lost illusions

lost illusions

bye
Sep 12, 2018
548
Lets see them ideas that we can eat
 
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Redt2go

Redt2go

flower child
Jan 5, 2019
1,643
Like to cook?
 
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lost illusions

lost illusions

bye
Sep 12, 2018
548
Rice chex lightly brushed with real butter and coated with either cinnamon sugar or carnation instant breakfast
 
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LiveSlowDieFast

LiveSlowDieFast

Specialist
Nov 14, 2018
338
I like to eat tomato scrambled eggs for breakfast. It takes like 10 minutes to make:

Put a pan on medium heat, add some butter and once it coats the entire pan, add half a can of chopped tomatoes and let it cook for 5 minutes

Meanwhile, crack two eggs into a cup or bowl, add some salt and pepper, and stir with egg beater

After the 5 minutes, turn off the heat or put it on a low setting and add the scrambled egg mass into the pan and mix with the tomatoes. Put some toast into the toaster in the meantime
 
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stellabelle

stellabelle

ethereal
Dec 14, 2018
3,919
Spaghetti is always a cheap favorite.
Or ramen noodles w egg.
 
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lost illusions

lost illusions

bye
Sep 12, 2018
548
Does anyone like real jalapenos wrapped in bacon and filled with cream cheese?
 
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stellabelle

stellabelle

ethereal
Dec 14, 2018
3,919
Fried egg on a waffle is good too.
 
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leaps

leaps

FUNERAL
Jan 16, 2019
250
Peanut butter and syrup on a pancake
 
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DownInaHole

DownInaHole

Not so wise
Jan 4, 2019
216
rice & beans are a complete protein.
 
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iHeartRockArt

iHeartRockArt

Wizard
Sep 21, 2018
608
I've also made a sort of hamburger helper when I didn't have actual hamburger helper...out of Ramen. I called it my "cheese burger casserole." Make the ramen soup, then strain the broth off of it and set aside. Cook the hamburger with chopped onion till onions are tender, season to your liking, add the noodles to the hamburger. Cook a few slices of bacon, chop it up. Then add a small amount of the broth back into it to moisten the meat and noodles, add the bacon and some cheese...then top with cheese. Bake in a casserole dish at 350 for 20 mins.
 
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lost illusions

lost illusions

bye
Sep 12, 2018
548
I've also made a sort of hamburger helper when I didn't have actual hamburger helper...out of Ramen. I called it my "cheese burger casserole." Make the ramen soup, then strain the broth off of it and set aside. Cook the hamburger with chopped onion till onions are tender, season to your liking, add the noodles to the hamburger. Cook a few slices of bacon, chop it up. Then add a small amount of the broth back into it to moisten the meat and noodles, add the bacon and some cheese...then top with cheese. Bake in a casserole dish at 350 for 20 mins.
I've done this, its pretty good
 
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iHeartRockArt

iHeartRockArt

Wizard
Sep 21, 2018
608
Homemade poppers are one of my favorite, sometimes I'll use a makeshift smoker and cook em under low temp
I love jalapeño poppers. I can't have bacon, but I love them with cheddar or cream cheese and dipped in batter and fried.
 
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Kyrok

Kyrok

Paragon
Nov 6, 2018
970
Ramen with celery, hotdog, ginger
Ground beef, beans, tomato, onions over spaghetti
5 bean soup, with cumin, coriander
Cabbage, onion, tomato soup
Stuffed cabbage ... rice, tomato, etc.
A million versions of beans & rice
Cheap frozen pizza, add your own toppings
 
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Minudah

Minudah

Stupid
Dec 3, 2018
1,355
I take tofu and just put some kind of sauce on it, like soy sauce or hot sauce. Quick simple filling meal that's cheap in some places
 
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hablakadabra

hablakadabra

Lurker
Feb 12, 2019
9
Tuna, cottage cheese, capers, salt, pepper
Throw a can of tuna in a bowl, add cottage cheese until its a thick paste. Mix in the capers.
Put it on some crispbread or toast.
Season with salt&pepper to your liking.
Healthy, quick and tastes good.
 
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lost illusions

lost illusions

bye
Sep 12, 2018
548
I take tofu and just put some kind of sauce on it, like soy sauce or hot sauce. Quick simple filling meal that's cheap in some places
What is tofu?
 
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lost illusions

lost illusions

bye
Sep 12, 2018
548
Tuna, cottage cheese, capers, salt, pepper
Throw a can of tuna in a bowl, add cottage cheese until its a thick paste. Mix in the capers.
Put it on some crispbread or toast.
Season with salt&pepper to your liking.
Healthy, quick and tastes good.
Interesting

I've made tuna patties before. Tuna, mayo, flower and a pan of butter
 
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A

anelakapu

Member
Mar 28, 2018
99
Spam musubi- slice of spam and sticky rice wrapped in seaweed..or pretty much anything drowning in tapatio
 
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FTL.Wanderer

FTL.Wanderer

Enlightened
May 31, 2018
1,782
This is one of my favorite topics! First, if someone has a stable enough environment, they can grow vegetables in containers on a deck or balcony. There are fantastic vertical gardening systems that can feed 6+ people off of the space of a tiny New York apartment faux balcony. And I developed a water recycling system to process (light) gray water for edible and decorative/protective plants even in the hellish heat of California's Central Valley, so you can save on your water bill even more easily if you live outside the desert.

