game day

Football Frenzie is upon us. Todays game is in the morning. Breakfast parties are going on all over town.

Breakfast for Dinner is a good way to cut your food bill. Traditionally, breakfast foods are cheaper than dinner foods. Some kids think it is fun because it is out of the ordinary.

Besides the standard quiche, there is sausage, eggs, and hash browns. Waffles and bacon, frittata,omlettes, fruit, French toast.

The bakery outlet sometimes has Texas toast. One time I got it for .50 at Grocery Outlet. It makes really good French toast.

CRANBERRY MUFFINS

2 cups flour
2/3 cup sugar
2tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt

1cup fresh cranberries, chopped


2/3 cup milk
1/4 cup melted butter
1tsp grated orange rind
1/2 tsp vanilla
1 slightly beaten egg

Preheat oven to 400. Mix dry ingredients together in a bowl. Sir in cranberries. Make a well. Combine wet ingredients. Fold together. Do not over mix.
Coat muffin pans with cooking spray. Spoon batter in to cups. bake 18 minutes ormuntil muffins spring back when touched. Cool on a wire rack.

From Cooking Light.

Thanks for stopping by

Jane






Saturday, January 12, 2013

Yesterdays grocery trip and more comfort foods

Yesterdays grocery trip was a real eye opener. It os going to takema lot of ingenuity
To keep a 75.00 a week budget. The salmon that used to be 1.1 pounds for 5 bucks os now 12 ounces for 5 bucks. the hamburger that was supposed to be 7 percent was really 10 percent. Still a bargain and actually 7 percent is harder to defat and still get enough fat to not make it dry.

I did manage to spend less than 75.00 takimg in consideration that my husband bought his beef jerky ingredients. He went to Costco and picked up bisquick, bananas, and brown and server bread. Still itmshould be close to the 75.00. itsna marathon cooking day today!

There are lot of recipes for boneless, skinless chicken breasts. It happens to be the most expensive way to buy chicken. It is worth your while to either learn how to cut up a raw chicken,or adjust the recipe to compensate for cooked chicken breast. Use the same flavors as the regular recipe.


GREEK CHICKEN WITH CAPERS

1 pound chicken breasts, boneless

Flour
1 tsp oregano
Olive oil

1 onion, thinly sliced
1.5 cups chicken broth


1/3 cup raisins
2T lemon juice
2T capers
1/4 cup crumbled feta cheese

Lemon slices

1) flatten the chicken breasts that have been cut into portions. Dredge in flour that has been seasoned with oregano.

2) in a skillet with olive oil, brown chicken. Cook about 4 minutes each side.

3) remove chicken from pan, keep warm.

4) sauté onions about 2 minutes. Stir in broth, raisins and juice. Cook a few minutes, deglazing the pan.

5) return chicken to pan and cook until chicken done. Remove chicken, stir capers into sauce.

Serve chicken by pouring sauce over it and sprinkling feta on top. Garnish with a lemon wedge if desired.

Serve with couscous and zucchini that has been steamed.


NOTES: you could Make the sauce and add Cooked chicken breast to warm at the last minute and cook the sides before or while you cook the sauce. This would shorten the time in the kitchen. You might have to add a flour slurry to thicken then sauce to compensate for not having dredged the chicken.
Couscous is cooked almost like instant rice.
Don't overcook the zucchini...threaten it!

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane


Friday, January 11, 2013

Comfort Foods and menus from the ads

I was watching then chew yesterday. They were talking about how each generation has different comfort foods. I always thought Mac and cheese was comfort food. Interpretation is that for the older generation it is Mac and cheese, and braised meats. For the X generation it is fast food burritos and hamburgers. For the y generation it is ramen noodles-- not the kind out of a package--more like foo.

I would love to kmow you take on comfort foods. You can leave a comment below and still remain incognito LOL


Now, on to the meal plans from the ads.

My formula is still 2 beef, 2 pork or chicken, 2 vegetarian, and 1 fish.


Good ground beef is on sale at Safeways as is salmon--hopefully I can get some this time. Chicken is still a buck.


1) meatbLls and spagetti, green salad, bread
2) tacos, refried beans, salsa rice

3) roast chicken, mashed potatoes
4) pork chops, red cabbage, applesauce

5) no brainer pasta, salad
6) quiche, salad

7) salmon on potatoes and tomatoes


To make fish on potatoes and tomatoes. Slice potatoes and tomatoes. ROMAS are cheaper and have less seeds. Layer them in a greased baking pan drizzle with olive oil. Salt and pepper. Place fish on top and drizzle with olive oil. Bake at 375 until potatoes are tender and fish is done.

No brainer pasta is on an earlier post, as is taco seasoning.

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane

Thursday, January 10, 2013

agh...the ads

Truly, I dont live for the ads!LOL

SAFEWAYS

Buy one, get one meat sale. If you don't want to buy double packages of meat, I would suggest that you getbwith a sister, cousin or neighbor and buy in bulk. Saco fs are worth it.

Round steak nets 2.50
7 percent ground beef 2.50 ******net
Pork ribs. 1.75net
Chicken 1.00 net


5 dollar Friday
Salmon
Baby back ribs 5.00
Strudel

Frozen potatoes...fries or tots 1.99
Brownie mix 1.00*****coupon
Tuna 1.00
Ice cream 1.99***coupon
Eggs 18 count 2.39****coupon


**** note ground beef is a REALLY good buy. At that fat content, when you defat it, you havE LESS than boneless skinless chicken breast that four dollars a pound.
I batchncook ground beef and meal size portion it. Tacos, meatballs, beef crumbles for pizza or pasta sauce, no brainer pasta and a meat loaf.


