You guys make great personal shoppers.
Natter 75: More Than a Million Natters Served
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, butt kicking, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Coldwater Creek seems to have several options in yellow.
I have completely run out of things that I can cook easily (without panicking or anxiety) and/or things I actually want to eat that I can cook. Help. Needs to be cheap, super easy, and hopefully not too unhealthy?
I have also found the CW's puppy cam, which has done nothing good for my motivation to get off this couch.
Timelies all!
Monday. Bleah.
Amy, when I am truly done with cooking I grab a handful of a variety of lean cuisines and keep them in the freezer for meals.
Other go tos: whole wheat wraps with hummus thin sliced veggies or turkey.
spaghetti squash with chopped: onion, greens (usually collards), whatever other veggies are around and a can of white beans or grilled chicken.
grilled cheese with bacon or tomato.
caprese salad
egg spinach tomato scramble
chicken in tinfoil with any root veggies and sprinkled with spices
Needs to be cheap, super easy, and hopefully not too unhealthy?
I made chili for this week's lunches that sort of fits the bill.
Ingredients: 1 small onion (chopped), 1 can black beans, 1 can Bushes chili beans (medium heat), 1 larger can diced tomatoes. 2–3 tablespoons olive oil, 1/4 teaspoon cumin. 1 splash of cheap red wine (optional). Salt. You can add ground beef if you have some handy.
Sauté chopped onion in oil, with a shake or two of salt. When it's translucent, add ground beef (if any) and wine, and cook until meat browns. Add both cans of beans, the tomatoes, and the cumin. Bring to a boil and then simmer for a couple of hours. Salt to taste. You can add more chili powder if you like it hotter. Without the meat it's pretty healthy. Even with the meat there's not that much added fat if you drain it off before adding the beans and tomatoes. It keeps a week in the fridge and months in the freezer. Aside from sautéing the onion, it's basically a stir everything together and simmer for ages recipe, which is my favorite kind. Sure, I look like I'm sitting around reading fanfic, but don't you see that pot on the stove? I'm totally cooking!
My go to meals have been chicken thighs microwaved in a stonewave bowl and then mix3d with a bag of steamer veggies woth a dollar of ricotta. Which is not all that exciting but it was relativley fast and healthy.
At some point I moved up to frozen ravioli. I'd throw a handful in saucepan of water and take them out and add spinach of let wilt on and ricotta but I couldn't eat tomatoes. Now if probably do pasta sauce.
Also easy is sauteed onion and pepper then add black beans and some salsa and eat in a tortilla or over rice.
Needs to be cheap, super easy, and hopefully not too unhealthy?
If you don't already know about it, you can download a PDF of the the Good and Cheap cookbook, which this author wrote as part of her Master's in food studies. It's meant to be recipes that are healthy and fit into a SNAP budget: [link]
I don't know where the recipes fall on the "super easy" scale, though.
Thanks, Buffistas! Good ideas there. Feeding me is less hard than feeding me + the two kids, between pickiness and appetite and needs of growing humans, etc., so any ideas for things that aren't take-out and aren't frozen pizza are helpful.
WTF with this explosion in Manchester at the Ariana Grande concert?
I've been into tuna melts lately, not sure where that falls on various scales.