Archive for category Specials

Little Suzie Homemaker Is Tired

This used to be 25 lbs of galas, but we've been snacking them pretty hard all week. It's still a lot of apples.

This used to be 25 lbs of galas, but we've been snacking them pretty hard all week. It's still a lot of apples.

Over budget.

Spent this week: $165.46
Spent in the past 24 hours: $0

Same old song. We would have been okay, if not for the Thai food.

We spent $110.46 on groceries. That includes $10 worth of ice cream and $6 worth of orange juice. (Pregnancy tax.) We spent $28 at the farm stand of our favorite no-spray u-pick. Their u-pick is over for the season, but they’ve got great deals right now on stuff that’s already picked. That is, 25% anything you buy by the case. We go through gala apples like water around here, and apples keep well on our nice, cold (unheated, uninsulated) sun porch. We got 25 lbs of beautiful organic (minus the pricey certificate) gala apples for $18. That $18 puts us outside of our budget, but we won’t have to buy apples for a few weeks and I’m also going to make and can a few batches of apple butter, which will extend our quickly dwindling toast spread stash. (Must also finish making jam from the rest of the frozen blueberries, and get started on the marionberries.) Bonus: the sunporch now smells very strongly of cold apples. The other $10 was spent on Brussels sprouts, broccoli, cauliflower, some kind of hot pepper that Billy will eat alone because I don’t care for them, and some gorgeous bartlett pears. We’ve still got half the broccoli and cauliflower, and those peppers, so that $10 goes toward feeding us next week, too… So there was some spending this week that will translate to lower costs in the coming weeks. All that is fine.

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Cari’s spending: To the host, the spoils

We had people over for dinner twice this past weekend. I was sure that with that we’d blown our chances of meeting the budget this week, and I was plotting all kinds of percentage systems of food eaten by our family vs food eaten by guests to try to coax the numbers into shape. It was going to be tricky to calculate, though, based on all the leftovers from both dinners. Turns out we’re under budget, so I don’t have to figure those percentages out. Huge relief. I hate math.

On Saturday evening (Halloween), we had friends over for trick or treating and pizza. Okay. We bought two pizzas, which was too much, and we ended up eating cold pizza for breakfast Sunday morning and reheated pizza for lunch on Monday, so that worked out fine, budget wise, because of the number of meals we got out of it. (The health impact of eating pizza three days in a row? That’s a different blog.) So we were fine, budget-wise, with the pizza, but I was sure the entertaining had broken the budget, because on Sunday night we had another family over and they eat meat, and Billy wanted to serve meat, and, well…

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Letter from Austin: Weird, Wasted Fruit

Letter from Austin: Weird fruit. Weird, wasted fruit.

cherimoya

cherimoya

Anina writes:

I happened to visit the East Side Café, one of my favorite restaurants in Austin, during the first fall weekend under 100 degrees. The cold snap meant I was primed to buy their soup cookbook (It was only 80 that weekend! Soup time! Sweaters!). It’s organized by season, so I jumped right in and started making autumn’s soups. The first two were fabulous, and each fed me and guests through most of a week, but the third one is bland. Sorry, East Side, but split pea soup without ham is kind of like eating green paste (even if it has fresh herbs in it). I can’t add enough salt to this thing. However, it’s healthy and vegan, and it was cheap to make, which made me cocky.

I had extra money in my budget, and clearly, this was my chance to go wild.

When I’m feeling spendy, I cruise the exotic fruit area of the grocery store looking for old friends from my California youth. My Rosebud has been the cherimoya, which I (and my friend Audra) remember as the best fruit I/we ever tasted, kind of like a strawberry-pineapple hybrid, but somehow monumentally better. I had recently been so obsessed that I read about cherimoyas on Wikipedia, which lead me to the monstera deliciosa, which was touted as The Most Delicious Fruit in the World [citation needed]. I found both in the Whole Foods and spent about $13 on them.

Some things should be left in the past, it turns out, and other things are just too inscrutable for me to decide when they’re ripe. Monstera deliciosa, according to Wikipedia, takes a year to ripen on the tree, is poisonous until ripe, and, once picked, is ready to eat when its scales start falling off. When I bought it, it looked like an elongated green pinecone. Some of the scales were loose (hard to imagine I’m talking about a fruit rather than, say, a sea monster), but I deemed it not ready yet. In successive days, I still felt doubtful about it, and kept waiting until it became apparent (I think) that the damn thing had rotted. Here’s what it looked like just before I stuck it in the compost. Kind of like the product of an armadillo and a corncob and, you know, feces. It was like buying a fancy dress and saving it for a special occasion but getting too fat to wear it before a special enough occasion comes along. Yeah, just like that.

But most disappointing was the cherimoya, which I ate ripe, at the right time. It was fine, but it didn’t live up to memory (I have to admit it was my second attempt at reclaiming cherimoya bliss.). Rosebud was just a sled, and I guess food is just food. It’s okay. I know how to make some tasty soups, and where to buy some excellent chocolate for under $13.

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It’s surplus week on $50 a Week

Emily’s got a freezer full of pig parts. Me? Fall garden cleanup this weekend resulted in this:

The big'uns

The big'uns

The little'uns

The little'uns

I haven’t weighed them yet, but hefting the bags I’m estimating we’re looking at about twenty pounds of green tomatoes. Pickle them? Fry them? Sort small batches into paper bags and hope they ripen? What the hell to do with this many green tomatoes?

