Posted on 11/19/2013 12:19:47 PM PST by wbill
I hope the beer was AFTER range time.
For $35 you can get 50 lbs. of rice and 50 lbs. of beans at Costco. You can eat reasonably well for eight weeks, not one.
Might not be particularly happy, but it’s a perfectly survivable diet. Though if you eat absolutely nothing else, you’ll eventually get deficiency diseases.
Hey, grania, thanks for the ping. I just made some yum cabbage soup with organic carrots and organic celery leftover from our $30 week, and some potatoes too. Plus a lot of other stuff, including some dried lentils, so it’s got protein and really tastes great. If it needs more protein, I can top it with a big tablespoon of nonfat yogurt, my version of sour cream.
Other good news: I lost a little weight. Every bite I put into my mouth had outstanding nutritional value during our $30 week except the vanilla/sugar wafers from Mexico, but you’ve gotta have a little fun. Those wafers were $1.11 for the package; the equivalent Nabisco package is OVER $5 at my market...checked yesterday. So it’s worth it to drive 8 miles to the el cheapo store. Just one package of cookies pays for the gas.
We should write a FR cookbook that presents recipes on the cheap from all over the country.
My dad was in the restaurant business, was very smart about getting us kids to eat and enjoy everything. We were NOT allowed to turn down any food we had not actually tasted, we were not allowed to eat much bread except for sandwiches, and we always had well-balanced meals. We almost never had dessert of any kind. Nor dinner rolls. (”Not enough food value,” he’d say. — today we’d say nutritional value.)
The only thing I ever tried that I really wanted to gag on was nopales cactus, which I had in a Mexican restaurant and have managed to avoid for the rest of my life.
Guess I’m saying that parents can make mealtimes not only delicious and nutritious, but also can instill a sense of adventure and discovery in their kids. When mine were preschoolers, I took them to the grocery store and we started alphabetically through the vegetables, from artichokes to zucchini. I had a very hard time getting beyond the artichokes because they absolutely loved them. Perhaps because they chose them themselves. My son honestly didn’t like peas. So he didn’t have to eat them; he had all the other veggies he did like..
Hey wbill, this is fascinating. grania and I each ate for a week for $30 a week or so ago, so we know how easy it is to do it. She’s in MA, I’m in WA. My post here gives some details of my $30 adventure. It was fun
See Post #62 on t his thread.
Breakfasts vary. Lunches are usually sandwich-based. Dinners always consist of some form of meat, some form of starch (potatoes, bread, rice etc etc) and some form (or 2) of veggies. Desserts? Meh. Sometimes. If we had them every night, they wouldn't be a treat.
And don't get me going on leftovers. I've got leftover pizza for my lunch today. Pizza was made from leftover spaghetti sauce. Made a big pot of sauce this weekend (~$15, fed us one night, plus I froze enough for another night, plus I made pizza (homemade pizza, homemade sauce...one of my favorites!!) last night. And I'm having it leftover for lunch today.
$5.49 / day to eat on for one would be do-able, but bland. For a family would be eeeeeeeeeasy.
Yes, those economies of scale when cooking for a family.
My answer to "bland" is a couple of bottles of really tasty sauce. The cabbage soup last night got a dash of Thai peanut sauce. Tonight it will get mint chutney from India. A little goes a long long way, thank, goodness, because those yummifiers are pricey.
Beer is a food group, right?
5.56mm
Beer is a food group, right?....Yes, beer takes care of three food groups. 1.Bottled beer,2. caned beer and 3 keg beer.
Absolutely. It's "Liquid Bread".
Actually, it should be in its own group. Along with Pizza, Chocolate, and Hamburgers.
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