Saturday, April 9, 2016

5 ways to have Passive cooking

Passive  cooking is a word coined by the Chew.   It's the cooking time where you have assembled your ingredients, put them to cook, and can walk away to do other things.    To my favorite type of cooking.   Efficient cooking .

There are many recioes that use passive cooking.   When they don't, sometimes you can cook early on the day or on the weekend so that you aren't cooking if dinner time is hectic in your house.   It certainly is on our house.    

  1. Make ahead. Some people make dinner the night or day of dinner.
  2.  So,e people  make freezer meals.  Freezer meals can be made in multiples in a short amount of time,   The Pinterest is full of recipes.  Dinner is ready for the crockpot.  You pull the bag the night before, out it in the fridge to thaw and sumo it on the crockpot on the morning,   
  3. Crock pot dinners.   We love soup.   
  4. Oven dinners.    Meatloaf, baked potatoes and acorn squash was my mothers favorite go to.  The whole meal cooked on one oven.    Pork chops with Apple cranberry, bread stuffing is one of ours too.   
  5. Hobo or pocket dinners.    We have fish packets all the time.    I got the recipe from "do it on a dime,"  it cooks fish on parchment with spinach, rice, beans, fish and broccoli layered on parchment paper. Sealed. And common on the oven at 400 degrees for 30 minutes.   There are a lot of other foil packet dinners that basically put your starch, meat, amd veggie on a piece of foil and seal and either out them on the oven or on a grill .    Mothers love them because they are easygoing and washing the dishes is a breeze.   No pans.  No dirty plates.    Kids like them because it's camping out!,   

About all.    If you want recipes, let me know on the comments.   



Groceries on the cheap is looking at the Put Dinner On The Table meal train from a different
 pro spective.  The emphasis is on purchasing good food( shelf- stable/ freezer staples )at the lowest possible cost and purchasing enough to last you until it goes on sale again -- Keeping a controlled non-perishable stock of the things you use on a regular basis. It means that when you shop, rather than purchasing just what you need for a day or a week, you  buy a loss leader protein, produce you will need on sale, a stock item if it's a RBP, and dairy instead.    This allows you to put well balanced meals 
on the table consistently  for a four dollar a day budget per person.   You spend more time on the planning and shopping end of the meal train and less on the cooking end by cooking efficiently.    

Four dollars a day is the target amount for people on snap.   My premise is that of you can do it on four dollars a day, spending more isn't hard.   You still get more bang for your buck.    



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