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Getting Fun with Frugal Food, Because That’s How We Roll Comments Off

Sometimes I complain about living on a budget, but really, I like* the challenge of coming up with good meals for my family without spending a fortune. I find that the limits actually help me to be a little more creative in the kitchen.

We do a lot more meatless meals, which is healthier anyway. I’ve resurrected some old Southern favorites that I kind of forgot about, and they are so good. And I’ve found that the more I make myself the more money I save, plus it all tastes better. continue reading…

Food Tips: A Better Morning, A Better Salad 1

Hey, you can even have a better salad for breakfast during your better morning.

I refuse to believe that trading recipes is silly.  Tunafish casserole is at least as real as corporate stock. ~Barbara Grizzuti Harrison

Smart Moves for Morning

  1. Get into a breakfast routine. It’s okay to eat the same thing every day for breakfast, and it will help you be prepared and be sure you’re eating something. Switch out week to week if you get bored.
  2. Do some prep the night before: get the coffee ready to go, put out breakfast plates, go ahead and unload the dishwasher so it’s not waiting for you.
  3. Come in to a clean kitchen. At the minimum: put away food, wipe down counters, and put dirty dishes into hot, soapy water to soak. A step above: wash the dishes or load in the dishwasher. Leave only the dirtiest pots/pans soaking overnight. continue reading…

Back in the Menu Planning Saddle 3

NOT my menu...
It’s been a month since I planned a menu. The last one was a two-week planning fest designed to carry us through Christmas without leaving a bunch of excess food in the fridge when we went out of town over New Year’s. It worked pretty well, and then we were out of town, and then we were home and sick. We were supposed to start our diet the first week in January, and we did. That stomach bug really gave us a kickstart. Woohoo. The things some people will do to lose weight… But the tummy bug was not voluntary so I really shouldn’t praise my own dedication to weight loss. In fact, if I’d had a choice I definitely would have declined. I despise being sick and I’m really bad at it, as in, whiny and unpleasant and grouchy.

Here I am, anyway, trying to keep us semi-aligned to our diet aspirations and on track for losing the rest of the weight. I actually lost 15 pounds over the holidays and the following two weeks of sickness, so I guess that’s good however unpleasant it was for me and the rest of the family. Heh heh.

One thing I’ve learned about my menu planning is that detailed menu planning kind of throws me off. I work better when I plan 6 or 7 dinners and then just choose the night before what we’ll have the next day. If I forget to think about it and  thus forget to pull meat out of the freezer, all the fish thaws in minutes so I can throw one of those meals together quickly if needed. I like having dinner prepped earlier in the day but it just doesn’t always work that way.

Our diet criteria are also influencing how I plan menus these days. I’m trying to think more, eat better, and not just grab what is quick and easy. ( Read inspiration here.) We’ve never eaten a lot of red meat because it’s expensive, but we used to eat a lot of pasta and good ole down-home Southern stuff: chicken and dumplings, homemade mac & cheese, meatloaf & mashed potatoes. I’m drooling. Stop, Annie, for the love of all that’s thin and healthy!

So now we’re doing a, um, very modified version of the Rosedale Diet. Basically lots of fish and lean poultry, salads and fresh vegetables, and not so much sugar and carb-laden food. I’m allowing us one pasta night per week & one beef night per week, and I’m aiming for eating fish at least twice a week and meatless twice a week.

I’m linked up with OrgJunkie’s Menu Plan Monday.

fisheatfish

Dinners

Cranberry Chicken Melts on Low-Carb Buns
Beef Fajitas
Parmesan Crusted Tilapia, Salad, Sauteed Veggies
Broiled Salmon, Buttery Cauliflower, Salad
Crock Pot Chili Lime Chicken-Tostada-Salad (probably skip the tostada and just make it a salad)
Broccoli Cheese Soup, Homemade Crackers
Artichoke Pasta with Alfredo Sauce

Lunches

Tuna Salad
French Onion Soup
Salad with Grilled Turkey or Chicken
Leftovers

Breakfasts (which I’m trying to save, still)

Banana Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Muffins (a friend’s recipe I can’t wait to try, these will be our breakfast “luxury” for the week)
Raisin Bran
Whole Wheat Bagels
Omelet & Turkey Sausage (if I get really industrious, or if I whine enough and get Joe to cook…heehee)

Images courtesy of mugley and floodllama.

Help Me Save Breakfast 3

frootloops2

I really don’t like cooking breakfast. I really don’t like eating breakfast. I love food, but the only thing I really want to eat in the morning is some sort of sweet, starchy item (think pastry) that goes with my coffee. Before 8, that’s the only thing that sounds appetizing and, alas, it is extremely bad about expanding the love handles.