But for people who don't want to garden, buying dried legumes and whole grains in bulk is still phenomenally cheap. At my local food coop, French lentils (a fancier legume) cost $1.09/pound bulk. And you can Google the soil to plant contamination dynamics for lentils; they're among the cleanest (fewest contaminants) plants. Fancy jasmine brown rice at my coop costs $1.04/pound bulk. There are even cheaper options--like phytonutrient dense kidney and black beans and long grain brown rice. Organic whole steel cut oats are ridiculously cheap at our coop--$0.39/pound. Together, the legumes and grains supply complementary amino acids (L-methionine for the legumes and lysine for the grains...).

For desserts, fresh fruit that's on deep discount freezes for pennies on the dollar and because it's so ripe makes a sweet treat that rivals the far more expensive and less nourishing stuff sold in groceries' frozen sections.

In the spring and summer, local farmer's markets offer seasonal produce at terrific prices relative to supermarket prices. I buy large quantities and share with neighbors. And you can pick berries that would otherwise rot at locally owned farms (sometimes even wild--careful, local contaminants...) during their high season so cheaply it makes supermarket prices seem criminal.

During the winter, equally nutrient dense (to fresh) frozen vegetables bought in bulk on sale can save over 80% off typical prices (frozen chard, kale, spinach). And if you grow your own in containers (tomatoes, cucumbers, green beans, cabbage, broccoli...), you can pickle--preserves nutrients and even enhances profile of some vitamins while adding probiotics.

Finally, some produce you can get a nearly infinite return on--like sectioning garlic, turmeric, ginger... or collecting and propagating seeds of easy to grow non-sweet fruit like avocados (requires right temperature) and gobs of peppers.

There are tons more ideas... When I lived in Seattle, my neighbors and I started a local community garden. In exchange for just four hours of work a month, each of us had more than enough food to get by year round. Every community ought to have a collective garden to prevent food shortage. A tiny plot of land can produce so much food that even local homeless can have health-supporting, filling nutrition much of which doesn't even require cooking.

Good luck!
 
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lost illusions

lost illusions

bye
Sep 12, 2018
548
This is one of my favorite topics! First, if someone has a stable enough environment, they can grow vegetables in containers on a deck or balcony. There are fantastic vertical gardening systems that can feed 6+ people off of the space of a tiny New York apartment faux balcony. And I developed a water recycling system to process (light) gray water for edible and decorative/protective plants even in the hellish heat of California's Central Valley, so you can save on your water bill even more easily if you live outside the desert.

But for people who don't want to garden, buying dried legumes and whole grains in bulk is still phenomenally cheap. At my local food coop, French lentils (a fancier legume) cost $1.09/pound bulk. And you can Google the soil to plant contamination dynamics for lentils; they're among the cleanest (fewest contaminants) plants. Fancy jasmine brown rice at my coop costs $1.04/pound bulk. There are even cheaper options--like phytonutrient dense kidney and black beans and long grain brown rice. Organic whole steel cut oats are ridiculously cheap at our coop--$0.39/pound. Together, the legumes and grains supply complementary amino acids (L-methionine for the legumes and lysine for the grains...).

For desserts, fresh fruit that's on deep discount freezes for pennies on the dollar and because it's so ripe makes a sweet treat that rivals the far more expensive and less nourishing stuff sold in groceries' frozen sections.

In the spring and summer, local farmer's markets offer seasonal produce at terrific prices relative to supermarket prices. I buy large quantities and share with neighbors. And you can pick berries that would otherwise rot at locally owned farms (sometimes even wild--careful, local contaminants...) during their high season so cheaply it makes supermarket prices seem criminal.

During the winter, equally nutrient dense (to fresh) frozen vegetables bought in bulk on sale can save over 80% off typical prices (frozen chard, kale, spinach). And if you grow your own in containers (tomatoes, cucumbers, green beans, cabbage, broccoli...), you can pickle--preserves nutrients and even enhances profile of some vitamins while adding probiotics.

Finally, some produce you can get a nearly infinite return on--like sectioning garlic, turmeric, ginger... or collecting and propagating seeds of easy to grow non-sweet fruit like avocados (requires right temperature) and gobs of peppers.

There are tons more ideas... When I lived in Seattle, my neighbors and I started a local community garden. In exchange for just four hours of work a month, each of us had more than enough food to get by year round. Every community ought to have a collective garden to prevent food shortage. A tiny plot of land can produce so much food that even local homeless can have health-supporting, filling nutrition much of which doesn't even require cooking.

Good luck!
I liked growing onoins, garlic, hot peppers and tomatoes. I'm farely good at it
 
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C

creationisdeath

Specialist
Oct 20, 2018
359
These cheap ramen thingies will eventually kill you - painfully. I can recommend rice. You will hate it after a while but it's cheap and better than the boatloads of MSG you find in ramen.
 
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Minudah

Minudah

Stupid
Dec 3, 2018
1,355
What is tofu?
I don't really know exactly. I just know it's a large, thick white block made out of soybeans that's popular in East Asia, especially Japan, and that it's a lot cheaper than meat. But some countries subsidize meat so heavily that it ends up being "cheaper" than tofu, which is stupid because those subsidies pay for over 95% of the price of meat to get to that point. Glad tofu is the cheaper option where I live.
 
Last edited:
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