LilyBart
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2007
- Posts
- 1,708
* claps *
Everyone should read this book.
I think its probably worth its own thread... sigh...
~LB
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* claps *
Everyone should read this book.
I am totally in budget food mode now.
However I am also, finally, reading The Omnivores Dilemma. Which is really depressing.
So CM, skip the Lipton's Onion Soup mix please. Just place that roast on a bed of coarsely chopped veggies, lay a couple of slices of bacon on top and cook as normal. (Don't diss the bacon, please.) My gravy recipe will follow tomorrow.
The meat is one thing (I can at least rationalize it, anyway), it is the awful shit that we are putting into our bodies every time we use an ingredient manufactured by a company.
As I stare at my shelf of what I thought were "healthy cereals."
But I am still drinking wine. (Drawing the line at 2 buck chuck, actually I think its 3 buck chuck now.) I'll give up something else first.
Hey, I can cut my own hair, right?
~LB
Organic refried in a can. Mission tortillas. Fresh cilantro. Pace hot. Crystal Farms cheddar (cheap block.) Poverty isn't THAT bad all of a sudden. You'll lay out about 15 bucks, but eat for a week.
I am totally in budget food mode now.
However I am also, finally, reading The Omnivores Dilemma. Which is really depressing.
So CM, skip the Lipton's Onion Soup mix please. Just place that roast on a bed of coarsely chopped veggies, lay a couple of slices of bacon on top and cook as normal. (Don't diss the bacon, please.) My gravy recipe will follow tomorrow.
The meat is one thing (I can at least rationalize it, anyway), it is the awful shit that we are putting into our bodies every time we use an ingredient manufactured by a company.
As I stare at my shelf of what I thought were "healthy cereals."
But I am still drinking wine. (Drawing the line at 2 buck chuck, actually I think its 3 buck chuck now.) I'll give up something else first.
Hey, I can cut my own hair, right?
~LB
Use your slow cooker.
It's beef. It's commonly a shoulder steak. You can do a lot of things with it, but do 'em slowly and at low heat for a long time.
CM's roast veggies are stars in their own right. I've gotten addicted to parchment paper for that purpose, it's super easy cleanup.
My secret of late is found in the Indian grocery - it's an amazing all-purpose thing that you can put into Mexican, pseudo mexican, and anything on earth that needs a cilantro/hot kick and you're out of cilantro. Cilantro chutney - the green jar 'o stuff. I've mixed it with the brown stuff (tamarind chutney) some water, vinegar, and molasses and put it over pork ribs in the slow cooker for 8 hours. Om nom nom.
Organic refried in a can. Mission tortillas. Fresh cilantro. Pace hot. Crystal Farms cheddar (cheap block.) Poverty isn't THAT bad all of a sudden. You'll lay out about 15 bucks, but eat for a week.
I had a similar reaction after reading this book.
Put down the scissors and back away from the comb. Do it slowly and no one gets hurt.
Haha!
OK, I will find another way to cut expenses.
I just am going to have to think on this for a bit.
~LB
I've not read that one, but Fast Food Nation scared me shitless. Oh, I did read an excerpt actually, some time ago when it came out.
I was raised really to cook with whole foods only. Nothing premade. We went through some lean times too. I have to look back on the family cookbook.
As far as haircuts go, you actually can learn to do trims, but I'm terrible at it. I just found a place locally that is sort of hip, urban and affordable, and then found a killer stylist there. I tip well, and send Mister Man there. Yes, I schedule his haircuts.
I grew up with a pretty unprocessed diet too. But after what I have read so far, you would be surprised by what you think is pure in your diet. Unless you shop exclusively in the produce section...and even then....
Well, Mr Bart still goes to Al the Barber for $7 and gets a a hot shave thrown in.
Why can't women get a $7 trim and a wax for free?
~LB
I grew up with a pretty unprocessed diet too. But after what I have read so far, you would be surprised by what you think is pure in your diet. Unless you shop exclusively in the produce section...and even then....
Well, Mr Bart still goes to Al the Barber for $7 and gets a a hot shave thrown in.
Why can't women get a $7 trim and a wax for free?
~LB
Al the Barber charges about 33% of the standard barber-shop rate around here. There are places, chain-like shops, that charge under $10 for a haircut but I would't let them touch my dog, much less the few hairs I have left to cherish in this world.
Apparently, you and Mr Bart have different standards. And Mr Bart doesn't have a whole passel of hair to get jiggy with.
However, Al the Barber is still independent.
As is my my hairdresser...who really doesn't charge that much (in the world of women's hair, anyway...$40 for shampoo, cut and style.) I paid that much 20 years ago when I still lived in DC. So I rationalize that I am ahead.
Rationalization is a concept I need to let go of.
~LB
Ok, you've convinced me. I'll read it! I do pretty well, and have a lot of trust in TJ's, which I hope isn't misguided. I'd actually rather go more veggie than use meat that isn't organic. I'm grossed out by big commercial meat. I do pretty well, but I will skip the list of my bonafides because it's annoying. I know I sound annoying, and so I'll spare you!
It is tempting, the whole meat and potatoes, big affordable cuts of meat approach though. I have been trying to do organic but drumsticks so far.
Well, I do get the pleasure of being shampooed by a nubile young thing as part of my $35 cut. That's worth plenty in this geezer's book.
Be careful, too, of organic. There is no official standard to define organic. And you will still end up with sub-grade corn product in your diet. Oh, and the FDA isn't always the eater's friend.
Really, read the book. Its a bit of work but oh so enlightening.
You will read food labels in a new way forevermore.
~LB
Silly.
4" potted basil from the garden center
cute little pot
windowsill
no more shopping for basil.
Try this...
Flour tortilla
Sliced banana
Jack cheese
cilantro
spicy pepper of choice (I'm a mild pepper sort, personally)
Make as any quesadilla recipe. Really tasty. Seriously.
~LB
My turkey gravey recipe is from memory, but basically you simmer the turkey neck all day in water with carrots, onions, a bay leaf, some peppercorns and salt and some celery. You blend some of the meat, stock, carrots, celery and onions to make the gravy. It's very light, which is a nice contrast to the heavy turkey, and you can actually taste the flavors.
Ok, you've convinced me. I'll read it! I do pretty well, and have a lot of trust in TJ's, which I hope isn't misguided. I'd actually rather go more veggie than use meat that isn't organic. I'm grossed out by big commercial meat. I do pretty well, but I will skip the list of my bonafides because it's annoying. I know I sound annoying, and so I'll spare you!
It is tempting, the whole meat and potatoes, big affordable cuts of meat approach though. I have been trying to do organic but drumsticks so far.
Being newly freed from tradition, I'll probably make lamb burgers liberally shot throughout with mint, oregano, and topped with dill yogurt. Neither of us are excited by T-day food.
Sounds delicious. If you hear a plaintive knock on your door around midday on Thanksgiving, it's because I finally decided to flee the Wonderbread/Cornbread stuffing with three grains of salt for exotic flavoring.
Dead basil if you are me.
It's seasonal. A lot of the stuff I see comes in a clump of dirt. CM seems to be able to make that live, whereas I consider this "storage."
I always did this, but added a bit of a roux, as with LB's recipe.
Isn't Oregon Tilth ok still? *hyperventilates*
And I tend to get meat that is veg-fed mooed its last moo or whatever bison do, within 200 miles. I control what I can, avoid the huge farms, and I wind up eating my weight in tuna mercury either way.