My usual morning breakfast routine is something gourmet and exciting like Raisin Bran. I am in awe of these Moms who offer all these morning food choices to their kids. Eggs? Omelet? Egg white omelet with shaved asparagus and prosciutto curls? Cheese toast? Scone with marmalade? No problem, I’ll just whip up a batch. French toast? Bacon? Oatmeal?

That doesn’t really happen in our house, like, ever. I keep going on kicks where I try to cook us up a nice hot breakfast before my husband leaves for work, and I usually do a nice job for one morning. Or two, on a good stretch. Then it’s back to bowls of cold cereal or a granola bar and a banana. (That’s my other morning standby. )

I usually make myself eat something just because I know it’s important for my metabolism and all that, but I don’t really like it. I’d actually like to change this and really, I want to get better at preparing an appetizing morning breakfast option for us all. The problem is, I have too many criteria and since I can’t find something that meets them all, I just give up and we go back to default.
eggs1

My Perfect Breakfast Critera:

1. Something low carb. Sugary sweet baked goods really don’t seem like a healthy way to start the day, even though muffins do go great with coffee.
2. Something not uber high fat, like delicious bacon or sausage or cheesy omelets. Again, since the point is to start your day on a healthy note, this seems kind of like shooting yourself in the foot. Or the stomach, so to speak. I’m not opposed to eggs, as in plain ole scrambled, so maybe there’s something there…
3. Something quick. Did I mention I have 3 kids? Every moment counts in the morning. Every moment is worth its weight in gold. I do not have time for stirring pots of bubbling breakfasty foods.
4. Something easy to eat, so that my 2 kids who are sitting at the bar feeding themselves won’t end up wearing most of their breakfast. It also needs to be
5. Something they’ll like, because I just am not ready for an “Oh Yes You WILL Eat Your Food” showdown in the morning.  They’re not very picky but, you know, they’re kids.

So far, like I said, the best options seem to be a semi-healthy cold cereal (like Whole Grain Cheerios or Raisin Bran) or a banana with a granola bar or piece of whole wheat toast.

But that’s all so, so boring and blech and frankly I’m just tired of it. I’d like to serve my family something a little more warm and comforting on these cold winter mornings, but I’m at a loss. So I’m polling the crowd. I am desperate for ideas, recipes, make-ahead breakfast ideas, or anything that comes close to meeting my criteria.

Or, alternately, if any of ya’ll want to show up around 7:30 or so with a batch of fresh-baked anything, I’ll drop critera #1 in an instant and pour you a cup of coffee.

Help? Please? Share? I’m dying here…and we’re almost out of Raisin Bran.

Images courtesy of D Sharon Pruitt.

Four Foods on Friday: 13 Feb 2009 edition 3

Don’t you want to go play too?

Four Foods on Friday is hosted by Fun, Crafts, and Recipes blog. Someday I’m gonna be on the FFOF Regulars list. Yes. I have a dream.

#1. Are your Kitchen utensils nylon, silicone, wood or other?

Mostly wood, with a few random nylons and others in there. My favorite is the big hardwood paddle I got from Williams-Sonoma. It’s a perfect stirrer/scraper/flipper, and, oh yes, paddle.

#2. Do you prefer dishes washed in a dishwasher or by hand?

I love my dishwasher.

#3. How many sets of dishes do you have?

Ohhhhh. Too many, but kind of an odd collection I guess. I have two or three boxed up in the basement (mainly wedding gifts), one set boxed up in the garage (inherited from Mom), and what we actually use on a daily basis is a combination of a set of Blue Willow – which doesn’t have any bowls with it – and a couple of sets of bowls, one from Japan that my sis-in-law got me.

#4. Share a recipe that calls for only one pot or pan.

This is what I’m making for tonight. I guess technically it calls for zero pots or pans; you just need one slow cooker. I’ll be gone all day, so it will be really nice to come in and actually have dinner mostly made. A batch of rice to go with, and we’re set.

From AllRecipes.com: Kathy’s Delicious Whole Slow Cooker Chicken

INGREDIENTS

  • 1 (3 pound) whole chicken, skin removed
  • 1/2 cup chicken broth
  • 1/3 cup soy sauce
  • 1/3 cup olive oil
  • 1/4 cup honey
  • 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
  • 2 teaspoons balsamic vinegar
  • 2 teaspoons lemon juice
  • 1 teaspoon sesame oil
  • 2 tablespoons minced garlic

DIRECTIONS

  1. Remove skin from chicken, and empty inner cavity of contents within. Pat chicken dry with a paper towel, and place inside the slow cooker.
  2. In a bowl, stir together the chicken broth, soy sauce, olive oil, honey, Worcestershire sauce, balsamic vinegar, lemon juice, sesame oil, and minced garlic. Pour mixture over chicken, and cover.
  3. Cook chicken on low setting for 8 hours, or 4 hours on high setting.
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