ALBERTSOMS

chicken .99
Pork chops 2.40 net. B1G1
Sirloin steak, 3.50. Net B1G1
Frozen boneless, skinless chicken breast 3 lbs 4.99 weekend only
Pasta sauce 1.00

TOP

Whole salmon 3.97
Iceberg lettuce 1.00


QFC

Yoplait .50
Boneless chicken breast 3.75 net B1G1
16 ounces blueberries 5.99


That's all.
Remember to cross off anything that is a more expensive price and anything you don't need to stock.

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

jane

Expensive

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

OOPS, no ads yet again.

Wednesday and yet again another day without the ads. I went to the Goodwill yesterday and found a couple of magazines (small books actually) for .49 a piece. You can get inspiration anywhere, and it is expecially nice if it is free or next to free.

From cooking Light

Tuscan Chicken Stew , Drop Bixcuits

1 pound skinless, boneless chicken breasts, cut into one inch cubes.
1/2 tsp dried rosemary
2 tsp olive oil
2 tsp minced garlic
1/2 cup chicken broth
1 can white beans
1 can (7ounces) roasted red peppers, drained and cut into 1/2 inch cubes.
3.5 cups torn spinach.

Combine chicken , rosemary, salt and pepper. Toss well. Heat oil in skillet and cook chicken for 3 minutes. Add garlic, saute 1 minute. Add broth, beans, and peppers. Bring to a boil. Cover, reduce heat and simmer 10 minutes until chicken is done. Stir in spinach. simmer 1 minute. Yield 4 servings.

Note: You can use already cooked chicken and toss with the spices. add chicken broth and beans, and roast your own peppers. I call adding the spinach for a small time , threatening it. LOL

The other alternative to boneless, skinless chicken breast (the most expensive way to buy chicken besides the wings,) is to cut up your whole chicken raw. Its not hard, but it is a little time consuming if you aren't an expert butcher.


Drop Bisquits

2 cups flour
1T baking powder
1 tsp sugar
1/4 cup butter, chilled , cut into small pieces
1 cup milk

Heat oven to 450 degrees.
Lightly spoon flour into dry measuring cup, level with a knife.
Combine dry ingredients and 1/2 tsp salt. Cut in butter. Add milk and stir JUST until moist.

spoon batter into 12 muffin cups coated with cooking spray,
Bake at 450 for 12 minutes or until golden. Remove from pan immediately, place on wire rack.


This is supposed to be a thirty minute meal. It would be less if you use already cooked chicken. In that case, I would cook the bisquits first, and then cook the chicken.


Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Tuesday

It's Tuesday. I thought I would talk about comfort foods. Winter is upon us. they are calling for snow in the convergence zone!

SOUR CREAM ENCHILADAS

1-1/2 pounds chicken breasts

2 cans cream soup

1cup sour cream

1-1/2 tsp onion, chopped

1 tsp minced garlic

2 cans chopped green chiles

1/2 cup vegetable oil

12 tortillas

2 cups grated cheese

Serves 6

preheat oven to 350. Grease a 9X13 pan.
Cook the chicken and cut into bite sized pieces

In a large pot, mix together soup, sour cream, onion, garlic and chilis. Simmer 5 minutes.

In a skillet, heat oil. Soften tortillas on oil avout 2 minutes.

Top each tortilla with chicken, and 2 T of sauce. Roll up.

Arrange rolled tortillas in pan. Pour remaining sauce over tortillas.

Top with cheese and baked covered for 20 minutes, uncover and bake an additional 10 minutes.

From Comfort Foods Cookbook.

note. As is, this would be a time consuming and expensive recipe. The secret to low cost cooking, is to adjust accordingly. this recipe feeds six. I would 1/2 it and serve a salad along with it or some rice For four people.

You can use a can of green chill is or pickled peppers that have been rinsed.

The chicken is probably already cubed and in your freezer.

Chicken Breast was a dollar a pound at Albertsons last week. Tortillas I got for a buck.
Cream of mushroom soup is .75 often or you could make a white sauce and use pRt of the sour cream for the milk.

With some substitutions, this can become a low cost dish. Remember, if you replace an expensive ingredient, use something that takes the same space and substitute the same flavors.


Thanks for stopping by

Please share.

Jane







Monday, January 7, 2013

Monday Madness

And we start the madness all over again. I don't think that I have ever talked about leftovers. When I was in junior high home ec class, the teacher insisted we call them planned overs. LOL. Leftovers are an easy way to give the cook a night off or take advantage of cooking a larger batch of something and have the leftovers for lunch the next day. Last night we had roast chicken breast, mixed veggies, baked potatoes and fruit salad. Today I am making a chicken waldorf salad.

Taco meat can become nachos or a taco casserole or the meat in no brainer pasta. The recipe for no brainer pasta is on an earlier post-- a good cheaper, better, faster alternative to hamburger meal boxes-- more food, less money.

Pot roast can become pulled beef sandwiches.

Pasta sauce is 1.00 this week (ends tuesday) at Albertsons. Pasta was .93 at Safeways just 4 U. If You haven't signed up for it, it is well worth your while. Usually there is a electronic coupon for 3 dollars off 15 dollars off produce--that's twenty percent if you watch your totals.

If a large package is cheaper, take advantage if the cheaper price and freeze some of it, make a concentrated effort to use it up...blueberries can be in banana bread, waffles, pancakes, on top of cereal or use the "green" boxes so they last longer. organize your fridge so that things don't get shoved to the back and forgotten.

A good trick for this is the mid week inventory. Take a quick minute and make a mental note of what's in the fridge and what you can so with it. I usually do that when I am
Putting away the leftovers so that I can think about what to do with them while I am doing the mindless task of the dishes.

I am out of ideas and time...

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane