Wednesday, June 10, 2020
Survival Meals - a few I have figured out so far
I went shopping again last Sunday, so I have been eating too much. I bought a LOT of fruit and veggies. The big challenge is not to waste it.
The long-term goal is to figure out how much I need to get through one week. I want to go shopping once a week to take advantage of any sales they might have at the time.
I haven't found that to be a reasonable goal since the VIRUS CRISIS has changed our lives. My normal saving patterns have been ruined. Getting to the main discount store I always shop first wasn't possible this month. The replacements have prices that are much higher. When you add up all the increased prices, it is a lot of food that I can't buy.
Buying potatoes and onions in the bagged quantities is usually a savings option. Because they are less expensive, I am trying to buy them and make sure they get stored to last as long as possible. I have been using some of the fabric shelf cubes from the Dollar Tree as my produce storage. One for potatoes, one for onions. Recently I started putting the cubes on separate shelves to see if that makes a difference of any kind.
I am use to buying a few of several different kinds of potatoes. When I have one kind because of the bagged produce, meals change. Potatoes mean micro-baked, boiled into potato salad, toaster oven baked into fries, added to soups, and whatever else I can think of. I haven't done mashed potatoes yet... I usually have instant potatoes as a back-up and make them when I need to. I want to try making chips again one of these days. If I go shopping once a week, I will gladly go back to getting a variety of potatoes and onions.
My potato salad today was three small cooked potatoes, diced, with some slivered onions I cut up earlier, some radishes I had that I cut in half and sliced thin, some black beans I cooked myself and was trying to use up, diced onions, sliced tops of green onions, most of the dill relish I needed to use up, most of the mayo I had to use up, and spices that I like. I think I put chia seeds in it, too. It worked out very good. I ate two thirds of it right away, and saved the last third for later.
I would have used all the dill relish and mayo but I needed enough for one sandwich. That will get used up tomorrow most likely.
I have discovered how a small and inexpensive can of tomato paste can become tomato soup and pasta sauce. I used up some more of my onions with the pasta sauce, and the chunks of bell pepper I had cut up and ready to use. I also sliced up some fresh mushrooms for the sauce. Italian blend and garlic bits and a little salt were the spices, but I have been adding about a tablespoon of sugar to my tomato dishes recently. I like how it makes the flavor better.
Now I am on a quest to find other ways to use it. I don't know if diluting it into tomato juice is an option, but that isn't too far away from tomato soup. I remember reading about people in the Depression using ketchup with hot water at food counters as their only food for the day.
It's hard to even think of times that bad, but I recently watched several videos on the Great Depression and the Stock Market Crash that happened right before it. I put one of the video links in a post at my Facebook Prayers page... https://facebook.com/work2gather.Prayers ...so you can watch that one from here. The video I posted is the testimonies of people who lived through that hard time, and what they remember most. They were children then... so they remember what kids would remember.
I have used ketchup for tomato flavor in our family goulash recipe. I like Heinz ketchup so the flavor was very nice. It made the familiar goulash into a new dish.
I have discovered that freezing kale that is ready to use makes it softer when it thaws. I am still trying the different varieties to see what happens, but I think I like the Italian Kale the best. I use it for greens in all kinds of meals, including tacos. I slice it really thin, and it works just right for me.
Finding ways to stretch the food dollar is critical to surviving hard times. I am trying to become more whole food plant based in my eating, but it is hard. I am slowly reducing my intake of meat and dairy and eggs... and oils. It really changes a lot of things in your life when you eat mostly fresh produce and whole grains. Shopping once a week will help me succeed in that goal.
Now that I am collecting ideas for my blogging, I hope these posts will get more interesting and offer readers better ideas about each topic. It's all about getting organized and collecting the reference materials to share with you. I am working on that!
Until next time,
In Christ,
Deborah Martin
work2gather.us
and more...
Monday, October 24, 2016
Budgets and Emergencies
I am again working on my budgets. At the end of one financial month, before the beginning of the next financial month, I try to plan how I can make my small funds last until the next infusion of money. It has always been a survival issue for me... started way back when I had kids and lived on welfare only. Now I only have a small Social Security Retirement check along with a small amount of food stamps (currently called SNAP). Not much has changed in my income, despite lots of efforts to change it, but it is only me right now. My kids have grown.
Right now I am at the end of my food supplies and planning to create a better emergency pantry than I have had in the past. I know I have talked about it before, but let me update what I can as I write this new post.
Awhile back I purposely tried to live on my back-up food supplies. I discovered the meal options were not very good. I had a lot of easy to store foods like rice and dry beans, but little to go with them to make a decent meal. I decided then to make a change in how I prepare for unexpected food emergencies. I am trying to make a pantry that would create meals I like to eat. I am now working on that challenge.
Since I live at such a low income level, I am going to work on a three month pantry first. My food budget is so low (only $126 each month), I can only use a small amount of food money to begin the building process. This morning I decided there is only $11 available for my emergency pantry efforts each month. This will be quite a task.
I have created a plastic container to act as my starting storage option. Naturally, I will eat the food if I have to, but the bigger goal is to stretch my other purchases to meet the regular food needs of November. I see a lot of rice and pasta ahead... maybe a steady diet of ramen, a great meal stretcher !! 😃
Actually, I have been reading a lot of materials about food and diets and weight loss. FOOD RULES by Michael Pollan is the latest book I have been reading. Eating healthy and eating cheaply is the main difficulty in poverty. I hope to find some useful solutions to those problems. I will share them with you when I do.
What will eleven dollars buy for my first month doing this? I don't know...yet! My staples for quick meals are Rice-a-Roni Spanish Rice, ramen, and Kraft Macaroni and Cheese... they will probably start the process. Canned milk is good to have on hand. That might be all I can get in one budget. Dried fruits store well, so I need to decide which ones to get and how to package them.
By the time we get to December's budget, I should have more meal ideas to start collecting for. Let me know if you have any good ideas for this effort. I search lots of resources, and will try to share those with you as time goes by.
In Christ, Deb 💛