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Sarah McColl Stays Under Budget in Style in the First Fifty Bucks a Week Challenge

chicken-cauliflower-curry

Last week, blogger Sarah McColl was brave enough to participate in the first ever Fifty Bucks a week Challenge. And it turns out we could all learn a few things from Sarah. Not only did she stay under budget spending only $44, she made beautiful dishes including Curried Chicken and Cauliflower, Butternut Squash Bisque and Stamppot with Kale—all while house sitting, no less!

Sarah had recently cut her grocery budget anyway, but as previously mentioned was worried she wouldn’t be able to get the “eating well” part down. But I never doubted her and she proved me right, employing a little something I like to call 1 Girl, 1 Chicken (if you don’t know the reference, be glad).

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Introducing the Fifty Bucks a Week Challenge!

sarah_mccoll

Pink of Perfection's Sarah McColl

Eating well on fifty bucks a week. It sounds simple enough, right? Wrong. Or maybe it is right. To find out, we’ve decided to challenge a few of our foodie friends to see if they can do what we’ve been doing (or at least trying to do) since June 1.

Our first “contestant” in the Fifty Bucks a Week Challenge is the Brooklyn-based Sarah McColl from the lovely little blog Pink of Perfection.

I “met” Sarah after my sister emailed me a link to her website and wrote, “You need to be best friends with this girl.” That was a couple years ago, and though we haven’t actually met in person, we’ve exchanged more than a few gushy emails and (if we’re being honest here) I’ve developed somewhat of a girl crush on her.

Maybe that’s because while Sarah certainly has her fair share of ups and downs (and blogs about them openly and honestly) she has managed to create a seemingly charmed life for herself—a life filled with double chocolate cookies, homemade yogurt made to look easy, dinner parties, strawberry jam she jarred herself, a pink bathroom (jealous!) and what seems like an endless supply fresh flowers, all for surprisingly little money.

Sarah was a recessionista before the word (or the recession) ever existed. And because she’s used to living on a budget, I don’t imagine she’ll have a hard time sticking to the fifty dollar limit, but she admits she does have a few concerns.

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Letter from Austin: On Onions

Today we have a special treat for you: a letter from our friend Anina Moore, who has been doing the Fifty Bucks a Week thing down in Austin, in the great state of Texas. We’re looking to make these letters from friends in far-flung places an occasional feature of the blog, and we’re delighted to bring you Anina’s take on onions as a first offering.

Now, take it away, Anina!

red onion

red onion

Anina in Austin writes:

When some good friends of mine moved down here from Albany, one of them referred to the winter days we’d spend inside watching movies and playing board games—then she stopped herself and said, “I guess that’s not what winter’s like down here.”

No, that’s what summer’s like. This summer, we had over 60 days of 100 degree temps or higher. We broke records that weren’t set all that long ago. And we were hot. It’s hot outside, so unless you’re going swimming, or exercising in the dark, it’s too hot to get any nature-based fitness fun. It’s hot indoors, even with AC (which is considered a God-/Flying Spaghetti Monster-/Ceiling Cat-given right around here), since I want to spend less on my electric bill than on my mortgage. Summer is when I gain weight—not with winter’s carbs, but with summer’s: ice cream.

As for the meals I have between ice cream scoops, I’m not really interested in turning on the stove (much less the oven). In the summer, I eat salads and sandwiches a lot: humble, healthy, easy, simple.

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I Have Met the Hungry, and He Is Me

tortilla española outta controlla. image courtesy forkthis.blogspot.com.

tortilla española outta controlla. image courtesy forkthis.blogspot.com.

I’ve been blowing a lot of mental fuses lately. Maybe it’s the August heat. Maybe it’s the August humidity. More likely, it’s the August heat and humidity. Other than weird acts of spelling, this resulted last week in my entering a cookoff to benefit the Greenpoint Soup Kitchen. This wasn’t any ordinary cookoff. I don’t say that because most cookoffs don’t involve sandwiches that you bring with you to a backyard in Brooklyn; or because most cookoffs lack a list of prizes half so fabulous; or even because most cookoffs aren’t for as good a cause (since I have no objection to cooking for cooking’s sake, I can hardly rate a cookoff for a soup kitchen above a cookoff for cooking-off’s sake). This cookoff was extraordinary because it was my first.




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URDB: Something Fishy This Way Comes

spelling with herring (courtesy forkthis.blogspot.com)

spelling with herring (courtesy forkthis.blogspot.com)

On Wednesday night, I competed in the Eighth Meeting of the World Record Appreciation Society. I was there to set a record. My task: to spell “I ♥ PICKLED HERRING,” in pickled herring, and then eat it, faster than anyone had ever done it before. For a thorough survey of the evening’s events, please see the excellent Fork This. What follows, rather, will be a highly personal, perhaps even ego-centric account. My sense of wonder, of new vistas in spelling and herring, stands between me and my scant objectivity. I still kind of can’t believe I did this. I find it hard to write about. Not traumatic. Just… different. More like writing about the first time I had sex than the first time I climbed a mountain. It wasn’t especially heroic, and it didn’t last very long. The buildup was pure anxiety; the aftermath, strangely peaceful, in a suddenly well-nourished way.

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Special Announcement! Record Attempt at URDB Tonight!

pickled-fish-based orthography

pickled-fish-based orthography

This is an extraordinary day.

Tonight I will set the first Universal Record for Shortest Time to Spell “I ♥ PICKLED HERRING” in Pickled Herring and Then Eat It. This feat of pickled-fish-based orthography and consumption will take place at the Eighth Meeting of the World Record Appreciation Society, Wednesday, August 12, 2009 from 8:00 PM - 11:00 PM (ET), at the Crash Mansion, 199 Bowery, New York, NY 10002.

Read on for details…

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